Background
Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp was born on the 30th of October 1817 at Hanau, , Hesse-Kassel, Germany, where his father, Johann Heinrich Kopp (1777 - 1858), a physician, was professor of chemistry, physics and natural history at the Lyceum.
Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp was born on the 30th of October 1817 at Hanau, , Hesse-Kassel, Germany, where his father, Johann Heinrich Kopp (1777 - 1858), a physician, was professor of chemistry, physics and natural history at the Lyceum.
After attending the gymnasium of his native town, Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp studied at Marburg and Heidelberg, and then, attracted by the fame of Liebig, went in 1839 to Gießen, where he became a privatdozent in 1841, and professor of chemistry twelve years later.
In 1864 Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp was called to Heidelberg in the same capacity, and he remained there till his death. Kopp devoted himself especially to physico-chemical inquiries, and in the history of chemical theory his name is associated with several of the most important correlations of the physical properties of substances with their chemical constitution. Much of his work was concerned with specific volumes, the conception of which he set forth in a paper published when he was only twenty-two years of age.
And the principles Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp established have formed the basis of subsequent investigations in that subject, although his results have in some cases undergone modification.
Another question to which he gave much attention was the connection of the boiling point of compounds, organic ones in particular, with their composition. In addition to these and other laborious researches, Kopp was a prolific writer
In 1843–1847 he published a comprehensive History of Chemistry, in four volumes, to which three supplements were added in 1869–1875. Kopp, in studying heat capacities, found "that the molecular heat capacity of a solid compound is the sum of the atomic heat capacities of the elements composing lieutenant
The elements having atomic heat capacities lower than those required by the law of Dulong and Petit retain these lower values in their compounds."
In addition, Kopp wrote (1863) on theoretical and physical chemistry for the Graham-Otto Lehrbuch der Chemie, and for many years assisted Liebig in editing the Annalen der Chemie and the Jahresbericht.
Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp was a memberof the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Royal Society.