Title: Chemistry through the Ages
1Chemistry through the Ages
Meet the Chemists
23000 BC Science by NEED
Tablets record the first known chemists as women
who manufactured perfumes from various
substances. Ancient Egyptians produced certain
compounds such as those used in mummification.
31000 BC Beginning of METALURGY
Chemical arts included the smelting of metals and
the making of drugs, dyes, iron, and bronze.
Iron making was also introduced and refinement
of lead and mercury was performed. The physical
properties of some metals such as copper, zinc,
silver, and gold were understood.
Many groups of people contributed to these
developments--among them were ancient Egyptians,
Greeks, Hebrews, Chinese, and Indians.
4600 to 400 BC Age of PURE REASONING no
Experimentation
Democritus the atom to be the simplest unit of
matter. All matter is composed of atoms. Not
accepted for 100s of years
Aristotle 4 basic elements fire, air, water
earth. All matter is made up of these elements
and had the properties of hot, cold, dry
wet. Matter was continuous
5300 BC to 12 AD EXPERIMENTATION TECHIQUES
MAGIC
Alchemists Searched for the Elixir of Life to
make people live longer. Attempted to change
metals into gold. Philosopher's Stone
Contributions - experimental procedures -
equipment
6Little in science advancements
71500S 1600S Experimentation Begins
Auroleus Phillips Theostratus Bombastus von
Hohenheim Paracelsus is credited with the
introduction of opium and mercury into the
arsenal of medicine. Founder of Medical
Chemistry His works also indicate an advanced
knowledge of the science and principles of
magnetism.
GASES
- Robert Boyle particles in motion - Gas Laws
pressure volume
81700s QUALITATIVE TO QUANTITATIVE
1775 Lavoisier better gunpowder Systematically
determines weight of elements in compounds
91800s atoms Electrochemistry
1803 John Dalton publishes his Atomic Theory
which states that all matter is composed of
atoms, which are small and indivisible.
1808 Joseph Gay-Lussac another gas laws
In 1811 Avogadro hypothesized that equal volumes
of gases at the same temperature and pressure
contain equal numbers of molecules.
10Jon Berzelius inorganic elements bond together
in definite proportions by weight Father of
Modern Chemistry
1831 Michael Faraday 1st electrical generator
1867 Alfred Nobel dynamite, a stable form of
nitroglycerin
111869 Dmitri Mendeleev arranged all known
elements into one table
1880 Humphrey Davy nitrous oxide be used as
anesthetic (he was ignored) Recognized the
tendency of one substance to react preferentially
with another - electrical
1897 J.J. Thomson discovered the electrons
121900s Atomic Nuclear Structure Applied
Chemistry
Marie Curie 1903 Phenomenon of radioactivity
1911 discovered uranium and thorium within
pitchblende
1906 Paul Ehrlich produce substance to seek our
disease-causing microorganisms.
131907 Leo Hendrik Baekeland Polymers that when
mixed with filler would produce a hard moldable
plastic. Used in automobiles and radio
industries Bakelite
1911 Rutherford Structure of atom He believed
that the atom was mostly empty space.
14- Wallace Hume Carothers synthetic polymer -
Neoprene nylon
- Gilbert Lewis Bonding theory based on the
- number of electrons in outer most ring
1935 James Chadwick discovers the neutron.
15- Eugene Houdry High octane fuel
- James Watson, Francis Crick, Maurice Wilkins
Rosalind Franklin - Organic Molecules- DNA
161954 Linus Pauling Quantum mechanics, expanded
covalent bond theory to include metallic compounds
1962 Paul B. Weisz zeolite catalysts to Improve
production rate gasoline, plastics,
polyesters, etc/
17TODAY 2000s
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