Alfred Stock



Alfred Stock
Born16 July 1876(1876-07-16)
Danzig, German Empire
Died12 August 1946 (aged 70)
Aken an der Elbe, Germany
NationalityGerman
FieldChemistry
InstitutionsUniversity of Karlsruhe
Notable students  Egon Wiberg

Alfred Stock (July 16 1876 – August 12 1946) was a German mercury poisoning. The German Chemical Society's Alfred-Stock Memorial Prize is named after him.

Life

Born in Danzig (Gdańsk) and educated at Berlin, he was nine years assistant of Emil Fischer before he became professor at the University of Breslau in 1900. In 1916 he succeeded Richard Willstätter as director at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry in Berlin. After a severe mercury poisoning he became the director of the Chemistry Department at the Technische Hochschule in Karlsruhe from 1926 to 1936. He was renowned for his pioneering research on boron hydrides.[1]

Research on the hydrides of boron and silicon

Stock began studying the boron organic synthesis as well as a source of diverse ligands and building blocks for researchers.

Research on other areas of inorganic chemistry

In 1921, he first prepared metallic sodium and beryllium fluorides. This method made beryllium available for industrial use, as in special alloys and glasses and for making windows in X-ray tubes.

He was also influential in chelation.

The "Stock system," first published in 1919, was a means of nomenclature on binary compounds. In his own words, he considered the system to be "simple, clear, immediately intelligible, capable of the most general application." In 1924, a German commission recommended Stock system to be adopted with some accommodations. FeCl2, which would have been named iron(2)-chloride according to Stock's original idea, became iron(II) chloride in the revised proposal. In 1934 Stock agreed to the use of Roman numerals but preferred keeping the hyphen and dropping the parentheses. Although this suggestion has not been followed, the Stock system remains in use worldwide.

Interests in mercury and mercury poisoning

He published over 50 papers on different aspects of amalgam usage. Nevertheless a paper from Fleischmann, in which removal of mercury in amalgam-related illness had led to complete recovery, supported his idea. (Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift 1928, No. 8). A committee was founded in Berlin to investigate cases of possible mercury intoxication and hence the term micromercurialism was first used.[5]

Retirement and death

After retirement in 1936, he moved from Karlsruhe to Berlin. He died at Aken an der Elbe, a small town near Dessau, in August 1946 at the age of 70.

Posthumous recognition

In recognition of his contributions to the field of inorganic chemistry, the German Chemical Society (Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker) posthumously created in 1950 the Alfred-Stock Memorial Prize (Alfred-Stock-Gedächtnispreis). The prize, consisting of a gold medal and money, is awarded annually for "an outstanding independent scientific experimental investigation in the field of inorganic chemistry."[6]

References

  1. ^ Stock, Alfred (1933). The Hydrides of Boron and Silicon. New York: Cornell University Press. 
  2. ^ For a fascinating review of the origin and dissemination of the term 'ligand' in chemistry see: Brock, William H.; K. A. Jensen, Christian Klixbüll Jørgensen, George B. Kauffman (1983). "The origin and dissemination of the term “ligand” in chemistry". Polyhedron 2 (1): 1-7. doi:10.1016/S0277-5387(00)88023-7.
  3. ^ Irving, H.; R.J.P. Williams (1948). "Order of stability of metal complexes". Nature 162: 746-747. ISSN 0028-0836.
  4. ^ Wiberg, Egon (1950). "Alfred Stock 1876-1946". Chemische Berichte 83 (6): XIX-LXXVI. doi:10.1002/cber.19500830619.
  5. ^ Stock, Alfred (1926). "Die Gefaehrlichkeit des Quecksilberdampfes". Zeitschrift für angewandte Chemie 39: 461-466. doi:10.1002/ange.19260391502.
  6. ^ Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker e.V., GDCh-Preise 2008. de:Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker (2007).
 
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