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1901 2012
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1909
Wilhelm Ostwald
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by the former Rector General of National Antiquities, Dr. H. Hildebrand, President of the Royal Academy of Sciences, on December 10, 1909
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The Royal Academy of Sciences has resolved to award the former
professor at Leipzig University and Geheimrat, Wilhelm Ostwald,
the Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1909 in recognition of his work on
catalysis and associated fundamental studies on chemical
equilibria and rates of reaction.
As early as the first half of last century it had in certain
cases been observed that chemical reactions could be induced by
substances which did not appear to participate in the reaction
themselves and which at all events were not altered in any way.
This led Berzelius in his famous annual reports on the progress
of chemistry for 1835 to make one of his not infrequent brilliant
conclusions whereby scattered observations were collated in
accordance with a common criterion and new concepts were
introduced in science. He termed the phenomenon catalysis.
However, the catalysis concept soon came up against opposition
from another eminent quarter as allegedly unfruitful and
gradually fell utterly into discredit.
Some 50 years later Wilhelm Ostwald carried out a number of
studies to determine the relative strength of acids and bases. He
sought to solve this extraordinarily important matter for
chemistry in a variety of ways which all yielded consistent
results. Amongst other things he found that the rate at which
different processes take place under the action of acids and
bases can be used to determine the relative strengths of the
latter. He performed extensive measurements along these lines,
and in so doing laid the foundations for the entire procedure for
studying rates of reaction, all the more essential typical cases
of which he examined. From that time onwards the theory of the
rate of reaction has become increasingly important for
theoretical chemistry; these tests, however, were also able to
throw new light on the nature of catalytic processes.
After Arrhenius had formulated
his well-known theory that acids and bases in aqueous solution
are separated into ions and that their strength depends on their
electrical conductivity, or more accurately, on their degree of
dissociation, Ostwald tested the correctness of this view by
measuring the conductivity and hence the concentration of the
hydrogen and hydroxyl ions with the acids and bases which he had
used in his previous experiments. He found Arrhenius' theory
corroborated in all of the many cases which he himself
investigated. His explanation why he consistently found the same
values for the relative strength of the acids and bases whichever
method he used was that in all these cases the hydrogen ions of
the acids and the hydroxyl ions of the bases acted catalytically
and that the relative strength of the acids and bases was
determined solely by their ion concentration.
Ostwald was hence led to undertake a more thorough study of
catalytic phenomena and he extended its scope to other catalysts,
as they were called, as well. After consistent, continuous
research he successfully formulated a principle to describe the
nature of catalysis which is satisfactory for the present state
of knowledge, namely that catalytic action consists in the
modification, by the acting substance, the catalyst, of the rate
at which a chemical reaction occurs, without that substance
itself being part of the end-products formed. The
modification can be an increase, but also a decrease of the
reaction rate. A reaction which otherwise proceeds at a slow
rate, taking perhaps years before equilibrium is attained, can be
accelerated by catalysts to such an extent that it is complete in
a comparatively short time, in certain cases within one or a few
minutes, or even in fractions of a minute, and conversely.
The rate of a reaction is a measurable parameter and hence all
parameters affecting it are measurable as well. Catalysis, which
formerly appeared to be a hidden secret, has thus become what is
known as a kinetic problem and accessible to exact scientific
study.
Ostwald's discovery has been profusely exploited. Besides Ostwald
himself a large number of eminent workers have recently taken up
his field of study and the work is advancing with increasing
enthusiasm. The results have been truly admirable.
The significance of this new idea is best revealed by the
immensely important role - first pointed out by Ostwald - of
catalytic processes in all sectors of chemistry. Catalytic
processes are a commonplace occurrence, especially in organic
synthesis. Key sections of industry such as e.g. sulphuric acid
manufacture, the basis of practically the whole chemical
industry, and the manufacture of indigo which has flourished so
during the last ten years, are based on the action of catalysts.
A factor of perhaps even greater weight, however, is the growing
realization that the enzymes, so-called, which are
extremely important for the chemical processes within living
organisms, act as catalysts and hence the theory of plant and
animal metabolism falls essentially in the field of catalyst
chemistry. As an illustration, the chemical processes involved in
digestion are catalytic and can be simulated step by step using
purely inorganic catalysts. Furthermore the ability of various
organs to transform nutrients from the blood in such a way that
they are suitable for the specific tasks of each organ can
indubitably be explained by the occurrence of various kinds of
enzymes within the organ capable of catalytic actions adapted to
their particular purpose. That apart, it is strange that such
substances as hydrocyanic acid, mercuric chloride, hydrogen
sulphide and others which act as extremely potent poisons on the
organism have also been observed to neutralize or "poison"even
pure inorganic catalysts such as e.g. finely dispersed platinum.
Even from these brief references it should be clear that a new
approach to the difficult problems of physiological processes has
been possible with the aid of Ostwald's theory of catalysis.
Because they are related to the actions of enzymes in the living
organism, the new field of research is of an importance for
mankind that cannot as yet be fully gauged.
Although the Nobel Prize for Chemistry is now being awarded to
Professor Ostwald in recognition of his work on catalysis, he is
a man to whom the chemical world is indebted also in other ways.
By the spoken and the written word he, perhaps more than any
other, has carried modern theories to a rapid victory and for
several decennia he played a leading part in the field of general
chemistry. In other ways too he has furthered chemistry by his
versatile activity with numerous discoveries and refinements in
both the experimental and the theoretical spheres.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1909
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