Thursday, June 9, 2011

Robert Bunsen

Robert Bunsen
Robert Wilhelm Eberhard (March 30, 1811 to August 16, 1899) was a German chemist. He studied the emission spectra of the resistance, and Gustav Kirchhoff discovered cesium (in 1860) and rubidium (1861). Bunsen developed several methods of gas analysis equipment has been a pioneer in photochemistry, rather than the original organic chemistry field of arsenic. His laboratory assistant, Peter Desage, he developed the Bunsen burner, an improvement of laboratory burners then in use. Bunsen-Kirchhoff Award spectroscopy as Bunsen and Kirchhoff. Bunsen was born in Göttingen, Germany, the youngest of four children and the University of Göttingen, librarian and professor of modern philology, Christian Bunsen (1770-1837).
When school Holzminden Bunsen recorded in 1828 and studied chemistry at Göttingen Friedrich Stromeyer obtain a doctorate in 1831. In 1832 and 1833, he went to Germany, France and Austria, where he met Friedrich Runge (who discovered aniline and 1819 isolated caffeine), Justus von Liebig in Giessen and Eilhard Mitscherlich in Bonn .

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