- Augustus Matthiessen
Infobox_Scientist
name = Augustus Matthiessen
image_width =
caption = Augustus Matthiessen
birth_date = birth date|1831|1|2
birth_place =London United Kingdom
residence =
nationality = British
death_date = death date and age|1870|10|6|1831|1|2
death_place =London United Kingdom |field =
work_institution =Mary’s Hospital Medical School St. Bartholomew’s Hospital
alma_mater =University of Gießen
doctoral_advisor =Johann Heinrich Buff
doctoral_students =
influences =Robert Bunsen Gustav Kirchhoff August Wilhelm von Hofmann
influenced =
known_for = isolation ofcalcium andstrontium ; Matthiessen's rule
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Augustus Matthiessen, FRS (
2 January 1831 ,London –6 October 1870 , London), the son of a merchant, was a Britishchemist andphysicist who obtained his PhD in Germany at theUniversity of Gießen in 1852 withJohann Heinrich Buff . He then worked withRobert Bunsen at theUniversity of Heidelberg from 1853 to 1856. His work in this period included the isolation ofcalcium andstrontium in their pure states. He then returned to London and studied withAugust Wilhelm von Hofmann from 1857 at theRoyal College of Chemistry , and set up his own research laboratory at 1 Torrington Place,Russell Square , London. He was elected a Fellow of theRoyal Society (FRS) in 1861. He worked as a lecturer on chemistry at St Mary's Hospital, London, from 1862 to 1868, and then atSt Bartholomew's Hospital , London, from 1868. His research was chiefly on the constitution ofalloys andopium alkaloid s. He contributed to both physics and chemistry. (Please see references below.) For his work on metals and alloys, he was awarded the Royal Society'sRoyal Medal in 1869.Matthiessen committed suicide in 1870 under "severe nervous strain".
Legacy
The
Matthiessen's rule for carrier mobility probably originated from Augustus Matthiessen's study of electrical conduction of metals and alloys. (Please see references below. Note: In Matthiessen's time, the concept of "mobility" was not established yet. The modern form of Matthiessen's rule forelectron mobility (or hole mobility) is actually an extension of Matthiessen's work in the 19th century by subsequent scientists.)In 1997, Rudolf de Bruyn Ouboter briefly mentioned Matthiessen's 1864 paper in a figure inside his article aboutHeike Kamerlingh Onnes 's discovery of superconductivity (Scientific American, March 1997).References
*Augustus Matthiessen, "On the electric conducting power of the metals", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 148 (1858), pp. 383-387.
*Augustus Matthiessen and Carol Vogt, "On the influence of temperature on the electric conductive-power of thallium and iron", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 153 (1863), pp. 369-383.
*Augustus Matthiessen and Carol Vogt, "On the influence of temperature on the electric conductive-power of alloys", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 154 (1864), pp. 167-200.
*A. Matthiessen and G.C. Foster, "Researches into the chemical constitution of narcotine and its products of decomposition Part I", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 153 (1863), pp. 345-367.
*A. Matthiessen and G.C. Foster, "Researches into the chemical constitution of narcotine and its products of decomposition Part II", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 157 (1867), pp. 657-667.
*Augustus Matthiessen, "Researches into the chemical constitution of narcotine and its products of decomposition Part III", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 159 (1869), pp. 661-665.
*Augustus Matthiessen and C.R.A. Wright, "Researches into the chemical constitution of narcotine and its products of decomposition Part IV", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 159 (1869), pp. 667-678.
*Rudolf de Bruyn Ouboter, "Heike Kamerlingh Onnes 's discovery of superconductivity", Scientific American, March 1997, pp. 98-103. (A figure mentioning Matthiessen's 1864 paper appears on page 102.)ources
*Entry for Augustus Matthiessen in
Dictionary of National Biography (1903)
* [http://royalsociety.org/DServe/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=((text)='Matthiessen') Entry for Matthiesson] in the Royal Society's Library and Archive catalogue's details of Fellows (accessed 20 April 2008)
* [http://www.rsc.org/delivery/_ArticleLinking/DisplayArticleForFree.cfm?doi=JS8712400605&JournalCode=JS Obituary of Augustus Matthiessen in Meetings of the Royal Society] (pp 615-617)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.