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1 Moissan
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2 Moissan
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3 Moissan
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4 Moissan, Ferdinand-Frédéric-Henri
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 28 September 1852 Paris, Franced. 20 February 1907 Paris, France[br]French chemist, the first to isolate fluorine, and a pioneer in high-temperature technology.[br]His family, of modest means, moved in 1864 to Meaux, where he attended the municipal college; he returned to Paris before completing his education and apprenticed himself to a pharmacist. In 1872 he began work as a laboratory assistant at the Musée d'Histoire Naturelle, while continuing studies in chemistry. He qualified as a pharmacist at the Ecole Supérieure de Pharmacie in 1879, and by this time he had decided that his main interest was inorganic chemistry. His early investigations concerned the oxides of iron and related metals; his work attracted the favourable attention of Sainte-Claire Deville and was the subject of his doctoral thesis. In 1882 Moissan married Leonie Lugan, whose father provided generous financial support, enabling him to pursue his researches with greater freedom and security. He became, successively, Professor of Toxicology at the Ecole in 1886 and of Inorganic Chemistry in 1899. In 1884 Moissan began both his investigation of the compounds of fluorine and his attempts to isolate the highly reactive element itself. Previous attempts by chemists had ended in failure and sometimes injury. Moissan's health, too, was affected, but in June 1886 he succeeded in isolating fluorine by electrolysing potassium fluoride in hydrogen fluoride at −50°C (−58°F) in platinum apparatus. He was then able to prepare further compounds of fluorine, some of technological importance, such as carbon tetrafluoride. At the same time, Moissan turned his attention to the making of artificial diamonds. To achieve this, he devised his celebrated electric-arc furnace; this was first demonstrated in December 1892 and consisted of two lime blocks placed one above the other, with a cavity for a crucible and two grooves for carbon electrodes, and could attain a temperature of 3,500°C (6,332°F). It seemed at first that he had succeeded in making diamonds, but this attempt is now regarded as a failure. Nevertheless, with the aid of his furnace he was able to produce and study many substances of technological importance, including refractory oxides, borides and carbides, and such metals as manganese, chromium, uranium, tungsten, vanadium, molybdenum, titanium and zirconium; many of these materials had useful applications in the chemical and metallurgical industries (e.g. calcium carbide became the main source of acetylene).[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsNobel Prize in Chemistry 1906.BibliographyThere are several listings of his more than 300 publications, such as Lebeau, cited below. Major works are Le Four électrique (1897, Paris) and Le Fluor et ses composés (1900, Paris).Further ReadingCentenaire de l'Ecole supérieure de pharmacie de l'Université de Paris 1803–1903,1904, Paris, pp. 249–57.B.Harrow, 1927, Eminent Chemists of Our Time, 2nd edn, New York, pp. 135–54, 374– 88.P.Lebeau, 1908, "Notice sur la vie et les travaux de Henri Moissan", Bulletin Soc. chim. de France (4 ser.) 3:i–xxxviii.LRDBiographical history of technology > Moissan, Ferdinand-Frédéric-Henri
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5 муассановский
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > муассановский
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6 Chemical technology
См. также в других словарях:
MOISSAN (H.) — MOISSAN HENRI (1852 1907) Chimiste français, né et mort à Paris, qui reçut en 1906 le prix Nobel de chimie pour ses travaux sur l’isolement du fluor et pour la réalisation du four électrique qui porte son nom. Après des études au Muséum… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Moissan — [mwa sã], Ferdinand Frédéric Henri, französischer Chemiker, * Paris 28. 9. 1852, ✝ ebenda 20. 2. 1907; seit 1900 Professor an der Sorbonne in Paris. Moissan untersuchte besonders Fluorverbindungen und stellte erstmals reines Fluor dar; er… … Universal-Lexikon
Moissan — (spr. mŭassáng), Henry, Chemiker, geb. 28. Sept. 1852 in Paris, arbeitete am naturwissenschaftlichen Museum im Laboratorium für Bodenkultur, wurde 1883 Leiter der praktischen Arbeiten und 1886 Professor an der höhern Schule für Pharmazie, auch… … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Moissan — (spr. mŏassáng), Henri Ferdinand Marie, franz. Chemiker, geb. 28. Sept. 1852 in Paris, bekannt durch seine Darstellung künstlicher Diamanten im elektr. Ofen, isolierte und verflüssigte als erster das Fluor, arbeitete außerdem bes. über die Oxyde… … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
Moissan — Moissan, Henri … Enciclopedia Universal
Moissan — Henri Moissan Henri Moissan Ferdinand Frédéric Henri Moissan (né à Paris le 28 septembre 1852 et décédé à Paris le 20 février 1907) était un pharmacien français. Il est principalement connu pour avoir isolé le premier le fluor … Wikipédia en Français
Moissan — Henri Moissan Ferdinand Frederic Henri Moissan (* 28. September 1852 in Paris; † 20. Februar 1907 in Paris) war ein französischer Chemiker. Ihm glückte es als erstem, am 26. Juni 1886 reines Fluor herzustellen. 1893 entdeckte Moissan in einem… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Moissan — n. family name; Henri Moissan (1852 1907), French chemist and the 1906 Nobel laureate for his work in the field of Chemistry (known primarily for his invention of the electric arc furnace) … English contemporary dictionary
MOISSAN, HENRI — (1852–1907), French inorganic chemist and Nobel Prize winner. Moissan was born in Paris of a non Jewish father and a Jewish mother. He joined the Ecole Supérieure de Pharmacie, where in 1886 he became professor of toxicology and in 1899 professor … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Moissan (crater) — Coordinates 9°30′N 103°18′E / 9.5°N 103.3°E / … Wikipedia
Moissan, Henri — ▪ French chemist in full Ferdinand Frédéric Henri Moissan born Sept. 28, 1852, Paris, France died Feb. 20, 1907, Paris French chemist who received the 1906 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for the isolation of the element fluorine and the development … Universalium