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{{Short description|French chemist (1817–1884)}}
{{Infobox Scientist
{{Infobox scientist
|name = Charles-Adolphe Wurtz
|box_width =
|name = Adolphe Wurtz
|image =Wurtz Charles-Adolphe.jpg
|image =Charles-Adolphe Wurtz.jpg
|image_size =150px
|image_size =240px
|caption = Charles Adolphe Wurtz (1817–1884)
|caption =
|birth_date = 26 November 1817
|birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1817|11|26}}
|birth_place =
|birth_place = [[Wolfisheim]], near [[Strasbourg]], France
|death_date = 10 May 1884
|death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1884|5|10|1817|11|26}}
|nationality = France
|death_place = [[Paris]], France
|nationality = French
|ethnicity =
|ethnicity =
|field = [[Chemistry]]
|field = [[Chemistry]]
|work_institutions =
|work_institutions =
|alma_mater =
|alma_mater = [[University of Strasbourg]]
|doctoral_advisor =
|doctoral_advisor = Amédée Cailliot
|academic_advisors = [[Justus von Liebig]]
|doctoral_students =
|doctoral_students = [[Charles Friedel]]<br>[[Armand Gautier (chemist)|Armand Gautier]]
|notable_students = [[Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff]]<br>[[Alexander Zaytsev (chemist)|Alexander Zaytsev]]
|known_for = [[Wurtz reaction]]
|known_for = [[Wurtz reaction]]
|awards = [[Faraday Lectureship Prize]] {{small|(1879)}}<br>[[Copley Medal]] {{small|(1881)}}
}}
}}
'''Adolphe Wurtz''' (26 November 181710 May 1884) was an [[Alsace|Alsatian]] French [[chemist]]. He is best remembered for his decades-long advocacy for the atomic theory and for ideas about the structures of chemical compounds, against the skeptical opinions of chemists such as [[Marcellin Berthelot]] and [[Etienne Henri Sainte-Claire Deville]]. He is well known by organic chemists for the [[Wurtz reaction]], to form carbon-carbon bonds by reacting alkyl halides with sodium, and for his discoveries of [[ethylamine]], [[ethylene glycol]], and the [[aldol reaction]]. Wurtz was also an influential writer and educator.
'''Charles Adolphe Wurtz''' ({{IPA|fr|vyʁts|lang}}; 26 November 1817{{spnd}}10 May 1884) was an [[Alsace|Alsatian]] French [[chemist]]. He is best remembered for his decades-long advocacy for the atomic theory and for ideas about the structures of chemical compounds, against the skeptical opinions of chemists such as [[Marcellin Berthelot]] and [[Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville]]. He is well known by organic chemists for the [[Wurtz reaction]], to form carbon-carbon bonds by reacting alkyl halides with sodium, and for his discoveries of [[ethylamine]], [[ethylene glycol]], and the [[aldol reaction]]. Wurtz was also an influential writer and educator.


==Life==
==Life==


Adolphe Wurtz (he never used the name "Charles") was born in [[Strasbourg]], where his father, Johann Jacob (Jean Jacques) Wurtz, was a [[Lutheran]] [[pastor]] in the nearby town of [[Wolfisheim]]. His wife, Adolphe's mother, Sophie Kreiss, died in 1878.
Adolphe Wurtz (he never used the name "Charles") was born at [[Wolfisheim]], near [[Strasbourg]], where his father was [[Lutheran]] [[pastor]]. Strasbourg was and is the capital of the French border province of [[Alsace]], which had been part of [[Germany]] until the seventeenth century; most residents spoke both French and Alsatian, a dialect of German. Consequently, the German influence on Wurtz was strong. When he left the [[Protestant]] [[gymnasium (school)|gymnasium]] at Strasbourg in 1834, his father allowed him to study [[medicine]] as next best to [[theology]]. He devoted himself specially to the chemical side of his profession with such success that in 1839 he was appointed Chef des travaux chimiques at the Strasbourg faculty of medicine. For the summer semester of 1842 he studied under [[Justus von Liebig]] at the [[University of Giessen]]. After graduating from Strasbourg as M.D. in 1843, with a thesis on [[serum albumin|albumin]] and [[fibrin]], he went to Paris, where he worked in [[Jean Baptiste Dumas]]'s private [[laboratory]]. In 1845, he became assistant to Dumas at the [[École de Médecine]], and four years later began to give lectures on [[organic chemistry]] in his place. As there was no laboratory at his disposal at the Ecole de Médecine, he opened a private one in 1850 in the Rue Garanciere; but three years later the building was sold, and the laboratory had to be abandoned. In 1850, he received the professorship of chemistry at the new [[Institut National Agronomique Paris-Grignon]] at [[Versailles]], but the Institut was abolished in 1852. In the following year the chair of "pharmacy and organic chemistry" at the faculty of medicine became vacant by the resignation of Dumas, and the chair of "medical chemistry" by the death of [[Mathieu Orfila]]. Both of these chairs were now abolished, and Wurtz was appointed to the newly defined post of "organic and mineral chemistry". (At the same time, a new chair devoted exclusively to pharmacy was awarded to [[Eugene Soubeiran]]). In 1866, Wurtz undertook the duties of dean of the faculty of medicine. In this position, he exerted himself to secure the rearrangement and reconstruction of the buildings devoted to scientific instruction, urging that in the provision of properly equipped teaching laboratories France was much behind Germany (see his report ''Les Hautes Etudes pratiques dans les universités allemandes'', 1870).


When he left the [[Protestant]] [[gymnasium (school)|gymnasium]] at Strasbourg in 1834, his father allowed him to study [[medicine]] as next best to [[theology]]. He devoted himself specially to the chemical side of his profession with such success that in 1839 he was appointed {{lang|fr|Chef des travaux chimiques}} at the Strasbourg faculty of medicine.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=859}} For the summer semester of 1842 he studied under [[Justus von Liebig]] at the [[University of Giessen]]. After graduating from Strasbourg as M.D. in 1843, with a thesis on [[serum albumin|albumin]] and [[fibrin]], he went to Paris, where he first was referred by [[Jean Baptiste Dumas]] to [[Antoine Jérôme Balard|Antoine Balard]].<ref>{{Cite book|title = Nationalizing Science: Adolphe Wurtz and the Battle for French Chemistry|last = Rocke|first = Alan|publisher = The MIT Press|year = 2001|location = Cambridge, MA|pages = 103–104}}</ref> His employment with Balard lasted a few months, after which Wurtz began work in Dumas's private [[laboratory]]. In 1845, he became assistant to Dumas at the [[École de Médecine]], and four years later began to give lectures on [[organic chemistry]] in his place.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=859}}
In 1875, resigning the office of dean but retaining the title of honorary dean, he became the first occupant of a new chair of organic chemistry at the [[University of Paris|Sorbonne]], which the government had established due to his influence. However, he had great difficulty in obtaining an adequate laboratory. The buildings of the new Sorbonne that ultimately provided modern scientific laboratories were not completed until 1894, ten years after his death.


As there was no laboratory at his disposal at the Ecole de Médecine, he opened a private one in 1850 in the Rue Garanciere; but three years later the building was sold, and the laboratory had to be abandoned. In 1850, he received the professorship of chemistry at the new [[Institut National Agronomique Paris-Grignon|Institut National Agronomique]] at [[Versailles (city)|Versailles]], but the Institut was abolished in 1852. In the following year the chair of "pharmacy and organic chemistry" at the faculty of medicine became vacant by the resignation of Dumas, and the chair of "medical chemistry" by the death of [[Mathieu Orfila]]. Both of these chairs were now abolished, and Wurtz was appointed to the newly defined post of "organic and mineral chemistry". (At the same time, a new chair devoted exclusively to pharmacy was awarded to [[Eugene Soubeiran]]). In 1866, Wurtz undertook the duties of dean of the faculty of medicine. In this position, he exerted himself to secure the rearrangement and reconstruction of the buildings devoted to scientific instruction, urging that in the provision of properly equipped teaching laboratories France was much behind Germany (see his report ''Les Hautes Etudes pratiques dans les universités allemandes'', 1870).{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=859}}
Wurtz was an honorary member of almost every scientific society in Europe. He was the principal founder of the [[EDP Sciences|Paris Chemical Society]] (1858), was its first secretary and thrice served as its president. In 1880, he was vice-president and in 1881 president of the Academy, which he entered in 1867 in succession to [[Théophile-Jules Pelouze]]. In 1881, Wurtz was elected [[senator for life|life senator]].


In 1875, resigning the office of dean but retaining the title of honorary dean, he became the first occupant of a new chair of organic chemistry at the [[University of Paris|Sorbonne]], which the government had established due to his influence. However, he had great difficulty in obtaining an adequate laboratory.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=859}} The buildings of the new Sorbonne that ultimately provided modern scientific laboratories were not completed until 1894, ten years after his death.
Wurtz died in Paris in 1884, probably of complications due to [[diabetes]], and was buried at [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]]<ref>{{cite journal|author = Williamson, A. W.|title = Obituary of Charles Adophe Wurtz|journal = Proceedings of the Royal Society of London|year = 1885| volume = 38|pages = xxiii – xxxiv}}</ref>

Wurtz was an honorary member of almost every scientific society in Europe. He was the principal founder of the [[Societe Chimique de France|Paris Chemical Society]] (1858), was its first secretary and thrice served as its president. In 1880, he was vice-president and in 1881 president of the [[French Academy of Sciences]], which he entered in 1867 in succession to [[Théophile-Jules Pelouze]]. In 1881, Wurtz was elected [[Senator for life (France)|life senator]].{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=859}} Wurtz's name is one of the [[The 72 names on the Eiffel Tower|72 names inscribed on the Eiffel tower]].{{Citation needed|date=September 2020}}

Wurtz died in [[Paris]] on 10 May 1884, probably of complications due to [[diabetes]], and was buried in the north-east of the city at [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]]. <ref>{{cite journal|author = Williamson, A. W.|title = Obituary of Charles Adolphe Wurtz|journal = Proceedings of the Royal Society|year = 1885| volume = 38|pages = xxiii – xxxiv}}</ref>


==Scientific and academic work==
==Scientific and academic work==
Influenced by such leading figures as Liebig and Dumas, by 1856 Wurtz became a powerful advocate of a reform in chemical theory then being led by [[Charles Gerhardt]] and [[Alexander Williamson]]. This new chemistry of the 1850s took the idea of chemical atoms seriously, adopted atomic weights for the elements that strongly resemble the modern ones, and proposed a unitary schematic plan that opposed the dualistic theory derived from the work of [[Jons Jacob Berzelius]]. Soon thereafter, Wurtz also adopted the new structural theory that was developing from the work of younger chemists such as [[August Kekule]]. However, a kind of skeptical positivism was influential in France during the second half of the nineteenth century, and Wurtz's efforts to gain a favorable hearing for atomism and structuralism in his homeland were largely frustrated.
Influenced by such leading figures as Liebig and Dumas, by 1856 Wurtz became a powerful advocate of a reform in chemical theory then being led by [[Charles Frédéric Gerhardt|Charles Gerhardt]] and [[Alexander William Williamson|Alexander Williamson]]. This new chemistry of the 1850s took the idea of chemical atoms seriously, adopted atomic weights for the elements that strongly resemble the modern ones, and proposed a unitary schematic plan that opposed the dualistic theory derived from the work of [[Jons Jacob Berzelius]]. Soon thereafter, Wurtz also adopted the new structural theory that was developing from the work of younger chemists such as [[August Kekulé]]. However, a kind of skeptical positivism was influential in France during the second half of the nineteenth century, and Wurtz's efforts to gain a favorable hearing for atomism and structuralism in his homeland were largely frustrated.


Wurtz's first published paper was on [[hypophosphorous acid]] (1841), and the continuation of his work on the acids of [[phosphorus]] (1845) resulted in the discovery of [[sulfophosphoric acid]] and [[phosphorus oxychloride]], as well as of [[copper hydride]]. But his original work was mainly in the domain of organic chemistry. Investigation of the [[cyanic ethers]] (1848) yielded a class of substances which opened out a new field in organic chemistry, for, by treating those ethers with caustic [[potash]], he obtained [[methylamine]], the simplest organic derivative of [[ammonia]] (1849), and later (1851) the compound [[urea]]s. In 1855, reviewing the various substances that had been obtained from [[glycerin]], he reached the conclusion that glycerin is a body of [[alcohol]]ic nature formed on the type of three molecules of [[water]], as common alcohol is on that of one, and was thus led (1856) to the discovery of the [[glycol]]s or [[diatonic alcohol]]s, bodies similarly related to the double water type. This discovery he worked out very thoroughly in investigations of [[ethylene oxide]] and the [[polyethylene]] alcohols. The oxidation of the glycols led him to homologues of [[lactic acid]], and a controversy about the constitution of the latter with [[Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe]] resulted in the discovery of many new facts and in a better understanding of the relations between the oxy- and the amido-acids. In 1855, he published work on what is now known as the [[Wurtz reaction]].
Wurtz's first published paper was on [[hypophosphorous acid]] (1841), and the continuation of his work on the acids of [[phosphorus]] (1845) resulted in the discovery of [[sulfophosphoric acid]] and [[phosphorus oxychloride]], as well as of [[copper hydride]]. But his original work was mainly in the domain of organic chemistry. Investigation of the [[cyanic ethers]] (1848) yielded a class of substances which opened out a new field in organic chemistry, for, by treating those ethers with caustic [[potash]], he obtained [[methylamine]], the simplest organic derivative of [[ammonia]] (1849), and later (1851) the compound [[urea]]s. In 1855, reviewing the various substances that had been obtained from [[glycerin]], he reached the conclusion that glycerin is a body of [[Alcohol (chemistry)|alcohol]]ic nature formed on the type of three molecules of water, as common alcohol is on that of one, and was thus led (1856) to the discovery of the [[glycol]]s or diatomic alcohols, bodies similarly related to the double water type. This discovery he worked out very thoroughly in investigations of [[ethylene oxide]] and the [[polyethylene]] alcohols. The oxidation of the glycols led him to homologues of [[lactic acid]], and a controversy about the constitution of the latter with [[Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe]] resulted in the discovery of many new facts and in a better understanding of the relations between the oxy- and the amido-acids.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|pp=859–860}} In 1855, he published work on what is now known as the [[Wurtz reaction]].


In 1867 Wurtz synthesized [[neurine]] by the action of [[trimethylamine]] on [[glycol-chlorhydrin]]. In 1872 he discovered the [[aldol reaction]] and characterized the product as showing the properties of both an alcohol and an [[aldehyde]]. The product was named an [[aldol]], pointing out its double character.<ref name=Wurtz1872c>{{cite journal
In 1867 Wurtz synthesized [[neurine]] by the action of [[trimethylamine]] on [[glycol-chlorhydrin]]. In 1872 he discovered the [[aldol reaction]] and characterized the product as showing the properties of both an alcohol and an [[aldehyde]]. [[Alexander Borodin]] discovered the reaction independently in the same year. The product was named an [[aldol]], pointing out its double character.<ref name=Wurtz1872c>{{cite journal
| author = Wurtz, C. A.
| author = Wurtz, C. A.
| journal = [[Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences|Comp. Rend.]]
| journal = [[Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences|Compt. Rend.]]
| year = 1872
| year = 1872
| title = Sur un aldéhyde-alcool
| title = Sur un aldéhyde-alcool
Line 43: Line 51:
| url = http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k3031q/f1361.table}}</ref> This led to a second confrontation with Kolbe.
| url = http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k3031q/f1361.table}}</ref> This led to a second confrontation with Kolbe.


In addition to this list of some of the new substances he prepared, reference may be made to his work on abnormal vapor densities. While working on the olefins he noticed that a change takes place in the density of the vapor of amylene hydrochloride, hydrobromide, &c, as the temperature is increased, and in the gradual passage from a gas of approximately normal density to one of half-normal density he saw a powerful argument in favor of the view that abnormal vapor densities, such as are exhibited by sal-ammoniac or phosphorus pentachloride. are to be explained by dissociation. From 1865 onwards he treated this question in several papers, and in particular maintained the dissociation of vapor of chloral hydrate, in opposition to [[Etienne Henri Sainte-Claire Deville]] and [[Marcellin Berthelot]].
In addition to this list of some of the new substances he prepared, reference may be made to his work on abnormal vapor densities. While working on the olefins he noticed that a change takes place in the density of the vapor of amylene hydrochloride, hydrobromide, &c, as the temperature is increased, and in the gradual passage from a gas of approximately normal density to one of half-normal density he saw a powerful argument in favor of the view that abnormal vapor densities, such as are exhibited by sal-ammoniac or phosphorus pentachloride. are to be explained by dissociation. From 1865 onwards he treated this question in several papers, and in particular maintained the dissociation of vapor of chloral hydrate, in opposition to [[Etienne Henri Sainte-Claire Deville]] and [[Marcellin Berthelot]].{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=860}}


For twenty-one years (1852-1872) Wurtz published in the ''[[Annales de chimie et de physique]]'' abstracts of chemical work done out of France. The publication of his great ''Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliquée'', in which he was assisted by many other French chemists, was begun in 1869 and finished in 1878; two supplementary volumes were issued 1880-1886, and in 1892 the publication of a second supplement was begun. Among his books are ''Chimie médicale'' (1864), ''Leçons élémentaires de chimie moderne'' (1867), ''Théorie des atomes dans la conception générale du monde'' (1874), ''La Théorie atomique'' (1878), ''Progrés de l'industrie des matières colorantes artificielles'' (1876) and ''Traité de chimie biologique'' (1880-1885). His ''Histoire des doctrines chimiques'', the introductory discourse to his ''Dictionnaire'', but published separately in 1869, opens with the well-known dictum, ''La chimie est une science française''. The sentence is less nationalist than it appears; he intended to refer only to the birth of chemistry under the great [[Antoine Laurent Lavoisier]], not French national ownership of the science.
For twenty-one years (1852–1872) Wurtz published in the ''[[Annales de chimie et de physique]]'' abstracts of chemical work done out of France. The publication of his great ''Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliquée'', in which he was assisted by many other French chemists, was begun in 1869 and finished in 1878; two supplementary volumes were issued 1880–1886, and in 1892 the publication of a second supplement was begun. Among his books are ''Chimie médicale'' (1864), ''Leçons élémentaires de chimie moderne'' (1867), ''Théorie des atomes dans la conception générale du monde'' (1874), ''La Théorie atomique'' (1878), ''Progrés de l'industrie des matières colorantes artificielles'' (1876) and ''Traité de chimie biologique'' (1880–1885). His ''Histoire des doctrines chimiques'', the introductory discourse to his ''Dictionnaire'' (also published separately in 1869), opens with the phrase, {{lang|fr|La chimie est une science française}}.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=860}} Although it raised a storm of protest in Germany, the sentence is less nationalistic than it appears; he intended to refer only to the birth of chemistry under the great [[Antoine Laurent Lavoisier]], rather than asserting exclusive French national ownership of the science.


==See also==
==See also==

*[[Wurtz reaction]]
*[[Aldol reaction]]
*[[Aldol reaction]]
*[[Wurtzite]]
*[[Wurtzite]]

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==Works==
[[File:Wurtz, Adolph – Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée, 1869 – BEIC 11897833.jpg|thumb|''Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée'', 1869]]
* {{Cite book|title=Historie des doctrines chimiques depuis Lavoisier jusqu'à nos jours|volume=|publisher=Hachette et C.ie|location=Paris|year=1868|language=fr|url=https://gutenberg.beic.it/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=12320065}}
* {{Cite book|title=Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée|volume=A-B|publisher=Hachette et C.ie|location=Paris|year=1869|language=fr|url=https://gutenberg.beic.it/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=11897833}}
** {{Cite book|title=Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée|volume=C-G|publisher=Hachette et C.ie|location=Paris|year=1870|language=fr|url=https://gutenberg.beic.it/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=11899978}}
** {{Cite book|title=Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée|volume=P-S|publisher=Hachette et C.ie|location=Paris|year=1876|language=fr|url=https://gutenberg.beic.it/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=11902939}}
** {{Cite book|title=Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée|volume=S-Z|publisher=Hachette et C.ie|location=Paris|year=1878|language=fr|url=https://gutenberg.beic.it/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=11905300}}


==References==
==References==
*{{EB1911|wstitle=Wurtz, Charles Adolphe|volume=28|pages=859–860}} This work in turn cites:
<references/>
**[[Charles Friedel]]'s memoir in the ''Bulletin de la Société Chimique'' (1885) Wurtz's life and work, with a list of his publications.
**[[August Wilhelm von Hofmann]] in the ''Ber. deut. chem. Gesellsch.'' (1887) Reprinted in vol. iii. of his ''Zur Erinnerung an vorangegangene Freunde'' (1888)


==Further reading==
==Further reading==

*For Wurtz's life and work, with a list of his publications, see [[Charles Friedel]]'s memoir in the ''Bulletin de la Société Chimique'' (1885); also [[August Wilhelm von Hofmann]] in the ''Ber. deut. chem. Gesellsch.'' (1887), reprinted in vol. iii. of his ''Zur Erinnerung an vorangegangene Freunde'' (1888).
* {{cite journal
* {{cite journal
| last=[[Marc Tiffeneau|Tiffeneau]]
| last=Tiffeneau
| first=Marc
| first=Marc
| author-link=Marc Tiffeneau
| year=1921
| year=1921
| title=L'œuvre commune de Gerhardt et de Wurtz
| month=
| title=[L'œuvre commune de [[Charles Frederic Gerhardt|Gerhardt]] et de Wurtz]]]
| journal=Revue scientifique
| journal=Revue scientifique
| volume=59
| volume=59
| issue=
| pages=576–584
| pages=576–584
| title-link=Charles Frederic Gerhardt
| pmid =
}}
}}
*{{cite book|last = Rocke|first = Alan J.|title = Nationalizing Science: Adolphe Wurtz and the Battle for French Chemistry|publisher = MIT Press|year = 2001|location = Cambridge, MA and London|pages =|url =|doi =|isbn = 0-262-18204-1}}
*{{cite book|last = Rocke|first = Alan J.|title = Nationalizing Science: Adolphe Wurtz and the Battle for French Chemistry|publisher = MIT Press|year = 2001|location = Cambridge, Massachusetts and London|isbn = 0-262-18204-1}}
*{{cite journal|author = Wall, Florence E.|title = Faraday, Hofmann, and Wurtz|journal = Journal of Chemical Education|year = 1951|volume = 28|pages = 355 358|doi = 10.1021/ed028p355}}
*{{cite journal|author = Wall, Florence E.|title = Faraday, Hofmann, and Wurtz|journal = Journal of Chemical Education|year = 1951|volume = 28|issue = 7|pages = 355–358|doi = 10.1021/ed028p355|bibcode = 1951JChEd..28..355W}}
*{{cite journal
*{{cite journal
|last=Carneiro
|last=Carneiro
|first=A.
|first=A.
|author2=Pigeard N.
|authorlink=
|date=November 1997
|coauthors=Pigeard N.
|title=Alsatian chemists in Paris in the 19th century: a network, a school? |journal= Annals of Science |volume=54 |issue=6 |pages=533–46 |location = ENGLAND| issn = 0003-3790| pmid = 11619774 |doi=10.1080/00033799700200361}}
|year=1997|month=November
|title=Alsatian chemists in Paris in the 19th century: a network, a school? |journal= Annals of science |volume=54 |issue=6 |pages=533–46 |publisher= |location = ENGLAND| issn = 0003-3790| pmid = 11619774}}
*{{cite journal
*{{cite journal
|last=Carneiro
|last=Carneiro
|first=A.
|first=A.
|date=July 1993
|authorlink=
|year=1993|month=July
|title=Adolphe Wurtz and the atomism controversy
|title=Adolphe Wurtz and the atomism controversy
|journal= Ambix
|journal= Ambix
Line 90: Line 104:
|issue=2
|issue=2
|pages=75–95
|pages=75–95
|publisher= |location = ENGLAND| issn = 0002-6980| pmid = 11609199}}
|location = ENGLAND| issn = 0002-6980| pmid = 11609199|doi=10.1179/amb.1993.40.2.75}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Charles Adolphe Wurtz}}
*[http://web.lemoyne.edu/~GIUNTA/karlsruhe.html Charles-Adolphe Wurtz's report on the Karlsruhe Congress (1860)]
*[http://web.lemoyne.edu/~GIUNTA/karlsruhe.html Charles-Adolphe Wurtz's report on the Karlsruhe Congress (1860)]
*[http://books.google.com/books?id=OT0JAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA1&dq=wurtz&as_brr=1#PPR3,M2 ''The Atomic Theory'', by A. Wurtz (1881)] New York: Appleton and Company (scanned copy)
*[https://books.google.com/books?id=OT0JAAAAIAAJ&dq=wurtz&pg=PA1 ''The Atomic Theory'', by A. Wurtz (1881)] New York: Appleton and Company (scanned copy)
*[http://books.google.com/books?id=xeIIAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PR9-IA2&dq=wurtz&as_brr=1#PPA3,M2 ''Elements of Modern Chemistry'', by A. Wurtz (1899)] Philadelphia: Lippincott and Company (scanned copy of the third American edition; translated by W. H. Greene)
*[https://books.google.com/books?id=xeIIAAAAIAAJ&dq=wurtz&pg=RA1-PR9-IA2 ''Elements of Modern Chemistry'', by A. Wurtz (1899)] Philadelphia: Lippincott and Company (scanned copy of the third American edition; translated by W. H. Greene)
*{{Cite NIE|wstitle=Wurtz, Charles Adolphe|year=1905 |short=x}}


{{Copley Medallists 1851–1900}}
*{{1911}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Copley Medallists 1851-1900}}


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| DATE OF BIRTH = 26 November 1817
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 10 May 1884
| PLACE OF DEATH =
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Wurtz, Charles-Adolphe}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wurtz, Charles-Adolphe}}
[[Category:1817 births]]
[[Category:1817 births]]
[[Category:1884 deaths]]
[[Category:1884 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Wolfisheim]]
[[Category:People from Bas-Rhin]]
[[Category:French chemists]]
[[Category:19th-century French chemists]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Copley Medal]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Copley Medal]]
[[Category:French Life Senators]]
[[Category:French life senators]]
[[Category:Faraday Lecturers]]
[[Category:Members of the French Academy of Sciences]]
[[Category:Foreign Members of the Royal Society]]
[[Category:Foreign members of the Royal Society]]
[[Category:Foreign associates of the National Academy of Sciences]]

[[Category:Corresponding members of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences]]
[[ca:Charles Adolphe Würtz]]
[[Category:Officers of the French Academy of Sciences]]
[[de:Charles Adolphe Wurtz]]
[[Category:Deaths from diabetes in France]]
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[[pl:Charles Wurtz]]
[[pt:Charles Adolphe Würtz]]
[[ru:Вюрц, Шарль Адольф]]
[[sv:Adolphe Wurtz]]
[[uk:Вюрц Шарль Адольф]]

Latest revision as of 09:17, 13 September 2024

Adolphe Wurtz
Born(1817-11-26)26 November 1817
Wolfisheim, near Strasbourg, France
Died10 May 1884(1884-05-10) (aged 66)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Alma materUniversity of Strasbourg
Known forWurtz reaction
AwardsFaraday Lectureship Prize (1879)
Copley Medal (1881)
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry
Doctoral advisorAmédée Cailliot
Other academic advisorsJustus von Liebig
Doctoral studentsCharles Friedel
Armand Gautier
Other notable studentsJacobus Henricus van 't Hoff
Alexander Zaytsev

Charles Adolphe Wurtz (French: [vyʁts]; 26 November 1817 – 10 May 1884) was an Alsatian French chemist. He is best remembered for his decades-long advocacy for the atomic theory and for ideas about the structures of chemical compounds, against the skeptical opinions of chemists such as Marcellin Berthelot and Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville. He is well known by organic chemists for the Wurtz reaction, to form carbon-carbon bonds by reacting alkyl halides with sodium, and for his discoveries of ethylamine, ethylene glycol, and the aldol reaction. Wurtz was also an influential writer and educator.

Life

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Adolphe Wurtz (he never used the name "Charles") was born in Strasbourg, where his father, Johann Jacob (Jean Jacques) Wurtz, was a Lutheran pastor in the nearby town of Wolfisheim. His wife, Adolphe's mother, Sophie Kreiss, died in 1878.

When he left the Protestant gymnasium at Strasbourg in 1834, his father allowed him to study medicine as next best to theology. He devoted himself specially to the chemical side of his profession with such success that in 1839 he was appointed Chef des travaux chimiques at the Strasbourg faculty of medicine.[1] For the summer semester of 1842 he studied under Justus von Liebig at the University of Giessen. After graduating from Strasbourg as M.D. in 1843, with a thesis on albumin and fibrin, he went to Paris, where he first was referred by Jean Baptiste Dumas to Antoine Balard.[2] His employment with Balard lasted a few months, after which Wurtz began work in Dumas's private laboratory. In 1845, he became assistant to Dumas at the École de Médecine, and four years later began to give lectures on organic chemistry in his place.[1]

As there was no laboratory at his disposal at the Ecole de Médecine, he opened a private one in 1850 in the Rue Garanciere; but three years later the building was sold, and the laboratory had to be abandoned. In 1850, he received the professorship of chemistry at the new Institut National Agronomique at Versailles, but the Institut was abolished in 1852. In the following year the chair of "pharmacy and organic chemistry" at the faculty of medicine became vacant by the resignation of Dumas, and the chair of "medical chemistry" by the death of Mathieu Orfila. Both of these chairs were now abolished, and Wurtz was appointed to the newly defined post of "organic and mineral chemistry". (At the same time, a new chair devoted exclusively to pharmacy was awarded to Eugene Soubeiran). In 1866, Wurtz undertook the duties of dean of the faculty of medicine. In this position, he exerted himself to secure the rearrangement and reconstruction of the buildings devoted to scientific instruction, urging that in the provision of properly equipped teaching laboratories France was much behind Germany (see his report Les Hautes Etudes pratiques dans les universités allemandes, 1870).[1]

In 1875, resigning the office of dean but retaining the title of honorary dean, he became the first occupant of a new chair of organic chemistry at the Sorbonne, which the government had established due to his influence. However, he had great difficulty in obtaining an adequate laboratory.[1] The buildings of the new Sorbonne that ultimately provided modern scientific laboratories were not completed until 1894, ten years after his death.

Wurtz was an honorary member of almost every scientific society in Europe. He was the principal founder of the Paris Chemical Society (1858), was its first secretary and thrice served as its president. In 1880, he was vice-president and in 1881 president of the French Academy of Sciences, which he entered in 1867 in succession to Théophile-Jules Pelouze. In 1881, Wurtz was elected life senator.[1] Wurtz's name is one of the 72 names inscribed on the Eiffel tower.[citation needed]

Wurtz died in Paris on 10 May 1884, probably of complications due to diabetes, and was buried in the north-east of the city at Père Lachaise Cemetery. [3]

Scientific and academic work

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Influenced by such leading figures as Liebig and Dumas, by 1856 Wurtz became a powerful advocate of a reform in chemical theory then being led by Charles Gerhardt and Alexander Williamson. This new chemistry of the 1850s took the idea of chemical atoms seriously, adopted atomic weights for the elements that strongly resemble the modern ones, and proposed a unitary schematic plan that opposed the dualistic theory derived from the work of Jons Jacob Berzelius. Soon thereafter, Wurtz also adopted the new structural theory that was developing from the work of younger chemists such as August Kekulé. However, a kind of skeptical positivism was influential in France during the second half of the nineteenth century, and Wurtz's efforts to gain a favorable hearing for atomism and structuralism in his homeland were largely frustrated.

Wurtz's first published paper was on hypophosphorous acid (1841), and the continuation of his work on the acids of phosphorus (1845) resulted in the discovery of sulfophosphoric acid and phosphorus oxychloride, as well as of copper hydride. But his original work was mainly in the domain of organic chemistry. Investigation of the cyanic ethers (1848) yielded a class of substances which opened out a new field in organic chemistry, for, by treating those ethers with caustic potash, he obtained methylamine, the simplest organic derivative of ammonia (1849), and later (1851) the compound ureas. In 1855, reviewing the various substances that had been obtained from glycerin, he reached the conclusion that glycerin is a body of alcoholic nature formed on the type of three molecules of water, as common alcohol is on that of one, and was thus led (1856) to the discovery of the glycols or diatomic alcohols, bodies similarly related to the double water type. This discovery he worked out very thoroughly in investigations of ethylene oxide and the polyethylene alcohols. The oxidation of the glycols led him to homologues of lactic acid, and a controversy about the constitution of the latter with Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe resulted in the discovery of many new facts and in a better understanding of the relations between the oxy- and the amido-acids.[4] In 1855, he published work on what is now known as the Wurtz reaction.

In 1867 Wurtz synthesized neurine by the action of trimethylamine on glycol-chlorhydrin. In 1872 he discovered the aldol reaction and characterized the product as showing the properties of both an alcohol and an aldehyde. Alexander Borodin discovered the reaction independently in the same year. The product was named an aldol, pointing out its double character.[5] This led to a second confrontation with Kolbe.

In addition to this list of some of the new substances he prepared, reference may be made to his work on abnormal vapor densities. While working on the olefins he noticed that a change takes place in the density of the vapor of amylene hydrochloride, hydrobromide, &c, as the temperature is increased, and in the gradual passage from a gas of approximately normal density to one of half-normal density he saw a powerful argument in favor of the view that abnormal vapor densities, such as are exhibited by sal-ammoniac or phosphorus pentachloride. are to be explained by dissociation. From 1865 onwards he treated this question in several papers, and in particular maintained the dissociation of vapor of chloral hydrate, in opposition to Etienne Henri Sainte-Claire Deville and Marcellin Berthelot.[6]

For twenty-one years (1852–1872) Wurtz published in the Annales de chimie et de physique abstracts of chemical work done out of France. The publication of his great Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliquée, in which he was assisted by many other French chemists, was begun in 1869 and finished in 1878; two supplementary volumes were issued 1880–1886, and in 1892 the publication of a second supplement was begun. Among his books are Chimie médicale (1864), Leçons élémentaires de chimie moderne (1867), Théorie des atomes dans la conception générale du monde (1874), La Théorie atomique (1878), Progrés de l'industrie des matières colorantes artificielles (1876) and Traité de chimie biologique (1880–1885). His Histoire des doctrines chimiques, the introductory discourse to his Dictionnaire (also published separately in 1869), opens with the phrase, La chimie est une science française.[6] Although it raised a storm of protest in Germany, the sentence is less nationalistic than it appears; he intended to refer only to the birth of chemistry under the great Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, rather than asserting exclusive French national ownership of the science.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 859.
  2. ^ Rocke, Alan (2001). Nationalizing Science: Adolphe Wurtz and the Battle for French Chemistry. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. pp. 103–104.
  3. ^ Williamson, A. W. (1885). "Obituary of Charles Adolphe Wurtz". Proceedings of the Royal Society. 38: xxiii–xxxiv.
  4. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 859–860.
  5. ^ Wurtz, C. A. (1872). "Sur un aldéhyde-alcool". Compt. Rend. 74: 1361.
  6. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 860.

Works

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Dictionnaire de chimie pure et appliqueée, 1869

References

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Further reading

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