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Hermann Staudinger

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Nationality
  
Germany

Doctoral advisor
  
Daniel Vorlander

Known for
  
Role
  
Chemist

Awards
  
Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Alma mater
  
Doctoral students
  
Lavoslav Ruzicka

Name
  
Hermann Staudinger

Fields
  
Chemistry

Hermann Staudinger httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Born
  
23 March 1881Worms, Grand Duchy of Hesse, German Empire (
1881-03-23
)

Institutions
  
University of StrasbourgUniversity of KarlsruheETH ZurichUniversity of Freiburg

Died
  
September 8, 1965, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

Education
  
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg

Books
  
From Organic Chemistry to Macromolecules: A Scientific Autobiography Based on My Original Papers

Similar People
  
Leopold Ruzicka, Paul Flory, Johannes Thiele, Daniel Vorlander, Jacob Volhard

Hermann Staudinger


Hermann Staudinger | Wikipedia audio article


Hermann Staudinger (23 March 1881 – 8 September 1965) was a German chemist who demonstrated the existence of macromolecules, which he characterized as polymers. For this work he received the 1953 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is also known for his discovery of ketenes and of the Staudinger reaction.

Contents

Hermann Staudinger Hermann Staudinger Wikiwand

Early work

Hermann Staudinger Fritz Klatte Hermann Staudinger und das PVC Chemie

Hermann Staudinger was born in 1881 in Worms. After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Halle in 1903, Staudinger took a position at the University of Strasbourg.

Hermann Staudinger staudingerjpg

It was here that he discovered the ketenes, a family of molecules characterized by the general form depicted in Figure 1. Ketenes would prove a synthetically important intermediate for the production of yet-to-be-discovered antibiotics such as penicillin and amoxicillin.

In 1907, Staudinger began an assistant professorship at the Technical University of Karlsruhe. Here, he successfully isolated a number of useful organic compounds (including a synthetic coffee flavoring) as more completely reviewed by Rolf Mulhaupt.

The Staudinger reaction

In 1912, Staudinger took on a new position at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland. One of his earliest discoveries came in 1919, when he and colleague Meyer reported that azides react with triphenylphosphine to form phosphazide (Figure 2). This reaction – commonly referred to as the Staudinger reaction – produces a high phosphazide yield.

Polymer chemistry

While at Karlsruhe and later, Zurich, Staudinger began research in the chemistry of rubber, for which very high molecular weights had been measured by the physical methods of Raoult and van 't Hoff. Contrary to prevailing ideas (see below), Staudinger proposed in a landmark paper published in 1920 that rubber and other polymers such as starch, cellulose and proteins are long chains of short repeating molecular units linked by covalent bonds. In other words, polymers are like chains of paper clips, made up of small constituent parts linked from end to end (Figure 3).

At the time leading organic chemists such as Emil Fischer and Heinrich Wieland believed that the measured high molecular weights were only apparent values caused by the aggregation of small molecules into colloids. At first the majority of Staudinger’s colleagues refused to accept the possibility that small molecules could link together covalently to form high-molecular weight compounds. As Mulhaupt aptly notes, this is due in part to the fact that molecular structure and bonding theory were not fully understood in the early 20th century.

In 1926 he was appointed lecturer of chemistry at the University of Freiburg at Freiburg in Breisgau (Germany), where he spent the rest of his career. In 1927, he married the Latvian botanist, Magda Voita (also shown as (German: Magda Woit), who was a collaborator with him until his death and whose contributions he acknowledged in his Nobel Prize acceptance. Further evidence to support his polymer hypothesis emerged in the 1930s. High molecular weights of polymers were confirmed by membrane osmometry, and also by Staudinger’s measurements of viscosity in solution. The X-ray diffraction studies of polymers by Herman Mark provided direct evidence for long chains of repeating molecular units. And the synthetic work led by Carothers demonstrated that polymers such as nylon and polyester could be prepared by well-understood organic reactions. His theory opened up the subject to further development, and helped place polymer science on a sound basis.

Legacy

Staudinger’s groundbreaking elucidation of the nature of the high-molecular weight compounds he termed Makromolekule paved the way for the birth of the field of polymer chemistry. Staudinger himself saw the potential for this science long before it was fully realized. “It is not improbable,” Staudinger smartly commented in 1936, “that sooner or later a way will be discovered to prepare artificial fibers from synthetic high-molecular products, because the strength and elasticity of natural fibers depend exclusively on their macro-molecular structure – i.e., on their long thread-shaped molecules.” Staudinger founded the first polymer chemistry journal in 1940, and in 1953 received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for “his discoveries in the field of macromolecular chemistry.” In 1999, the American Chemical Society and Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker designated Staudinger's work as an International Historic Chemical Landmark. His pioneering research has afforded the world myriad plastics, textiles, and other polymeric materials which make consumer products more affordable, attractive and fun, while helping engineers develop lighter and more durable structures.

References

Hermann Staudinger Wikipedia