4. Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier
1743 â 1794
Began publishing chemical
studies in 1764
Member of the French
Academy of Sciences (1768)
Worked on ïŹrst geological
map of France (1769, w/
Jean-Ettiene Guettard)
6. Jean-Paul Marat
1743 â 1793
Physician shown to be a scientiïŹc
charlatan by Lavoisier in 1779.
Developed an animosity towards
the Academy in general and
Lavoisier in particular.
âMan has the right to deal with
his oppressors by devouring
their palpitating hearts.â
8. On Probability
âThe art of drawing conclusions
from experiments and
observations consists in
evaluating probabilities and
estimating if they are large and
numerous enough to constitute
proofs. This type of calculation is
more complicated and more
difïŹcult that we think; it demands
a great sagacity, and is in general
beyond the powers of ordinary
men.
9. On Charlatans
âIt is on their errors in this
sort of calculation that the
success of charlatans,
sorcerers and alchemists is
founded; likewise, in other
times, that of magicians,
enchanters, and in general, all
those who have deluded
themselves or who seek to
abuse public credulity.â
10. âFather of Modern Chemistryâ
Demise of phlogiston theory of
combustion
Modern concepts of element,
compound & mixture
Production of a table of elements
Naming of oxygen and hydrogen
Nomenclature
Modern methods of chemical
analysis, e.g. stoichiometry
Principle of âconservation of massâ
13. Gabriel Venel
Chemistry suffered from the
lack of an organizing theory
and needed someone who
could bring about a
ârevolutionâ in the science.
1753
14.
15. Johann Becher
1635 - 1682
Introduced the idea that
there was a substance
contained within
combustible matter that
was released upon
combustion (1667)
16. Johann Becher
1635 - 1682
Earth
Water
Terra lapidea (fusibility)
Terra ïŹuida (ïŹuidity,
volatility, metallicity)
Terra pinguis (oily,
sulphurous, combustibility)
17. Georg Stahl
1659 - 1734
1697: Introduces the term
âphlogistonâ for the (nearly)
weightless âinïŹammable principleâ
Studies its role in combustion and
oxidation (âcalcinationâ)
Charcoal & oil were rich in
phlogiston.
Metal = calyx + phlogiston
18. Georg Stahl
1659 - 1734
Chemical reactions occur
by phlogiston transferring
from one substance to
another.
A theory that uniïŹed
combustion, metabolism,
rusting and other
phenomena and that
explained many facts ...
19. Such as ...
Weight loss when combustibles are burned
because they lose phlogiston
Fire burns out in an enclosed space because it
saturates the air with phlogiston
Animals die in an airtight space because the air
becomes saturated with phlogiston
Some metal calxes turn to metals when heated
with charcoal because the phlogiston from the
charcoal restores the phlogiston in the metal
20. Joseph Priestly
1733 â 1804
Directions for Impregnating
Water with Fixed Air (1772)
Experiments and Observations
on Different Kinds of Airs
(1774 â â86)
Discovered âdephlogisticated
airâ (1774)
Member of the Lunar Society
23. 1772: Interest in âairsâ
Discovered that
phosphorous and sulfur gain
weight when they are
burned.
In a private note to the
secretary of the Academy, he
extends this to all bodies
undergoing combustion or
calcination.
24. 1772: Crisis
Louis Bernard Guyton de
Morveau shows that all metals
gain weight when calcinated
(oxidized).
But if calcination was explained
by the loss of phlogistion from
the metal, how could this be?
25. 1773
âThe importance of this
subject has prompted me
once more to undertake all
this work, which seemed to
me destined to bring about
a revolution in physics and
chemistry.â
26.
27.
28.
29. Oxygen
1771 â Carl Scheele isolates âïŹre airâ
1774 â Joseph Priestley isolates a new air and
visits Lavoisier in Paris to describe his
experiments
1775 â Priestly names âdephlogisticated airâ
1776 â Lavoisier repeats Priestleyâs experiments
1777 â Scheeleâs Treatise on Air & Fire published.
30.
31. 1777
âI shall henceforth designate
dephlogisticated air ... by the
name of the acidifying
principle, or, if one prefers
the same signiïŹcation in a
Greek word, by that of
oxygen principle.â
32. Death of Phlogiston
Lavoisier publishes his âMemoir on Combustion
in Generalâ (1777). He uses Priestleyâs original
experiments on oxygen, combustion and water
against the theory of phlogiston, and shows that
combustion required the presence of oxygen.
Priestly responds in âExperiments relating to
Phlogistonâ (1783) and âConsiderations on the
Doctrine of Phlogistonâ (1796).
33. Richard Kirwan
1733 â 1812
Fellow of the Royal Society
President of the Royal Irish
Academy.
Essay on Phlogiston and the
Constitution of Acids (1787)
Also opposed Huttonâs theory
of the Earth
34. Hydrogen
First produced by the 16th century alchemist
Paracelsus
1671: Re-discovered by Robert Boyle
1766: Called âinïŹammable airâ by Henry
Cavendish
1783: Called âhydrogenâ by Lavoisier after he and
Simon LaPlace replicate Cavendishâs experiments.
35. Henry Cavendish
1731 â 1810
Made âinïŹammable airâ by
combining metals and strong acids.
Discovered that when it was
mixed with âdephlogisticated air,â
water resulted.
Discovered that 79.167% of the
atmosphere is âphlogisticatedâ and
20.8333% âdephlogisticatedâ
36. Henry Cavendish
1731 â 1810
Independently discovered (but never
published):
Ohmâs Law
Daltonâs Law of Partial Pressures
Coulombâs Law
Charlesâ Law of Gases
37. Nomenclature
âWe must clean house
thoroughly, for they have made
use of an enigmatical language
peculiar to themselves, which
in general presents one
meaning for the adepts and
another meaning for the
vulgar, and at the same time
contains nothing that is
rationally intelligible either for
the one or for the other.â
40. Mass Conservation
âWrongly do the Greeks suppose that aught begins or ceases
to be; for nothing comes into being or is destroyed; but all is an
aggregation or secretion of pre-existing things; so that all
becoming might more correctly be called becoming mixed, and
all corruption, becoming separate.â (Anaxagoras, c450 BCE)
âThe sum total of things was always such as it is now, and such
it will ever remainâ (Epicurus, 341-270 BCE)
âA body of matter cannot disappear completely. It only changes
its form, condition, composition, color and other properties
and turns into a different complex or elementary
matter.â (Tusi, 1201 â 1274 CE)
41. Mass Conservation
âNothing is created, either in the operations
of art or in those of nature, and it may be
considered as a general principle that in
every operation there exists an equal
quantity of matter before and after the
operation; that the quality and quantity of
the constituents is the same, and that what
happens is only changes, modiïŹcations. It is
on this principle that is founded all the art of
performing chemical experiments; in all such
must be assumed a true equality or equation
between constituents of the substances
examined, and those resulting from their
analysis.â
42. Further Work
Introduction of the metric
system
Drawing of vertical cross-
sections to represent
stratigraphic order.
Studies of transpiration and
respiration
51. Marc-Auguste Pictet
âChemistry, banished until now to a small circle
of adepts whose language and ideas were
equally obscure, has become the inseparable
aide and companion to Physics: these sciences,
united and guided by experiment alone, have
proceeded at a rapid pace; Chemistry itself has
undergone a great revolution, a frightful
scaffolding has given way to a simple and
illuminating theory, based upon immediate
consequences of experiment ⊠Everything
indicates that we are on the right path, and that
it will lead daily to discoveries in the natural
sciences.â
52. 1790
âThis then is the revolution
which has occurred in an
important branch of human
knowledge since your
departure from Europe; I look
upon this revolution as well
advanced and it will be
complete if you will stand with
usâ
53. 1791
âAll the young scientists adopt
the new theory and I thence
conclude that the revolution is
accomplished in chemistryâ
54. Revolution
1787 â Cavendish abandons phlogiston
1789 â Universal acceptance in France
Early 1790âs â Edinburgh & Glasgow
1791 â Kirwan abandons phlogiston
1800 â Spread throughout Europe and on to
America
55. I. Bernard Cohen
âLavosierâs Chemical Revolution passes all the
tests for a revolution in science. It has been
recognized as a revolution by all historians and
scientists, just as it was seen to be a revolution
in its own time. Additionally, the whole science
of chemistry and its language have followed the
lines set forth in the Chemical Revolution. The
Chemical Revolution is thus a paradigmatic
example of a revolution in science.â
56. Carleton E. Perrin
âThe Chemical Revolution is a classic instance of
conceptual change in science â one of the ïŹrst to be
foretold. Venel had called for a breakthrough that
would exploit the distinctive methods and concepts
of chemistry to establish it as the independent peer
of physics. ⊠[Lavoisierâs] innovations transformed
the structure and language of chemistry, generating a
crisis that split the community. Chemistry emerged
from the conïŹict as a more mature discipline with
the public recognition Venel had desired.â
57. 1790
âNow that you have been
informed as to what has
transpired in chemistry, it might
be well to speak of our political
revolution. We look upon this
as accomplished and
accomplished irretrievably.â
58.
59.
60.
61.
62.
63. Jacques Louis David
âLet them be closed forever,
these schools of ïŹattery and
servility ⊠In the name of
humanity, in the name of
justice, and above all for your
love of youth, let us destroy â
let us annihilate â these deadly
academies, which can no longer
survive under a free regime.â
64. Jean-Paul Marat
1791
âI denounce to you the Coryphaeus of
the charlatans, Master Lavoisier, son of a
land-grabber, apprentice-chemist, pupil of
the Genevan stock-jobber Necker, a
Farmer General, Commissioner for
Gunpowder and Saltpeter, director of
the Discount Bank, secretary to the
King, member of the Academy of
Science, intimate of Vauvilliers, unfaithful
administrator of the Paris Food
Commission, and the greatest schemer
of our times.â
Portrait of Lavoisier six years before his eventual death / Aged 45 / One year before the French Revolution
Creation of gases / synthesis of water / measurement / Traité Élémentaire de Chimie
In ’86, L’s work with the FG allowed him turn a profit of close to 48M USD. He used this money to support his research.
The GA sold French gunpowder to the American revolutionaries / It gave L a home in the Arsenal when he built a lab.
The DB lunctioned to lend money to the Royal treasury
Marat believed in an “igneous fluid” that was contained within bodies. As we will see, L had been working on combustion for quite a while by then.
Franklin / Double-blinds / No magnets required / Actually a form of hypnotism / invisible forces / action at a distance
A certain elitism
A practical science / A Kuhnian “pre-science”?
Open versus the closed hermetic nature of alchemy / Boyle challenged the traditional elements and the alchemical vision.
The Chemistry of Gases
was certain that, given the right materials, he could make himself invisible
elements of air and fire replaced
Sold idea to a certain Dr Schweppes
Devp of steam engine
They must be absorbing something, most likely from the air.
The supercollideer of its day / Need to have vessel to capture gas (CO2). Impossible to build at the time / Need to have vessel to capture gas (CO2). Impossible to build at the time
The supercollideer of its day / Need to have vessel to capture gas (CO2). Impossible to build at the time / Need to have vessel to capture gas (CO2). Impossible to build at the time
Producing Oxygen
Becomes oxygène in 1787 / oxy – acid … gen – generating. Some acids do contain O2 but not all.
One of the last supporters of phlogiston / L reprinted ESSAY with commentaries. In 1789, K reprinted the reprint with commentary. / Eventually abandoned phlogiston in 1791
Modern values: N 78.084 and O 20.946
Shy – possibly aspergers?
Lists 55 elements / two part names / examples Nitric, Nitrous, Nitrate, Nitrite
In all of this L was building on the work of others and putting it into the correct theoretical framework. Shifted Chemistry from Baconian observation to Newtonian theory.
Stoichiometry ...
Stoichiometry ...
13 years old at marriage – avoiding marriage to 50 y.o. -
1789
Letter to Ben Franklin
Letter to Ben Franklin
Storming of the Bastile 1789 / Execution of Louis 16 1793 / between 18,000 and 40,000 people were executed during the Reign of Terror (until 95) / marat robspierre danton / latter two in 1794.
Storming of the Bastile 1789 / Execution of Louis 16 1793 / between 18,000 and 40,000 people were executed during the Reign of Terror (until 95) / marat robspierre danton / latter two in 1794.
Storming of the Bastile 1789 / Execution of Louis 16 1793 / between 18,000 and 40,000 people were executed during the Reign of Terror (until 95) / marat robspierre danton / latter two in 1794.
Storming of the Bastile 1789 / Execution of Louis 16 1793 / between 18,000 and 40,000 people were executed during the Reign of Terror (until 95) / marat robspierre danton / latter two in 1794.
Himself a member of the Academy of Painting & Sculpture
Arrest of the Ferme Générale / Charges were pressed by an ex-FG member. All members (incl L’s father in law) were executed. Image by Beaulieu.
David - Death of Marat (’93)
Charlotte Corday, Paul-Jacques-Aimé Baudry, 1860