Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Lajos Winkler

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Doctoral advisor
  
Carl von Than

Role
  
Chemist

Name
  
Lajos Winkler


Lajos Winkler wwwkfkihucheminfohunmvmarcpicswinklerjpg

Born
  
May 21, 1863 (
1863-05-21
)

Died
  
April 14, 1939, Budapest, Hungary

Alma mater
  
University of Budapest

Education
  
Eotvos Lorand University

Lajos Winkler (May 21, 1863 – April 14, 1939) was a Hungarian analytical chemist. He is best known today for his discovery of the Winkler method for the measurement of oxygen dissolved in water.

Contents

Life

Relatively little is in print in English concerning the life of Lajos Winkler. Winkler studied science at the Budapest University of Science, receiving his doctorate there in 1890, while working with Carl von Than. He stayed on to work as a lecturer, among other positions, and directed the Institute of Chemistry, starting in 1909, for more than 25 years. He is said to have published several hundred papers, to have helped found the Hungarian Journal of Chemistry, and to have been a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. See also the study of Vamos for more information and references.

Dissolved oxygen

Natural water contains molecular oxygen (O2), necessary for life in ponds, rivers, and so on. A common nineteenth-century test for determining dissolved oxygen, as described by Alfred Wanklyn, involved boiling the water sample and collecting, over mercury, the gases released, for subsequent analysis.

In 1888, while still a doctoral student, Lajos Winkler discovered a much safer, and more precise, method of dissolved-oxygen analysis, which is still widely used today. The Winkler method uses the dissolved oxygen to convert manganese(II) hydroxide into manganese(III) species, and then analyzing for the latter by titration.

References

Lajos Winkler Wikipedia