- Julius Lothar Meyer
Infobox Scientist
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birth_date =August 19 ,1830
birth_place =Varel
death_date =April 11 ,1895
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field =chemistry
work_institutions =University of Tübingen
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known_for =periodic table ofchemical element s
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influences =Robert Bunsen
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footnotes =Julius Lothar Meyer (
August 19 ,1830 -April 11 ,1895 ) was born inVarel , at that time belonging to the duchy ofOldenburg , now part ofGermany . He was contemporary and competitor ofDmitri Mendeleev to draw up the firstperiodic table ofchemical element s. Some five years apart, both Mendeleev and Meyer worked withRobert Bunsen .Biography
Meyer qualified in medicine at
Zürich ,Switzerland , and then studied and taught at various German universities. His first interest was thephysiology of respiration, and in 1857, he recognized thatoxygen combines with thehemoglobin inblood .In 1864, Meyer published an early version of the periodic table, containing 28 elements classified into 6 families by their valence—the first time that elements had been grouped and ordered according to their valence. Work on organizing the elements by
atomic weight had hitherto been stymied by inaccurate measurements of the atomic weights.Mendeleev published his periodic table of all known elements (and predicted several new elements to complete the table, plus some corrected atomic weights) in 1870. Working completely independently, a few months later, Meyer published a revised and expanded version of his 1864 table, virtually identical to that published by Mendeleev, and a paper showing graphically the periodicity of the elements as a function of atomic weight. Many chemists were doubtful about Mendeleev's periodic law, but Meyer's work provided significant support, particularly when the new elements were found as predicted and remeasured atomic weights accorded with those predicted.
Meyer's contributions also included the concept that the
carbon atoms inbenzene were arranged in a ring, although he did not propose the alternation of single and double bonds that later became included in the structure byKekulé .In 1876, Meyer became the first Professor of Chemistry at the
University of Tübingen , where he served until his death there.ee also
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History of the periodic table External links
* [http://www.chemie-master.de/pse/pse.php?modul=pse_meyer Periodic table according to Lothar Meyer (1870)]
* [http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/specialcollections/events/2007paulingconference/video-s1-2-gordin.html Video] of a talk by Michael Gordin titled "Periodicity, Priority, Pedagogy: Mendeleev and Lothar Meyer"
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