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Jean Stas

 
Scientist: Jean Servais Stas

Belgian chemist (1813–1891)

Stas, who was born at Louvain in Belgium, trained initially as a physician. He later switched to chemistry, serving as assistant to Jean Dumas before being appointed to the chair of chemistry at the Royal Military School in Brussels in 1840. He had to retire in 1869 because of trouble with his voice through a throat ailment and became instead commissioner of the mint, but retired from this in 1872.

Stas was well known in his time for his extremely accurate determination of atomic weights. At first he supported William Prout's hypothesis that the weight of all elements is an exact multiple of that of the hydrogen atom. All his early measurements seemed to agree with this theory, but as his work progressed he seemed to be getting more and more fractional numbers and this turned him into the most articulate and damaging opponent of Prout. His work laid the foundations for the eventual formation of the periodic system.

Stas also carried out chemical analysis on potato blight and nicotine poisoning.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Jean Servais Stas
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Stas, Jean Servais (zhäN' sĕrvā' stäs), 1813-91, Belgian chemist. He was assistant to J. B. A. Dumas and professor (1840-65) at the École royale militaire, Brussels. He is noted for his accurate determinations of atomic weights.
Wikipedia: Jean Stas
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Jean Stas

Jean Stas
Born August 21, 1813 (1813-08-21)
Leuven
Died December 13, 1891 (1891-12-14)
Nationality Belgian
Fields Chemistry
Known for Accurate determinations of atomic weights
Influences Jean-Baptiste Dumas

Jean Servais Stas (August 21, 1813 - December 13, 1891) was a Belgian analytical chemist.

Contents

Life and work

Stas was born in Leuven and trained initially as a physician. He later switched to chemistry and worked at the École Polytechnique in Paris under the direction of Jean-Baptiste Dumas. Stas and Dumas established the atomic weight of carbon by weighing a sample of the pure material, burning it in pure oxygen, and then weighing the carbon dioxide produced.

In 1840, Stas was appointed professor at the Royal Military School in Brussels. He acquired international fame by determining the atomic weights of the elements more accurately than had ever been done before, using an atomic mass of 16 for oxygen as his standard. His results disproved the hypothesis of the English physicist William Prout that all atomic weights must be integral multiples of that of hydrogen. These careful, accurate atomic weight measurements of Stas helped lay the foundation for the periodic system of elements of Dmitri Mendeleev and others.[1]

Stas retired in 1869 because of problems with his voice caused by a throat ailment. He became commissioner of the mint, but resigned in 1872 because he disagreed with the government's monetary policy. Jean Stas died in Brussels and was buried at Leuven.

Honors and awards

Selected writings

See also

References

  1. ^ Rawson, Don C. (1974). "The process of discovery: Mendeleev and the periodic law". Annals of Science 31 (3): 181–204. doi:10.1080/00033797400200221. 

Further reading


 
 

 

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Scientist. A Dictionary of Scientists. Copyright © Market House Books Ltd 1993, 1999, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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