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Johan Gottlieb Gahn

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Nationality
  
Swedish

Education
  
Uppsala University

Known for
  
Discovery of manganese

Fields
  
Chemistry

Name
  
Johan Gahn

Discovered
  
Manganese, Selenium

Role
  
Chemist


Johan Gottlieb Gahn httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsff

Died
  
December 8, 1818, Falun, Sweden

Johan Gottlieb Gahn


Johan Gottlieb Gahn (19 August 1745 – 8 December 1818) was a Swedish chemist and metallurgist who discovered manganese in 1774.

Gahn studied in Uppsala 1762 – 1770 and became acquainted with chemists Torbern Bergman and Carl Wilhelm Scheele. 1770 he settled in Falun, where he introduced improvements in copper smelting, and participated in building up several factories, including those for vitriol, sulfur and red paint.

He was the chemist for The Swedish Board of Mines Bergskollegium from 1773 – 1817. Gahn was however very reluctant to publish his scientific findings himself, but freely communicated them to Bergman and Scheele. One of Gahn's discoveries was that manganese dioxide could be reduced to manganese metal using carbon, becoming the first to isolate this element in its metal form.

In 1784, Gahn was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. He also made a managerial career in Swedish mining.

References

Johan Gottlieb Gahn Wikipedia


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