- Theodor Grotthuss
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Freiherr Christian Johann Dietrich Theodor von Grotthuß
Theodor von GrotthußBorn January 20, 1785
Leipzig, Electorate of SaxonyDied March 26, 1822 (aged 37)
Geddutz now Gedučiai, LithuaniaResidence Geddutz, Lithuania Fields electrochemistry photochemistry Known for explanation of electrolysis by the Grotthuss mechanism Freiherr Christian Johann Dietrich Theodor von Grotthuss (January 20, 1785 – March 26, 1822) was a German chemist known for establishing the first theory of electrolysis in 1806 and formulating the first law of photochemistry in 1817.[1] His theory of electrolysis is considered the first description of the so-called Grotthuss mechanism.[2]
Contents
Life and work
Grotthuss was born in 1785 in Leipzig, Germany, during an extended stay of his parents away from their home in northern Lithuania. He showed interest in natural sciences and went to study first in Leipzig and later in Paris at the Ecole Polytechnique. Several renowned scientists taught at the Ecole Polytechnique at that time, including Antoine François, comte de Fourcroy, Claude Louis Berthollet and Louis Nicolas Vauquelin. Because of some tensions in the relations between Russia and France, Grotthuss had to leave for Italy where he stayed at Naples for one year. The discovery of the first electric cell in 1800 by Alessandro Volta provided the scientists a source of electricity which was used in various laboratory experiments around Europe. The electrolysis of water, acids and salt solutions was reported, but a good explanation was missing. Grotthuss actively contributed to this area both in terms of electrolysis experiments and their interpretation. During his stay in Italy, he published his work on electrolysis in 1806.[1] His idea that the charge is not transported by the movement of particles but by breaking and reformation of bonds was the first basically correct concept for the charge transport in electrolytes; it still valid for the charge transport in water, and the current proton hopping mechanism is a modified version of the original Grotthuss mechanism.[3]
The following two years Grotthuss spent in Rome, some other Italian cities, and Paris, and then went back to Russia via Munich and Vienna. From 1808 on he lived at the estate of his mother in northern Lithuania. There he conducted research on electricity and light with the limited research equipment he could assemble. Grotthuss committed suicide in the spring of 1822 during a depression caused by health problems.[4]
See also
References
- ^ a b de Grotthuss, C.J.T. (1806). "Sur la décomposition de l'eau et des corps qu'elle tient en dissolution à l'aide de l'électricité galvanique". Ann. Chim. (Paris) 58: 54–73.
- ^ Marx, Dominik (2006). "Proton Transfer 200 Years after von Grotthuss: Insights from Ab Initio Simulations". ChemPhysChem 7 (9): 1848–1870. doi:10.1002/cphc.200600128. PMID 16929553.
- ^ Cukierman, Samuel (2006). "Et tu Grotthuss!". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1757 (8): 876–878. doi:10.1016/j.bbabio.2005.12.001. PMID 16414007.
- ^ Morachevskii, A. G. (2005). "Theodor Grotthuss (to 220th Anniversary of His Birthday". Russian Journal of Applied Chemistry 78 (1): 166–168. doi:10.1007/s11167-005-0250-y.
Further reading
- Stradins, J. (1975). "Theodore von Grotthuss, 1785-1822". Gesnerus 32 (3-4): 322–8. PMID 1107157.
- Krikštopaitis, Juozas Al. (PDF). In the Wake of Volta’s Challenge: The Electrolysis Theory of Theodor Grotthuss, 1805. http://ppp.unipv.it/Collana/Pages/Libri/Saggi/Nuova%20Voltiana5_PDF/p__083-090.pdf.
- Ostwald, Wilhelm (1896). Electrochemistry History and Theory. 1. Leipzig: Verlag von Veit and Company. - See pages 296 – 306 and 342 – 344 in volume 1 of the 1980 English translation (Amerind Publishing Company, New Delhi, N. P. Date, translator)
- Ronge, Grete: Grotthuß, Theodor Freiherr von. In: Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB). Band 7. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1966, p. 171 f. (German)
- Lommel (1879) (in German). "Grotthuß, Theodor Freiherr von". In Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). 9. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 767.
Categories:- 1785 births
- 1822 deaths
- People from Leipzig
- German chemists
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