All Resource articles – Page 73
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On This Day – Sep 27 : Ciamician, solar energy
He predicted that humans would one day be able to directly convert sunlight into energy, stored in a ‘fuel’ as an alternative to fossil fuels. Today, photovoltaic solar panels can produce electricity, but scientists are also working towards other methods of harnessing the sun’s power, such as solar fuels that mimic photosynthesis.
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On This Day - Nov 27 : Lars Onsager was born
He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1968 for his work on a general theory of irreversible chemical processes. This is known as Onsager’s reciprocal relations, which can be described as a universal natural law, and holds great scope and importance in physics and chemistry.
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On This Day - Dec 27 : Louis Pasteur was born
He discovered the role of bacteria in fermentation, proved the germ theory of disease and invented the process of pasteurisation. Pasteur is considered the founder of microbiology.
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On This Day - Feb 26 : Otto Wallach died
He devised a systematic analysis method to determine the molecular structure of the terpenes found in fragrant essential oils. Up until this point, few terpenes had been isolated in their pure form and structural information was very limited.
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On This Day - Mar 26 : Christian Anfinsen was born
He received half of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1972 for research on ribonuclease and amino acid sequences. He identified the connection between the molecular structure of ribonuclease and its biological function.
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On This Day - Apr 26 : Chernobyl nuclear disaster
The Chernobyl accident was the result of a flawed reactor design that was operated with inadequately trained personnel. The resulting steam explosion and fires released at least 5% of the radioactive reactor core into the atmosphere.
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On This Day - May 26 : Ernest Solvay died
He developed the industrial process to create soda ash (anhydrous sodium carbonate). Solvay’s process uses brine (salt water) and limestone (calcium carbonate) to create large amounts of soda ash, which can be used in glass and soap manufacturing.
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On This Day – Jul 26 : The Curies married
From 1896 the two physicists worked together researching radioactivity until Pierre was tragically run over by a horse-drawn carriage in 1906. In 1898, they discovered the elements polonium (Po) and radium (Ra).
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On This Day – Aug 26 : Antoine Lavoisier born
He is known as the founder of modern chemistry. Lavosier named both hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O), and introduced new chemical nomenclature. He also discovered that when matter changes state and shape, it always has the same mass.
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On This Day - Nov 26 : Discovery of niobium
Now known as niobium (Nb), this metal element is very similar to tantalum (Ta), and was in fact confused with it during parts of the 19th century. This lead to it being renamed niobium after the daughter of Tantalus in Greek mythology.
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On This Day - Feb 25 : Ida Noddack was born
Noddack co-discovered rhenium (Re) while working with her future husband Walter Noddack. They named the element after the river Rhine. Rhenium is one of the rarest metals on earth and is used in filaments and for catalysts in the chemicals industry.
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On This Day - Mar 25 : HIV has no latent period
These papers showed that HIV-positive patients who had not developed AIDS still showed high levels of the HIV virus in their lymphatic system, implying that the virus actively replicates even when no symptoms are detected.
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On This Day - Apr 25 : Wolfgang Pauli was born
He is most famous for the Pauli “exclusion principle”, which states that in an atom no two electrons can occupy the same quantum state simultaneously. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1945 for his work.
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On This Day - May 25 : Pieter Zeeman was born
He studied the influence of magnetism on a source of light, and found that each of the lines in the light spectrum split into several other lines. This effect, known as the “Zeeman Effect”, has important applications such as in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR).
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On This Day - Jun 25 : Walther Nernst was born
He was a pioneer in physical chemistry. Nernst is best known for his theories relating to the calculation of chemical affinity, which is the ability of chemicals to form compounds with one another. He won the 1920 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
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On This Day – Aug 25 : Hans Adolf Krebs was born
He won the 1953 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering a series of chemical reactions known as the Krebs cycle. This forms part of the process of respiration in living organisms through which energy is generated from food and oxygen (O).
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On This Day – Sep 25 : Separation of iron
The method from this English chemist, which used water, ammonia and muriatic acid, was simpler than other popular methods of extracting manganese metal from its ore. Manganese is used in important alloys, and one of its oxides, permanganate, is used in analysis such as redox titrations.
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On This Day - Oct 25 : Marjorie Vold was born
She was one of the top female colloid chemists, writing three major science texts and scores of journal articles despite suffering from multiple sclerosis for the last 35 years of her life. She even continued her chemistry calculations from a hospital bed!
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On This Day - Nov 25 : Adolph Kolbe died
He discovered a method for the electrolysis of the salts of fatty acids, known as Kolbe electrolysis. He also identified the Kolbe synthesis reaction, which is a method of making salicylic acid – the main component of Aspirin.
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On This Day - Dec 25 : William Gregor was born
He discovered the element titanium (Ti), which he originally named manaccanite after the Manaccan valley where he found it. A few years later, it was rediscovered by Martin Klaproth who thought it was a new element and gave it the current name of titanium.