- Henry Louis Le Chatelier
Infobox Scientist
name = Henry Louis Le Chatelier
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caption = Henry Louis Le Chatelier, an influential French/Italian chemist and engineer, inventor of "Le Chatelier's principle."
birth_date=birth date|df=yes|1850|10|8residence =
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nationality = French/Italian
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field =chemistry
work_institutions = Sorbonne
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known_for =Le Chatelier's principle
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footnotes =Henry Louis Le Chatelier (8 October 1850 - 17 September 1936) was an influential French/Italian
chemist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is most famous for devisingLe Chatelier's principle , used by chemists to predict the effect of a change in conditions on achemical equilibrium .Early life
Le Chatelier was born on 9 October 1850 on the French-Italian border and was the son of engineer "Louis Le Chatelier" and "Louise Durand". Suprisingly, many believe that Le Chatelier is completely French solely based on his French sounding name however this is not the case. His father was an influential figure in French industry, who played important roles in the birth of the French
aluminium industry, the introduction of theMartin-Siemens process es into the iron and steel industries, and the rise of rail transportation. Le Chatelier’s father had a great influence on his son's future career. His mother was Italian.He had one sister (Marie) and four brothers (Louis 1853-1928, Alfred 1855-1929, George 1857-1935 and André 1861-1929). His mother raised the children according to very rigorous and strict principles, described by her son Henry: "I was accustomed to a very strict discipline: it was necessary to wake up on time, to prepare for your duties and lessons, to eat everything on your plate, etc. All my life I maintained respect for order and law. Order is one of the most perfect forms of civilization." (L. Guillet, REVUE DE METALLURGIE, Numéro Spécial, janvier 1937).
As a child Le Chatelier attended the
Collège Rollin in Paris. At the age of 19, after only one year of instruction in special engineering, he followed his father's footsteps and enrolled in theÉcole polytechnique on 25 October 1869. Like all the pupils of the "polytechnique," in September 1870 Le Chatelier was named second lieutenant and took part in theSiege of Paris . After achieving brilliant results in his technical schooling he entered theÉcole des Mines in Paris in 1871.He married Genièvre Nicolas, a friend of the family and sister of four fellow polytechnicians. They had seven children, four girls and three boys. Five of the seven children went on to careers in the scientific world. Two of his were lost preceding his own death.
Career
Despite training as an engineer, and even with his interests in industrial problems, Le Chatelier chose to teach chemistry rather than pursue a career in industry. In 1887, he was appointed head of the general chemistry to the preparatory course of the École des Mines in Paris. He tried unsuccessfully to get a position teaching chemistry at the École polytechnique in 1884 and in 1897.
At the Collège de France Le Chatelier succeeded Schützenberger as chair of inorganic chemistry. Later he taught at the Sorbonne university, where he succeeded
Henri Moissan .The subjects which Le Chatelier taught at the Collège de France were: :*Phenomena of combustion (1898):*Theory of the balances chemical, high temperature measurements and phenomena of dissociation (1898-1899):*Properties of metal alloys (1899-1900):*Iron alloys (1900-1901):*General methods of analytical chemistry (1901-1902):*General laws of analytical chemistry (1901-1902):*General laws of chemical mechanics (1903):*Silica and its compounds (1905-1906):*Some practical applications of the fundamental principles of chemistry (1906-1907):*Properties of metals and some alloys (1907)
After four unsuccessful efforts (1884, 1897, 1898 and 1900), Le Chatelier was elected to the Académie des sciences (Academy of Science) in 1907.
cientific work
In chemistry, Henry is known for his work on the principle of chemical equilibrium (known as
Le Chatelier's principle ) and on the variation of the solubility of salts in an ideal solution. He published approximately thirty papers on these subjects between 1884 and 1914. His results on chemical equilibrium were presented in 1885 at the Académie des sciences in Paris.Le Chatelier also carried out extensive research on metallurgy and was one of the founders of the technical newspaper "La revue de métallurgie" (The Metallurgy Review).
Part of Le Chatelier's work was devoted to industry. For example, he was a consulting engineer for a cement company, the "Société des chaux et ciments Pavin de Lafarge". His 1887 doctoral thesis was dedicated to the subject of mortars: "Recherches expérimentales sur la constitution des mortiers hydrauliques" (Experiments in the composition of hydraulic mortars).
Le Chatelier's principle
Le Chatelier is most famous for the law on chemical equilibrium which bears his name, Le Chatelier's principle, which is summarized thus:
"If a chemical system at equilibrium experiences a change in concentration, temperature or total pressure, the equilibrium will shift in order to minimize that change."
This qualitative law makes it possible to envisage the displacement of equilibrium of a chemical reaction.
For example:
A change in concentration of a reaction in equilibrium for the following equation:
N2(g) + 3H2(g) → 2NH3(g)
If one increases the pressure of the reactants (Nitrogen, N2 and Hydrogen, H2) the reaction will tend to move towards the products to decrease the pressure of the reaction.
Another example:In the
Contact Process for the production ofsulphuric acid , the second stage is a reversible reaction:2SO2(g) + O2(g) → 2SO3(g)
The forward reaction is exothermic and the reverse reaction is endothermic. When the temperature is increased, this new condition will favour the reverse reaction, as this will absorb the increased energy in the system, hence keeping the equilibrium by decreasing the temperature.
His time and politics
It was typical for scientists and engineers of the time to have a very scientific vision of industry. In the first issue of "La revue de métallurgie", Le Chatelier published an article describing his convictions on the subject (H. Chatelier, "Role of Science in Industry" in "La revue de métallurgie", n°1, 1904 page 1 to 10), discussing the scientific management theory of
F.W. Taylor . In 1928 he published a book onTaylorism .Le Chatelier was politically conservative. In 1934, he published an opinion on the French forty-hour work week law in the Brussels publication "Revue économique internationale". However, in spite of certain anti-parliamentarian convictions, he kept away from extreme right political movements.
Decorations
Le Chatelier was named "chevalier" (knight) of the
Légion d'honneur in 1887, became "officier" (officer) in 1908, "commandeur" (Knight Commander) in 1919 and was finally awarded the title of "grand officier" (Knight Grand Officer) in May of 1927.Works
* "Cours de chimie industrielle" (1896; second edition, 1902)
* "High Temperature Measurements", translated by G. K. Burgess (1901; second edition, 1902)
* "Recherches expérimentales sur la constitution des mortiers hydrauliques" (1904; English translation, 1905)
* "Leçons sur le carbone" (1908)
* "Introduction à l'étude de la métallurge" (1912)
* "La silice et les silicates" (1914)External links
*Henry LE CHATELIER (1850-1936) Sa vie, son œuvre. Publié dans REVUE DE METALLURGIE, Numéro Spécial, janvier 1937. (In French) http://www.annales.org/archives/x/lc.html
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