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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1907
Eduard Buchner
Eduard Buchner
Born: 20 May 1860, Munich, Bavaria (now Germany)
Died: 13 August 1917, Focsani, Romania
Affiliation at the time of the award: Landwirtschaftliche Hochschule (Agricultural College), Berlin, Germany
Prize motivation: "for his biochemical researches and his discovery of cell-free fermentation"
Field: Biochemistry

Biography
Eduard
Buchner was born in Munich on May 20, 1860, the son of Dr.
Ernst Buchner, Professor Extraordinary of Forensic Medicine and
physician at the University, and Friederike née
Martin.
He was originally destined for a commercial career but, after the
early death of his father in 1872, his older brother Hans, ten
years his senior, made it possible for him to take a more general
education. He matriculated at the Grammar School in his
birth-place and after a short period of study at the Munich
Polytechnic in the chemical laboratory of E. Erlenmeyer senior,
he started work in a preserve and canning factory, with which he
later moved to Mombach on Mainz.
The problems of chemistry had greatly attracted him at the
Polytechnic and in 1884 he turned afresh to new studies in pure
science, mainly in chemistry with Adolf von Baeyer and in botany with
Professor C. von Naegeli at the Botanic Institute, Munich.
It was at the latter, where he studied under the special
supervision of his brother Hans (who later became well-known as a
bacteriologist), that his first publication, Der Einfluss des
Sauerstoffs auf Gärungen (The influence of oxygen on
fermentations) saw the light in 1885. In the course of his
research in organic chemistry he received special assistance and
stimulation from T. Curtius and H. von Pechmann, who were
assistants in the laboratory in those days.
The Lamont Scholarship awarded by the Philosophical Faculty for
three years made it possible for him to continue his
studies.
After one term in Erlangen in the laboratory of Otto Fischer,
where meanwhile Curtius had been appointed director of the
analytical department, he took his doctor's degree in the
University of Munich in 1888. The following year saw
his appointment as Assistant Lecturer in the organic laboratory
of A. von Baeyer, and in 1891 Lecturer at the University.
By means of a special monetary grant from von Baeyer, it was possible for Buchner
to establish a small laboratory for the chemistry of fermentation
and to give lectures and perform experiments on chemical
fermentations. In 1893 the first experiments were made on the
rupture of yeast cells; but because the Board of the Laboratory
was of the opinion that "nothing will be achieved by this" - the
grinding of the yeast cells had already been described during the
past 40 years, which latter statement was confirmed by accurate
study of the literature - the studies on the contents of yeast
cells were set aside for three years.
In the autumn of 1893 Buchner took over the supervision of the
analytical department in T. Curtius' laboratory in the University of Kiel
and established himself there, being granted the title of
Professor in 1895.
In 1896 he was called as Professor Extraordinary for Analytical
and Pharmaceutical Chemistry in the chemical laboratory of H. von
Pechmann at the University of Tübingen.
During the autumn vacation in the same year his researches into
the contents of the yeast cell were successfully recommenced in
the Hygienic Institute in Munich, where his brother was on the
Board of Directors. He was now able to work on a larger scale as
the necessary facilities and funds were available.
On January 9, 1897, it was possible to send his first paper,
Über alkoholische Gärung ohne Hefezellen (On
alcoholic fermentation without yeast cells), to the editors of
the Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft.
In October, 1898, he was appointed to the Chair of General
Chemistry in the Agricultural College in Berlin and he also held
lectureships on agricultural chemistry and agricultural chemical
experiments as well as on the fermentation questions of the sugar
industry. In order to obtain adequate assistance for scientific
research, and to be able to fully train his assistants himself,
he became habilitated at the University of Berlin in 1900.
In 1909 he was transferred to the University of Breslau and from
there, in 1911, to Würzburg. The results of Buchner's discoveries
on the alcoholic fermentation of sugar were set forth in the book
Die Zymasegärung (Zymosis), 1903, in collaboration
with his brother Professor Hans Buchner and Martin Hahn. He was
awarded the Nobel Prize in 1907 for his biochemical
investigations and his discovery of non-cellular
fermentation.
Buchner married Lotte Stahl in 1900. When serving as a major in a
field hospital at Folkschani in Roumania, he was wounded on
August 3, 1917. Of these wounds received in action at the front,
he died at Munich on the 12th of the same month.*
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.
*Other sources states August 13.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1907
MLA style: "Eduard Buchner - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1907/buchner.html
