- William Robert Grove
Infobox Scientist
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birth_date =11 July ,1811
birth_place =Swansea inWales
death_date =1 August ,1896
death_place =London
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field =physics
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known_for =conservation of energy
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Sir William Robert Grove PCQC FRS (11 July ,1811 –1 August ,1896 ) was a Britishlawyer ,judge and Welshphysical scientist who anticipated the general theory of theconservation of energy and was a pioneer offuel cell technology.Early life
Born
Swansea inWales , Grove was the only child of John, amagistrate anddeputy lieutenant ofGlamorgan , and his wife, Anne "née" Bevan. His early education was in the hands of private tutors before he attendedBrasenose College, Oxford to studyclassics though his scientific interests may have been cultivated bymathematician Baden Powell. Otherwise, his taste for science has no clear origin though his circle in Swansea was broadly educated. He graduated in 1832 and wascalled to the bar byLincoln's Inn in 1835. In the same year, Grove joined theRoyal Institution and was a founder of theSwansea Literary and Philosophical Society , an organisation with which he maintained close links.Morus (2004)]cientific work
At the Royal Institution, Grove met Emma Maria Powles (died 1879) and married her in 1837. Groves's health was never strong and the couple embarked on a tour of the
continent for theirhoneymoon . This sabbatical offered Groves an opportunity to pursue his scientific interests and resulted in his firstscientific paper [ cite journal | author=Grove, W. R. | title=On a new voltaic combination | journal=Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science | year=1838 | volume=13 | pages=430 ] suggesting some novel constructions for electric cells.In 1839, Grove developed a novel form of electric cell, the "
Grove cell ", which usedzinc andplatinum electrode s exposed to twoacid s and separated by a porous ceramic pot. Grove announced the latter development to the "Académie des Sciences " inParis in 1839. [" [http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k2967c/f503.table Note sur une pile voltaïque d'une grande énergie, construite par M. Grove; communication de M. Becquerel] ", "Comptes Rendus " (1839), 8 497] Later that year, he gave another account of his development at theBritish Association for the Advancement of Science meeting inBirmingham where it aroused the interest ofMichael Faraday . On Faraday's invitiation, Grove presented his discoveries at the prestigious Royal Institution Friday Discourse on13 March ,1840 .Grove's presentation made his reputation and he was soon proposed for Fellowship of the
Royal Society by such distinguished men asWilliam Thomas Brande ,William Snow Harris andCharles Wheatstone . Grove also attracted the attention ofJohn Peter Gassiot , a relationship that resulted in Grove becoming the first professor of experimental philosophy at theLondon Institution in 1841. Grove's inaugural lecture in 1842 was the first announcement of what Grove called the "correlation of physical forces", in modern terms, theconservation of energy .In 1842, Grove developed the first
fuel cell (which he called the "gas voltaic battery"), which producedelectrical energy by combininghydrogen andoxygen , and described it using his correlation theory. In developing the cell and showing thatsteam could be disassociated into oxygen and hydrogen, and the process reversed, he was the first person to demonstrate the thermal dissociation ofmolecule s into their constituentatom s. The first demonstration of this effect, he gave privately to Faraday, Gassiot andEdward William Brayley , his scientific editor. [Hays, J. N. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/3303 Brayley, Edward William (1801/2–1870)] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed 8 August 2007 (subscription required)] His work also led him to early insights into the nature ofionisation . [ cite journal | title= [http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/webdocs/AtomicStructure/Proton.pdf The proton] | author=Moore, C. E. "et al." | journal=Journal of Chemical Education | volume=62(10) | year=1985 | pages=859–860 ] [ cite journal | author=Grove, W. R. | title=VII. On the electro-chemical polarity of gases | journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society | volume=142(I) | pages=87 | year=1852 ]Also in the 1840s, Grove collaborated with Gassiot at the London Institution on
photography and theDaguerreotype [ cite journal | author=Grove, W. B. [sic] | title=On a voltaic process for etching Daguerreotype plates | journal=Proceedings of the London Electrical Society | year=1843 | pages=94–99 ] andcalotype [Grove, W. G. "On photography", "British Association Report, for 1844", part 2, 37] processes.Wood (1975)] Inspired by his legal practice, he presciently observed:In 1852, he discovered striae, dark bands that occur in
electrical breakdown , and investigated their character, presenting his work in an 1858 Bakerian lecture. [Harrison, W. J. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/10439 Gassiot, John Peter (1797–1877)] ", rev. Iwan Rhys Morus, "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed 5 August 2007 (subscription required)]"On the Correlation of Physical Forces"
In 1846, Grove published "On The Correlation of Physical Forces" [ cite book | author=Grove, W. R. | title=The Correlation of Physical Forces | location=London | publisher=Longmans, Green | year=1874 | edition=6th ed. ] [Early science terminology warning] in which he anticipated the general theory of the
conservation of energy that was more famously put forward inHermann von Helmholtz ' "Über die Erhaltung der Kraft" ("On the Conservation of Force") published the following year. His 1846Bakerian lecture relied heavily on his theory. ["On certain phenomena of voltaic ignition and the decomposition of water into its constituent gases by heat"]James Prescott Joule had been inspired to his investigations into themechanical equivalent of heat by comparing themass ofcoal consumed in asteam engine with the mass ofzinc consumed in a Grove battery in performing a common quantity of mechanical work. Grove was certainly familiar withWilliam Thomson 's theoretical analysis of Joule's experimental results and Thomson's immature suggestions of conservation of energy. Thomson's public champion,Peter Guthrie Tait was initially a supporter of Grove's ideas but later dismissed them with some coolness. [Smith (1998) "pp"60, 176]Though Groves's ideas were forerunners of the theory of the conservation of energy, they were qualitative, unlike the quantitative investigations of Joule or
Julius Robert von Mayer . His ideas also shaded into broader speculation, such as the nature ofOlbers's paradox , which he may have discovered for himself rather than through a direct knowledge.Crowther (1965) "pp"92-93]Grove also speculated that other forms of energy were yet to be discovered "as far certain as certain can be of any future event."
Royal Society politics
Straight from his becoming a Fellow in 1840, Grove was a critic of the
Royal Society , deprecating itscronyism and the "de facto " rule of a few influential Council members. In 1843, he published an anonymous attack on the scientific establishment in "Blackwood's Magazine " [ cite journal | author= [Anon. - Grove, W. R.] | title= [http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/ilej/image1.pl?item=page&seq=1&size=1&id=bm.1843.10.x.54.336.x.514 Physical Science in England] | journal=Blackwood’s Magazine | volume=54 | year=1843 | pages=514–25 ] and called for reform. Grove was elected to the Council of theRoyal Society in 1846 and was heavily involved in the ongoing campaign to modernise its charter in addition to campaigning for the public funding of science.A charter committee had already been established and Grove joined it. Groves's fellow campaigners included Gassiot,
Leonard Horner andEdward Sabine and their principal objectives were for the number of new Fellows to be subject to an annual limit and limitation of the power of nomination to the Council. The reformers' success in 1847 led to the resignation of several key conservatives and the establishment of Grove and his associates with domination of the Council. To celebrate, the reformers founded thePhilosophical Club .Though the Philosophical Club succeeded in ensuring that
William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse was appointed next President, they failed to get Grove appointed as Secretary. Grove continued to campaign for a single home for all the scientific institutions atBurlington House .Legal career
From 1846, Grove started to reduce his scientific work in favour of his professional practice at the bar, his young family providing the financial motivation, becoming a
QC in 1853. The bar provided him with the opportunity to combine his legal and scientific knowledge, in particular inpatent law [Anon.] (2001) "Grove, Sir William Robert", "Encyclopaedia Britannica " Deluxe edition, CD-ROM] and in the unsuccessful defence ofpoison er William Palmer in 1856. [cite book | author=Knott, G. H. | title=The Trial of William Palmer | year=1912 | edition=Notable English Trials | location=Edinburgh | publisher=William Hodge & Co. | pages=319 ] He was especially involved in thephotography patent cases of "Beard v. Egerton " (1845-1849), [(1849) 8 CB 165, 19 LJCP 36, 13 Jur 1004, 13 LTOS 426] on behalf of Egerton, and of "Talbot v. Laroche " (1854). In the latter case, Grove appeared forWilliam Fox Talbot in his unsuccessful attempt to assert hiscalotype patent.Grove served on a
Royal Commission onpatent law and on theMetropolitan Commission of Sewers .Crowther (1965) "p."98]He was made judge of the Court of Common Pleas in 1871 and appointed to the
Queen's Bench in 1880. He was to have presided at theCornwall andDevon winterassizes of 1884 which would have entailed him trying the notorioussurvival cannibalism case of "R v. Dudley and Stephens ". However, at the last minute he was substituted byBaron Huddleston , possibly because Huddleston was seen as more reliable in ensuring the guilty verdict that the judiciary required. Grove did sit as one of five judges on the final determination of the case in the Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench. [* cite book | title=Cannibalism and the Common Law: The Story of the Tragic Last Voyage of the Mignonette and the Strange Legal Proceedings to Which It Gave Rise | author=Simpson, A. W. B. | publisher=University of Chicago Press | location=Chicago | year=1984 | id=ISBN 9780226759425 | pages="p."198 ]He was a careful, painstaking and accurate judge, courageous and not afraid to assert an independent judicial opinion. However, he was fallible in patent cases where he was prone to become over interested in the technology in question and to be distracted by questioning the litigants as to potential improvements in their devices, even going so far as to suggest his own innovations. He retired from the bench in 1887. His portrait was painted by
Helen Donald-Smith 1890s.Family
Groves's daughter Imogen Emily (died 1886) married
William Edward Hall in 1866. [ Holland, T. E. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/11997 Hall, William Edward (1835–1894)] ", rev. Catherine Pease-Watkin, "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, , accessed 17 August 2007] His daughter Anna married Herbert Augustus Hills (1837–1907) and was mother toEdmond Herbert Grove-Hills ("Colonel Rivers"), [ Hutchins, R. (2006) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/57907 Hills, Edmond Herbert Grove- (1864–1922)’] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, online edn, accessed 17 August 2007] andJohn Waller Hills [Green, E. H. H. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/45568 Hills, John Waller (1867–1938)] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed 17 August 2007]Grove, his health perpetually troubled, died at home in
London after a long illness. He was buried atKensal Green Cemetery .Fact|date=December 2007Honours
*
Royal Society :
**Fellow, (1840);
**Royal Medal , (1847);
*Vice-President of theRoyal Institution (1844);
*Knighthood , (1872);
*Privy Councillor (1887);
*Thelunar crater "Grove" is named for him. [cite book | author=Cocks, E. E. & Cocks, J. C. | year=1995 | title=Who's Who on the Moon: A Biographical Dictionary of Lunar Nomenclature | publisher=Tudor Publishers | id=ISBN 0-936389-27-3 ]
* [http://www.grovefuelcell.com The Grove Fuel Cell Symposium and Exhibition] is organised byElsevier ee also
*
Timeline of hydrogen technologies Notes
Bibliography
*Obituaries:
**"The Times ",3 August 1896
**"Nature",27 August 1896
**"Law Journal",8 August 1896 ----
* cite book | author=Bonney, T. G. | year=1919 | title=Annals of the Philosophical Club of the Royal Society Written from its Minute Books | location=London | publisher=Macmillan
* cite journal | author=Cantor, G. | year=1976 | title=William Robert Grove, the Correlation of Forces, and the conservation of energy | journal=Centaurus | volume=19 | pages= 273–90 | doi=10.1111/j.1600-0498.1975.tb00327.x
* cite journal | author=Cooper, M. L. & Hall, V. M. D. | title=William Robert Grove and the London Institution, 1841–1845 | journal=Annals of Science | volume=39 | year=1982 | pages=229–54 | doi=10.1080/00033798200200221
* cite book | title=Statesmen of Science | author=Crowther, J. G. | location=London | year=1965 | publisher=Cresset Press | pages=77-101
* cite book | author=Edwards, E. | title=Portraits of Men of Eminence in Literature, Science and the Arts, with Biographical Memoirs | editor=L. Reeve and E. Walford | edition=6 vols | year=1863–7
*Lyons, H. G. (1938) "Notes and Records of the Royal Society London", 1:28–31
* cite journal | author=Morus, I. R. | title=Correlation and control: William Robert Grove and the construction of a new philosophy of scientific reform | journal=Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science | volume=22 | year=1991 | pages=589–621 | doi=10.1016/0039-3681(91)90035-Q
*— (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/11685 Grove, Sir William Robert (1811–1896)] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, online edn, May 2005, accessed25 July 2007 ODNBsub
*
*Vernon, K. D. C. (1966) "Proceedings of the Royal Institution of Great Britain", 41:250–80
* cite journal | author=Webb, R. K. | title=Sir William Robert Grove (1811–1896) and the origins of the fuel cell | journal=Journal of the Royal Institute of Chemistry | volume=85 | year=1961 | pages=291 | doi=10.1039/ji9618500291
* cite book | title=The Calotype Patent Lawsuit of Talbot v. Laroche 1854 | author=Wood, R. D. | publisher=privately published | location=Bromley, Kent | year=1975 | url=http://www.midleykent.fsnet.co.uk/laroche/TalbotvLaroche.htm | id=ISBN 0-9504377-0-0External links
* [http://www.corrosion-doctors.org/Biographies/GroveBio.htm Sir William Grove (1811–1896)]
* [http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=3282&inst_id=17 Archive of the Royal Institution]
* [http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/darwinletters/namedefs/namedef-2007.html Darwin Correspondence Project] - correspondence withCharles Darwin
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