Jacobus Henricus
Walther Hermann Nernst
Reinhold Benesch & Ruth Erica Benesch Find How Oxygen is Transported in Human Body
Frederick Soddy
Artturi Ilmari Virtanen
Louis Jacques Thenard discovers hydrogen peroxide
Jbir ibn Hayyn
Ya'qub Al-Kindi
Paul Karrer
Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier
Few things are as important as water, which we know is made of oxygen and hydrogen. Did you know that Antoine Lavoisier was the discoverer of both elements?
Contributions to Science
Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier is one of the most important scientists in the history of chemistry. He discovered elements, formulated a basic law of chemistry and helped create the metric system.
During his time, people believed that when an object burns, a mysterious substance called ‘phlogiston’ was released. This was called the ‘phlogiston theory’. Lavoisier’s experiments demonstrated the contrary, i.e. when something burned, it actually absorbed something from the air, instead of releasing anything. He later named the ‘something’ from the air as oxygen, when he found that it combined with other chemicals to form acid. (In Greek, ‘oxy’ means sharp, referring to the sharp taste of acids.)
Henry Cavendish had earlier isolated hydrogen, but he called it inflammable air. Lavoisier showed that this inflammable air burned to form a colourless liquid, which turned out to be water. The Greek word for water is ‘hydro’, so the air that burned to form water was hydrogen!
Lavoisier was known for his painstaking attention to detail. Whenever he made a chemical reaction, he weighed all the substances carefully before and after the reaction. He discovered that in a chemical reaction, though substances may change their chemical nature, their total mass remains the same. This is called the law of conservation of mass.
His love for accuracy led to the formulation of the metric system of weights and measures – which is still in use today.
Lavoisier’s attention to detail and