Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Adolf Stachel

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
German

Employer
  
Cassella

Died
  
1971

Name
  
Adolf Stachel

Occupation
  
Chemist


Born
  
28 February 1913
Augsburg

Adolf Stachel (born 28 February 1913 in Augsburg, died 1971 in Frankfurt am Main) was a German chemist, researcher and inventor, who worked as a researcher at the chemical and pharmaceutical company Cassella (now Sanofi) in Frankfurt-Fechenheim for much of his career.

He held a doctoral degree in chemistry (Doktor-Ingenieur) from the Technische Hochschule München. Early in his career, he was a mentee and collaborator of the Nobel Prize-winning chemist Hans Fischer, who was his doctoral supervisor. He later became a researcher at Cassella. His patents were related to basically substituted heterocyclic compounds, e.g. 2,3-benzotriazine-4(3H)-one derivatives (coumarin), and basically substituted 1H,3H)-quinazoline-2-thion-4-one derivatives, having excellent coronary dilator properties. Patentee was Cassella. When working at Cassella, he was a close collaborator of Armin K.W. Kutzsche. Together with Werner Zerweck they developed Nu-nu-dibenzylsulfamyl benzoic acid, US patent 2805250 A, in the early 1950s. Other frequent collaborators were Rudi Beyerle, Rolf-Eberhard Nitz and Klaus Resag.

He was married to Ingeburg Lydia Katharina Rohde.

References

Adolf Stachel Wikipedia