- Friedrich Kohlrausch
Infobox_Scientist
name = Friedrich Kohlrausch
|200px
image_width = 200px
caption = Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Kohlrausch (1840-1910)
birth_date = birth date|1840|10|14|mf=y
birth_place =Rinteln ,Germany
death_date = death date and age|1910|1|17|1840|10|14|mf=y
death_place =Marburg ,Germany
residence =Germany
nationality = German
field =Physicist
work_institution =University of Frankfurt/Main University of Göttingen University of Zurich Darmstadt UniversityUniversity of Würzburg Strasbourg University Humboldt University
alma_mater =University of Erlangen University of Göttingen
doctoral_advisor =Wilhelm Eduard Weber
doctoral_students =Walther Nernst
known_for = Work onelectrolytes
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Kohlrausch (
October 14 ,1840 –January 17 ,1910 ) was a Germanphysicist who investigated theconductive properties ofelectrolytes and contributed to the understanding of their behaviour. His research work covered also investigations of elasticity, thermoelasticity, and thermal conduction as well asmagnetic and electrical precision measurements.Today, Friedrich Kohlrausch is classed as one of the most important experimental physicists. His early work helped to extend the absolute system of
Carl Friedrich Gauß andWilhelm Weber to include electrical and magnetic measuring units.Biography
Education
Son of
Rudolf Kohlrausch , Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Kohlrausch was born on October 14, 1840, inRinteln ,Germany . After studying physics atErlangen andGöttingen , Friedrich Kohlrausch completed his doctorate inGöttingen .Teaching
After a two-year work as a lecturer in
Frankfurt , Kohlrausch was appointed a professor of physics at theUniversity of Göttingen (1866-70).In 1870 Kohlrausch became a professor at
ETH Zurich inSwitzerland . One year later, he moved to theDarmstadt University of Technology inGermany .In 1875 he responded to a call from the
University of Würzburg in southernGermany , where he subsequently conducted his experiments on electrical quantity determination and the conductivity of electrolytes. From 1888 he researched and taught atStrasbourg University . He turned down a professorship at theHumboldt University inBerlin in 1894.From 1900 he was also a professor at
Humboldt University .Research work
Kohlrausch was a pivotal figure in the history of electrochemistry for many reasons. First, the experiments from which he deduced his law of independent migration of ions became canonical and disseminated from Kohlrausch's laboratories in
Göttingen ,Zurich , andDarmstadt ;Arrhenius ,Wilhelm Ostwald andJacobus Henricus van 't Hoff , the originalIonists , all trained with methods and equipment of Kohlrauschian lineage. Moreover, because Kohlrausch also continued to test and confirm the Ionist theory after it had been first proposed, his work tied "measuring physics" and its consequent capability of producing plenty of empirical data to the results and methods of the Ionists and their followers.Electrolyte conductivity in solution
In 1874 he demonstrated that an
electrolyte has a definite and constant amount of electrical resistance. By observing the dependence of conductivity upondilution , he could determine the transfer velocities of theions (charged atoms or molecules) in solution. He usedalternating current to prevent the deposition of electrolysis products; this enabled him to obtain highly precise results.From 1875 to 1879, he examined numerous
salt solutions,acid s and solutions of other materials. His efforts resulted in the law of the independent migration of ions, that is, each type of migrating ion has a specificelectrical resistance no matter what its original molecular combination may have been, and therefore that a solution's electrical resistance was due only to the migrating ions of a given substances. Kohlrausch showed for weak (incompletely dissociated)electrolytes that the more dilute a solution, the greater itsmolar conductivity due to increased ionic dissociation.Measuring techniques & instruments
In 1895 he succeeded
Hermann von Helmholtz as President of the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt (PTR – Imperial Physical Technical Institute), an office which he held until 1905.Here, as in the past, his activities were focused on experimental and instrumental physics: he constructed instruments and devised new measuring techniques to examine electrolytic conduction in solutions. He concluded the setup of the PTR, a task which had not yet been completed on the death of its first president. He introduced fixed regulations, work schedules and working hours for the Institute.
Under direction of Kohlrausch , the PTR created numerous standards and calibration standards which were also used internationally outside
Germany .Kohlrausch was intent on creating optimum working conditions in the laboratories and to shield the labs from unwanted external influences. For six years, for instance, he fought against a streetcar line which was due to be laid near the PTR. However, before the streetcar was to make its first journey, the institute succeeded in developing an astatic
torsion magnetometer which was uninfluenced by disturbingelectromagnetic field s. The use of this instrument and the shielded wiregalvanometer developed bydu Bois and Rubens meant that precision electrical and magnetic work continued to be possible.Over the years, Kohlrausch added experiments which met the needs of physical chemistry and electrical technology in particular. He improved precision measuring instruments and developed numerous measuring methods in almost all of the fields of physics known during his lifetime, including a reflectivity meter, a
tangent galvanometer , and various types of magnetometers and dynamometers. The Kohlrausch bridge, which he invented at that time for the purpose of measuring conductivity, is still well known today. LikeHelmholtz and Siemens, Kohlrausch also saw the possibilities inherent in applied and basic research in the natural sciences and technology. He lay the foundations for scientific knowledge which promoted and advanced industry and technology. The PTR developed standardized precision instruments for university research institutes and industrial laboratories. It introduced uniform electrical units for Germany and also played a significant role in their international usage. In the period to 1905, there were many examples of the importance of the PTR for German industry, in particular for the high technologies of the time – the electrical, optical and mechanical industries.Overall, Kohlrausch was involved in the measurement of electrical, magnetic and electrochemical phenomena for almost 50 years. In 1905 Kohlrausch retired from his post as President of the PTR.
Friedrich Kohlrausch died in
Marburg on January 17, 1910 at the age of 70.Writings
In the
University of Göttingen , Kohlrausch documented his practical experiments resulting in the book "Leitfaden der praktischen Physik" (Guidelines to Practical Physics), which was published in 1870 as the first book of its type inGermany . It contained not only descriptions of experiments, experimental setups and measuring techniques, but also tables of physical quantities. To this day, the textbook "Praktische Physik" (Practical Physics), which originated in Kohlrausch's "Leitfaden der praktischen Physik", is standard reading for physicists and engineers inGermany . This is attributable, above all, to the detailed descriptions provided of the measuring methods that form the basis of technical and experimental applications in many fields in physics.Further reading
* [http://www.openlibrary.org/details/fundamentallawso00goodrich Biographical sketch and reprint of paper on conductivity]
* cite journal
title = Obituary: Friedrich Kohlrausch
author =Wilhelm Wien
journal = Annalen der Physik
volume = 336
issue = 3
pages = 449–454
year = 1910
doi = 10.1002/andp.19103360302Persondata
NAME= Kohlrausch, Friedrich Wilhelm
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= GermanPhysicist
DATE OF BIRTH=October 14 ,1840
PLACE OF BIRTH=Rinteln ,Germany
DATE OF DEATH=January 17 ,1910
PLACE OF DEATH=Marburg ,Germany
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