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Carl Bosch

 
Scientist: Carl Bosch

German industrial chemist (1874–1940)

Born in Cologne, Germany, Bosch was trained as both metallurgist and chemist and gained his doctorate under Johannes Wislicenus at Leipzig (1898). He joined the large German dyestuffs company, Badische Anilin und Soda Fabrik (BASF), in 1899. Following Fritz Haber's successful small-scale ammonia synthesis in 1909, Bosch began to develop a high-pressure ammonia plant at Oppau for BASF. The plant was opened in 1912 – a successful application of the Haber process on a large scale. Bosch also introduced the use of the water-gas shift reaction as a source of hydrogen for the process: CO + H2O = CO2 + H2

After World War I the large-scale ammonia fertilizer industry was established and the high-pressure technique was extended by BASF to the synthesis of methanol from carbon monoxide and hydrogen in 1923. Bosch was chairman of BASF's successor, IG Farben (1935–40) and concurrently director of the Kaiser Wilhelm institutes. He shared the Nobel Prize for chemistry with Friedrich Bergius in 1931.

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Carl Bosch

Born 27 August 1874(1874-08-27)
Cologne, Germany
Died 26 April 1940 (aged 65)
Heidelberg, Germany
Nationality Germany
Fields Chemistry
Institutions BASF, IG Farben
Alma mater Technical College of Charlottenburg
Known for Haber-Bosch process
Notable awards Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1931)

Carl Bosch (27 August 1874 – 26 April 1940) was a German chemist and engineer and Nobel laureate in chemistry.[1] He was a pioneer in the field of high-pressure industrial chemistry and founder of IG Farben, at one point the world's largest chemical company.

Contents

Biography

Early years

Bosch was born in Cologne, Germany to a successful gas and plumbing supplier.[2] His uncle Robert Bosch pioneered the development of the spark plug. Carl, trying to decide between a career in metallurgy or chemistry, studied at the Technical College of Charlottenburg (today the Technische Universität Berlin) and the University of Leipzig from 1892-1898.

Career

In 1899 he took an entry level job at BASF, then Germany's largest chemical and dye firm. From 1909 until 1913 he transformed Fritz Haber's tabletop demonstration of a method to fix nitrogen using high pressure chemistry into an important industrial process to produce megatons of fertilizer and explosives. The fully developed system is called the Haber-Bosch process. After World War I Bosch extended high-pressure techniques to the production of synthetic fuel and methanol. In 1925 Bosch helped found and was the first head of IG Farben and from 1935 chairman of the board of directors. He received the Siemens-Ring in 1924 for his contributions to applied research and his support of basic research. In 1931 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry together with Friedrich Bergius for the introduction of high pressure chemistry.

Personal life

Bosch, a critic of many Nazi policies, was gradually relieved of his high positions after Hitler became chancellor, and fell into despair and alcoholism.[2] He died in Heidelberg.

Legacy

The Haber-Bosch Process today consumes more than one percent of the energy on Earth and is responsible for feeding roughly one-third of its population.[3] On average, one-half of the nitrogen in a human body is synthetic, the product of a Haber-Bosch plant. Bosch was an ardent collector of insects, minerals, and gems. His collected meteorites and other mineral samples were loaned to Yale University, and eventually purchased by the Smithsonian.[4][5] He was an amateur astronomer with a well-equipped private observatory. The asteroid 7414 Bosch was named in his honour.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Carl Bosch Biography". Nobel Foundation. http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1931/bosch-bio.html. Retrieved 2008-05-24. 
  2. ^ a b Hager, Thomas (2008). The Alchemy of Air Harmony Books, New York. ISBN 9780307351784.
  3. ^ Smil, Vaclav. Enriching the Earth: Fritz Haber, Carl Bosch, and the Transformation of World Food Production. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press (2001)
  4. ^ "Biographical Archive: Carl Bosch (1874-1940)". The Mineralogical Record. 2009. http://www.minrec.org/labels.asp?colid=205. Retrieved 2009-01-04. 
  5. ^ Meteorites in the Carl Bosch Collection of Minerals Yale University (1949). "Carl Bosch und die Naturwissenschaft". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 5 (6): 299–300. doi:10.1016/0016-7037(54)90037-X. 
  6. ^ Gerhard Lehmann; Jens Kandler; André Knöfel (27 October 2004). "Amateurastronomen am Sternenhimmel". Amateure am Sternenhimmel. http://www.kleinplanetenseite.de/Versch/kphimmel.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-04. 

Further reading

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