- William Henry Perkin
Infobox Scientist
name = Sir William Henry Perkin
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caption = William Perkin (1838-1907)
birth_date =March 12 ,1838
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death_date =July 14 ,1907
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field =chemistry
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known_for =aniline dye,mauveine ,Perkin triangle
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prizes =Royal Medal ,Davy Medal ,Perkin Medal
footnotes =Sir William Henry Perkin, FRS (
March 12 ,1838 ndashJuly 14 ,1907 ) was an Englishchemist best known for his discovery, at the age of 18, of the firstaniline dye,mauveine .Perkin was born and brought up in the
East End of London . At the age of 15, he entered London'sRoyal College of Chemistry , studying underAugust Wilhelm von Hofmann . He lived onCable Street in East London, where he would often perform experiments. It was here that he discovered that aniline could be partly transformed into a crude mixture that when extracted withalcohol gave an intense purple colour. This Perkin and von Hofmann commercialized as mauveine. Perkin's discovery and sales resulted in atrade war , as competitors released variations of his initial dye.In 1879, Perkin received the
Royal Society 'sRoyal Medal , followed by the Society'sDavy Medal in 1889. He was knighted in 1906, the same year he received the firstPerkin Medal , established to commemorate the fifty years since his discovery. He died the following year ofpneumonia andappendicitis .Early years
William Perkin was born in
East End of London , the youngest of seven children. His father was a successful carpenter. His mother, Sarah, was of Scottish descent but moved to East London as a child. [UXL Encyclopedia of World Biography (2003). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5229/is_2003/ai_n19152997] Accessed 18 March 2008.] He was baptised in the parish church of St. Paul's onThe Highway , which had been connected to such luminaries asJames Cook ,Jane Randolph Jefferson (mother ofThomas Jefferson ) andJohn Wesley . He attended the City of London School where he was taught by Thomas Hall who fostered his scientific talent and encouraged him to pursue a chemical career. [UXL Encyclopedia of World Biography (2003). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5229/is_2003/ai_n19152997] Accessed 18 March 2008.] A plaque has been placed on Gosling House in Cable Street, Shadwell by theStepney Historical Trust commemorating the place where William was brought up. The plaque was unveiled by William Perkin's grandson, a shareholder in ICI, Professor John Leaback, Councillor Albert Lilley were there and the presentation was held at Tobacco Dock in the Highway. The Chief Executive Officer of Tower Hamlets, Ian Alton and the Mayor of tower Hamlets, Barry Blandford were also in attendance.Discovery of mauveine
In 1853, at the precocious age of 15, Perkin entered the Royal College of Chemistry in London (now part of
Imperial College London ), where he began his studies under the illustriousAugust Wilhelm von Hofmann . ["Encyclopedia Britannica", 1911 edition. [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_William_Henry_Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.] At this time, chemistry was still in a quite primitive state. Although atomic theory was accepted, the major elements discovered, and techniques to analyze the proportions of the elements in many compounds were in place, it was still a difficult proposition to determine the arrangement of the elements in compounds. Hofmann had published a hypothesis on how it might be possible to synthesizequinine , an expensive natural product in much demand for the treatment ofmalaria . [UXL Encyclopedia of World Biography (2003). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5229/is_2003/ai_n19152997] Accessed 18 March 2008.] Perkin, who had by then become one of Hofmann's assistants, embarked on a series of experiments to try to achieve this end. During theEaster break in 1856, when Hofmann had returned for a visit to his native Germany, Perkin tried some further experiments in his crude laboratory in his apartment on the top floor of his home inCable Street in East London. It was here that he made his great discovery, thataniline could be partly transformed into a crude mixture that when extracted with alcohol gave an intense purple colour. ["Encyclopedia Britannica", 1911 edition. [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_William_Henry_Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.] Perkin, who had an interest in painting and photography, immediately became interested in the result, and carried out further trials with his friend Arthur Church and his brother Thomas. Since this was off the track of the quinine work he had been assigned, they carried out the experiments in a hut in Perkin's garden, in secret from Hofmann. Ablue plaque marks the site of their home inCable Street , by the junction with St David Lane ( [http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/rzepa/wapping/wapping-Pages/Perkin's_lab.kml link] to Google Earth placemark).They satisfied themselves that they might be able to scale up the discovery and commercialize it as a dye, which they called
mauveine . Their initial experiments indicated that it dyed silk in a way that was stable against washing and light. They sent some samples to a dye works in Perth, Scotland, and received a very promising reply from the general manager of the company, Robert Pullar. Perkin filed for a patent in August, 1856, while he was still only 18. ["Encyclopedia Britannica", 1911 edition. [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_William_Henry_Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.] At the time, all dyes in use for colouring cloth were extracts of natural products, and many of them were expensive and labour-intensive to produce. Many were especially wanting in terms of stability, or fastness. The colour purple, which had been used since ancient times as a mark of aristocracy and prestige, was especially expensive and difficult -- known asTyrian purple , it came from the glandular mucus of certain molluscs. The process to produce it was variable and complicated, so Perkin and his brother understood that they were onto a possible substitute that could be made into a commercial success. [UXL Encyclopedia of World Biography (2003). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5229/is_2003/ai_n19152997] Accessed 18 March 2008.]Perkin could not have chosen a better time or place for his discovery. England was the cradle of the
Industrial Revolution , largely driven by advances in the production of textiles, the science of chemistry had advanced to the point that it could have a major impact on industrial processes andcoal tar , the major source of his raw material was being produced in abundance as a waste product of the production of coal gas and coke. [Michigan State University, Department of Chemistry website. [http://www.chemistry.msu.edu/Portraits/PortraitsHH_Detail.asp?HH_LName=Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.]Inventing the dye was one thing, raising the capital, manufacturing it in quantity cheaply, adapting it to cotton, getting acceptance from commercial dyers, and creating demand for it in the public was something else. Perkin was active in all of these areas. In a whirlwind of activity, he got his father to put up the capital, his brothers to partner in the creation of a factory, he invented a mordant for cotton, became a one man technical service operation, and publicized it in the marketplace. He was helped in the latter by the adoption of a similar colour in France by Napoleon's
Empress Eugénie and Queen Victoria, and by the adoption of the fabric-hungrycrinoline , or hooped-skirt. Everything seemed to "fall into place" through hard work and a little luck too. He became rich. [UXL Encyclopedia of World Biography (2003). [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5229/is_2003/ai_n19152997] Accessed 18 March 2008.]The true significance of Perkin's work was in showing that science and common everyday business and
consumerism could co-exist. Even at the age of 18, he demonstrated chemistry could be extremely lucrative, for many scientists at that time were concerned solely with academia.After Perkin's discovery, innumerable new aniline dyes appeared (some discovered by Perkin himself), and the factories required to produce them were constructed all across Europe, launching what amounted to an international
trade war in fabrics and dyes.Later years
William Perkin continued active research in organic chemistry for the rest of his life. He discovered and marketed other synthetic dyes including "Britannia Violet" and "Perkin's Green". He later found syntheses for
coumarin , one of the first syntheticperfume s, andcinnamic acid , this latter preparation becoming known as thePerkin reaction . [Michigan State University, Department of Chemistry website. [http://www.chemistry.msu.edu/Portraits/PortraitsHH_Detail.asp?HH_LName=Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.] Local lore has it that the colour of the nearbyGrand Union Canal changed from week to week depending on the activity of Perkin'sGreenford dyeworks. In 1869, Perkin found a method to commercially producealizarin , a brilliant red dye then produced from themadder plant, fromanthracene , but the German chemical companyBASF patented the same process one day before he did. ["Encyclopedia Britannica", 1911 edition. [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_William_Henry_Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.] Over the next few years, Perkin found his research and development efforts increasingly eclipsed by the German chemical industry, and in 1874, he sold his factory and retired from business, already a very wealthy man.Perkin received many honors in his lifetime. In 1879, he received the
Royal Society 'sRoyal Medal , followed, in 1889, by itsDavy Medal . He wasknight ed in 1906, the same year he was awarded the firstPerkin Medal , established to commemorate the fifteth anniversary of his discovery ofmauveine . ["Encyclopedia Britannica", 1911 edition. [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_William_Henry_Perkin] Accessed 18 March 2008.] Today it is widely acknowledged as the highest honour in American industrial chemistry and has been awarded annually by the American section of theSociety of Chemical Industry to many inspiring and gifted chemists.Perkin died in 1907 of pneumonia and appendicitis.
References
Further reading
* Garfield, Simon "Mauve: How One Man Invented a Color that Changed the World", ISBN 0-393-02005-3 (2000).
*:Garfield relates how William Perkin's accidental discovery of the color mauve – and a method to mass-produce it – created new interest in the industrial applications of chemistry research.
* Travis, Anthony S. "Perkin, Sir William Henry (1838-1907)" in the "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography", edited C. Mathew et al.Oxford University Press : 2004. ISBN 0-19-861411-X.
*cite journal |title=Sir William Henry Perkin: a review of his life, work and legacy |author=Holme I |journal=Coloration Technology |year=2006 |volume=122 |issue=5 |pages=235–251 |doi=10.1111/j.1478-4408.2006.00041.x
*cite journal |title=Perkin and the Dyestuffs Industry in Britain |author=Brightman R. |journal=Nature |year=1956 |volume=177 |issue=4514 |pages=805–856 |doi=10.1038/177815a0Persondata
NAME= Perkin, Sir William Henry
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=chemistry
DATE OF BIRTH=March 12 ,1838
PLACE OF BIRTH=
DATE OF DEATH=July 14 ,1907
PLACE OF DEATH=
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