Johannes Thiele (chemist), Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Johannes Thiele (chemist)

German chemist

Date of Birth: 13-May-1865

Place of Birth: RacibĂłrz, Silesian Voivodeship, Poland

Date of Death: 17-Apr-1918

Profession: chemist, university teacher

Nationality: Germany

Zodiac Sign: Taurus


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About Johannes Thiele (chemist)

  • Friedrich Karl Johannes Thiele (May 13, 1865 – April 17, 1918) was a German chemist and a prominent professor at several universities, including those in Munich and Strasbourg.
  • He developed many laboratory techniques related to isolation of organic compounds.
  • In 1907 he described a device for the accurate determination of melting points, since named Thiele tube after him.Thiele was born in Ratibor, Prussia, now RacibĂłrz, Poland.
  • Thiele studied mathematics at the University of Breslau but later turned to chemistry, receiving his doctorate from Halle in 1890 .
  • He taught at the University of Munich from 1893 to 1902, when he was appointed professor of chemistry at Strasbourg.He developed the preparation of glyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone).After KekulĂ©'s proposal for benzene structure in 1865, Thiele suggested a "Partial Valence Hypothesis", which concerned double and triple carbon-carbon bonds with which he explains their particular reactivity.
  • In 1899 this led to the prediction of the resonance that existed in benzene, and he proposed a resonance structure, by using a broken circle to represent the partial bonds.
  • Later this problem was completely solved with the advent of quantum theory. In 1899, Thiele was head of Organic Chemistry at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences in Munich.
  • With his associate Otto Holzinger, he synthesised an iminodibenzyl nucleus: two benzene rings attached together by a nitrogen atom and an ethylene bridge.He discovered the condensation of ketones and aldehydes with cyclopentadiene as a route to fulvenes.
  • He also recognized that these deeply colored species were related to but isomeric with benzene derivatives.According to one of his students Heinrich Otto Wieland, Thiele had a dislike of the chemistry of natural products.

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