Background
Walther Nernst was born on June 25, 1864 in Briesen, West Prussia (now part of Poland). He was the third child of Gustav Nernst, a judge, and Ottilie (Nerger) Nernst.
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This book, "Einführung in Die Mathematische Behandlung Der Naturwissenschaften: Kurzgefasstes Lehrbuch Der Differential- Und Integralrechnung Mit Besonderer Berücksichtigung Der Chemie (German Edition)", by Walther Nernst, is a replication. It has been restored by human beings, page by page, so that you may enjoy it in a form as close to the original as possible. This book was created using print-on-demand technology. Thank you for supporting classic literature.
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(Theoretical Chemistry From the Standpoint of Avogadro s R...)
Theoretical Chemistry From the Standpoint of Avogadro s Rule Thermodynamics Classic Reprint
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Walther Nernst was born on June 25, 1864 in Briesen, West Prussia (now part of Poland). He was the third child of Gustav Nernst, a judge, and Ottilie (Nerger) Nernst.
Walther Nernst attended the gymnasium at Graudenz (now Grudziadz), Poland, where he developed an interest in poetry, literature, and drama. For a brief time, he considered becoming a poet.
After graduation in 1883, Nernst attended the universities of Zurich, Berlin, Graz, and Würzburg, majoring in physics at each institution. He was awarded with Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1887 by Würzburg. His doctoral thesis dealt with the effects of magnetism and heat on electrical conductivity. In 1889, he finished his habilitation at University of Leipzig.
Nernst's first academic appointment came in 1887 when he was chosen as an assistant to professor Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald at the University of Leipzig. Ostwald had been introduced to Nernst earlier in Graz by Svante Arrhenius. These three, Ostwald, Arrhenius, and Nernst, were to become among the most influential men involved in the founding of the new discipline of physical chemistry, the application of physical laws to chemical phenomena.
The first problem Nernst addressed at Leipzig was the diffusion of two kinds of ions across a semipermeable membrane. He wrote a mathematical equation describing the process, now known as the Nernst equation, which relates the electric potential of the ions to various properties of the cell.
In the early 1890, Nernst accepted a teaching position appointment at the University of Göttingen in Leipzig.
In 1894, Nernst was promoted to full professor at Göttingen. At the same time, he also received approval for the creation of a new Institute for Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry at the university.
At Göttingen, Nernst wrote a textbook on physical chemistry, Theoretische Chemie vom Standpunkte der Avogadroschen Regel und der Thermodynamik (Theoretical Chemistry from the Standpoint of Avogadro's Rule and Thermodynamics). Published in 1893, it had an almost missionary objective: to lay out the principles and procedures of a new approach to the study of chemistry. The book became widely popular, going through a total of fifteen editions over the next thirty-three years.
During his tenure at Göttingen, Nernst investigated a wide variety of topics in the field of solution chemistry. In 1893, for example, he developed a theory for the breakdown of ionic compounds in water, a fundamental issue in the Arrhenius theory of ionization. According to Nernst, dissociation, or the dissolving of a compound into its elements, occurs because the presence of nonconducting water molecules causes positive and negative ions in a crystal to lose contact with each other. The ions become hydrated by water molecules, making it possible for them to move about freely and to conduct an electric current through the solution.
In later work, Nernst developed techniques for measuring the degree of hydration of ions in solutions.
By 1903, Nernst had also devised methods for determining the pH value of a solution, an expression relating the solution's hydrogen-ion concentration (acidity or alkalinity).
In 1889, Nernst addressed another fundamental problem in solution chemistry: precipitation. He constructed a mathematical expression showing how the concentration of ions in a slightly soluble compound could result in the formation of an insoluble product. That mathematical expression is now known as the solubility product, a special case of the ionization constant for slightly soluble substances.
Four years later, Nernst also developed the concept of buffer solutions - solutions made of bases, rather than acids - and showed how they could be used in various theoretical and practical situations.
Around 1905, Nernst was offered a position as professor of physical chemistry at the University of Berlin. This move was significant for both the institution and the man. Chemists at Berlin had been resistant to many of the changes going on in their field, and theoretical physicist and eventual Nobel Prize winner Max Planck had recommended the selection of Nernst to revitalize the Berlin chemists. The move also proved to be a stimulus to Nernst's own work.
Until he left Göttingen, he had concentrated on the reworking of older, existing problems developed by his predecessors in physical chemistry.
In Berlin he began to search out, define, and explore new questions. Certainly, the most important of these questions involved the thermodynamics of chemical reactions at very low temperatures. Research leads to the Third Law of Thermodynamics Attempting to extend the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation and the Thomsen-Berthelot principle of maximum work to temperatures close to absolute zero-the temperature at which there is no heat-Nernst eventually concluded that it would be possible to reach absolute zero only by a series of infinite steps. In the real world, that conclusion means that an experimenter can get closer and closer to absolute zero, but can never actually reach that point.
Nernst first presented his "Heat Theorem," as he called it, to the Göttingen Academy of Sciences in December of 1905. It was published a year later in the Nachrichten von der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen. The theory is now more widely known as the Third Law of Thermodynamics.
Nernst's Heat Theorem was eventually integrated into the revolution taking place in physics, the development of quantum theory. At the time he first proposed the theory, Nernst had ignored any possible role of quantum mechanics.
A few years later, however, that had all changed. In working on his own theory of specific heats, for example, Albert Einstein had quite independently come to the same conclusions as had Nernst. He later wrote that Nernst's experiments at Berlin had confirmed his own theory of specific heats. In turn, Nernst eventually realized that his Heat Theorem was consistent with the dramatic changes being brought about in physics by quantum theory.
Even as his work on the Heat Theorem went forward, Nernst turned to new topics. One of these involved the formation of hydrogen chloride by photolysis, or chemical breakdown by light energy. Chemists had long known that a mixture of hydrogen and chlorine gases will explode when exposed to light.
In 1918, Nernst developed an explanation for that reaction.
The rise of the Nazi party in 1933 brought an end to Nernst's professional career.
Little is known about his years after the retirement.
Walther Nernst made a significant breakthrough with his statement of the Third Law of Thermodynamics, which holds that it should be impossible to attain the temperature of absolute zero in any real experiment.
For his accomplishment, he was awarded the 1920 Nobel Prize for chemistry.
In addition to his important work with thermodynamics, Walther Nernst made contributions to the field of physical chemistry.
He was a close colleague of Einstein, and was a great contributor to the organization of German science - he was largely responsible for the first Solvay Conference in 1911, for example.
Nernst was awarded with Franklin Medal in 1928.
(This book, "Einführung in Die Mathematische Behandlung D...)
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(This book was digitized and reprinted from the collection...)
(Theoretical Chemistry From the Standpoint of Avogadro s R...)
Walther Nernst was personally opposed to the political and scientific policies promoted by Adolf Hitler and his followers and was not reluctant to express his views publicly.
In addition, two of his daughters had married Jews, which contributed to his becoming an outcast in the severely anti-Semitic climate of Germany at that time.
Walther Nernst was one of the geniuses of early twentieth-century German chemistry, a man with a prodigious curiosity about every new development in the physical sciences.
In addition to scientific research, Nernst was an avid inventor. Around the turn of the century, for example, he developed an incandescent lamp that used rare-earth oxide rather than a metal as the filament. Although he sold the lamp patent outright for a million marks, the device was never able to compete commercially with the conventional model invented by Thomas Alva Edison. Nernst also invented an electric piano that was never successfully marketed.
In his free time, he was especially fond of travel, hunting, and fishing. Nernst also loved automobiles and owned one of the first to be seen in Göttingen.
In 1890 Nernst married Emma Lohmeyer. The couple had five children - three daughters and two sons.
(1827–1888)
(1833–1876)
She was the daughter of a surgeon.