|
1901 2012
Prize category:
|
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1906
Henri Moissan
Henri Moissan
Born: 28 September 1852, Paris, France
Died: 20 February 1907, Paris, France
Affiliation at the time of the award: Sorbonne University, Paris, France
Prize motivation: "in recognition of the great services rendered by him in his investigation and isolation of the element fluorine, and for the adoption in the service of science of the electric furnace called after him"
Field: Inorganic chemistry, nuclear chemistry

Biography
Henri Moissan was born in Paris on September 28,
1852. His advanced education began in the Collège de Meaux
and later in Edmond Frémy's laboratory at the Musée
d'Histoire Naturelle, where he attended lectures by E.H.
Sainte-Claire Deville and Henri Debray. A year later, he removed
to Dehérain's laboratory in the École Pratique des
Haute Études and subsequently he directed a small laboratory
of his own before joining Debray and Troost in the laboratories
of the Sorbonne. He was appointed to a junior position in the
Agronomic Institute in 1879 and he gained his doctoral degree in
1880 with a thesis on the cyanogen series. He became assistant
lecturer and senior demonstrator at the School of Pharmacy and in
1886 he was elected Professor of Toxicology. In 1899 he took the
Chair of Inorganic Chemistry and in 1900 he was appointed
Assessor to the Director of that School. In the same year, he
succeeded Troost as Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, University
of Paris.
Moissan's first researches concerned the interchange of oxygen
and carbon dioxide in the leaves of plants. He was soon to leave
biology for the field of inorganic chemistry, where his early
work was on the oxides of iron-group metals and chromium and a
study of the chromous salts. In 1884 he turned his attention to
fluorine chemistry, preparing some organic and phosphorus
derivatives of that element. The following year he discovered
that solutions of potassium fluoride in hydrogen fluoride at
certain strengths remained liquid and conducted electrolytically
at sub-zero temperatures: a year later he successfully
electrolysed these solutions to isolate fluorine for the first
time. He made a full study of the properties of the gas and its
reactions with other elements.
In 1892, Moissan theorized that diamonds could be synthesized by
crystallizing carbon under pressure from molten iron. He designed
and developed the electric-arc furnace, attaining temperatures up
to 3,500°C, to assist him in work which led to the
production of tiny artificial stones. He subsequently used the
furnace to volatilize many substances which had been regarded as
infusible and to prepare many new compounds, particularly
carbides, silicides and borides; in 1891 he discovered
carborundum. His close study of the carbides and their reaction
with water led to his theory that, in some cases, petroleum may
be formed by subterraneous reaction between certain carbides and
water. He prepared the hydrides of calcium, sodium and potassium
and showed them to be non-conductive and, using the electric
furnace, isolated many metals.
Moissan is credited with over three hundred publications, his
greatest works being Le Four Électrique (The
electric-arc furnace) (1897), Le Fluor et ses
Composés (Fluorine and its compounds) (1900) and
Traité de Chimie Minerale (Treatise on inorganic
chemistry) (five volumes 1904-1906). He was an excellent lecturer
and a meticulous and patient experimentalist.
Moissan, a Commandeur de la Légion d'Honneur, was elected
member of the Académie de Médecine (1888),
Académie des Sciences (1891), Conseil d'Hygiène de la
Seine (1895 ), and the Comité Consultatif des Arts et
Manufactures (1898). In 1887 he was awarded the Prix Lacaze; he
was Davy medallist in 1896 and Hofmann medallist in 1903. He was
honoured by the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia and awarded
Fellowships of the Royal Society of London and The Chemical Society
(London). He held honorary memberships of many other learned
societies.
He died suddenly in Paris on February 20, 1907, shortly after his
return from the prize-giving ceremony in Stockholm.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1906
MLA style: "Henri Moissan - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 21 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1906/moissan.html
