History of Chemistry - chemistry.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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even better distillation apparatus than the Arabs had made and to condense the more volatile products of distillation.
Among the important products obtained in thisway were alcohol and the mineral acids: nitric, aqua regia (a mixture of nitric and hydrochloric), sulfuric, and hydrochloric.
Many new reactions could be carried outusing these powerful reagents.
Word of the Chinese discovery of nitrates and the manufacture of gunpowder also came to the West through the Arabs.
The Chinese atfirst used gunpowder for fireworks, but in the West it quickly became a major part of warfare.
An effective chemical technology existed in Europe by the end of the 13thcentury.
The second type of alchemical manuscript transmitted by the Arabs was concerned with theory.
Many of these writings reveal a mystical character that contributed littleto the advancement of chemistry, but others sought to explain transmutation in physical terms.
The Arabs had based their theories of matter on Aristotle's ideas, buttheir thinking tended to be more specific than his.
This was especially true of their ideas concerning the composition of metals.
They believed that metals consisted ofsulfur and mercury—not the familiar substances with which they were perfectly well acquainted, but rather the “principle” of mercury, which conferred the property offluidity on metals, and the “principle” of sulfur, which made substances combustible and caused metals to corrode.
Chemical reactions were explained in terms ofchanges in the amounts of these principles in material substances.
C The Renaissance
During the 13th and 14th centuries the influence of Aristotle on all branches of scientific thought began to weaken.
Actual observation of the behavior of matter castdoubt on the relatively simple explanations Aristotle had given; such doubts spread rapidly after the invention around 1450 of printing with movable type.
After 1500printed alchemical works appeared in increasing numbers, as did works devoted to technology.
The result of this increasing knowledge became apparent in the 16thcentury.
C1 The Rise of Quantitative Methods
Among the influential books that appeared at this time were practical works on mining and metallurgy.
These treatises devoted much space to assaying ores for theircontent of valuable metals, work that required the use of the laboratory balance, or scale, and the development of quantitative methods ( see Chemical Analysis). Workers in other fields, especially medicine, began to recognize the need for greater precision.
Physicians, some of whom were alchemists, needed to know the exactweight or volume of the doses they administered.
Thus, they used chemical methods for preparing medicines.
These methods were combined and forcefully promoted by the eccentric Swiss physician Theophrastus von Hohenheim, generally called Paracelsus.
He grew up in amining region and became familiar with the properties of metals and their compounds, which he believed were superior to the herbal remedies used by orthodoxphysicians.
He spent most of his life in violent quarrels with the medical establishment of the day, and in the process he founded the science of iatrochemistry (the useof chemical medicines), the forerunner of pharmacology.
He and his followers discovered many new compounds and chemical reactions.
He modified the old sulfur-mercury theory of the composition of metals by adding a third component, salt, the earthy part of all substances.
He declared that when wood burns “that which burnsis sulfur, that which vaporizes is mercury, and that which turns to ashes is salt.” As with the sulfur-mercury theory, these were principles and not the materialsubstances.
His emphasis on combustible sulfur was important for the later development of chemistry.
The iatrochemists who followed Paracelsus modified some of hiswilder ideas and collected his and their own recipes for preparing chemical remedies.
Finally, at the end of the 16th century, Andreas Libavius published his Alchemia, which organized the knowledge of the iatrochemists and is frequently called the first textbook of chemistry.
In the first half of the 17th century a few men began to study chemical reactions experimentally, not because they were useful in other disciplines, but rather for theirown sake.
Jan Baptista van Helmont, a physician who left medical practice to devote himself to the study of chemistry, used the balance in an important experiment toshow that a definite quantity of sand could be fused with excess alkali to form water glass, and that when this product was treated with acid, it regenerated the originalamount of sand (silica).
Thus were laid the foundations of the law of conservation of mass.
Van Helmont also showed that in a number of reactions an aerial fluid wasliberated.
He called this substance “gas.” A new class of substances with its own physical properties was shown to exist.
C2 Revival of Atomic Theory
In the 16th century experimenters discovered how to create a vacuum, something that Aristotle had declared impossible.
This called attention to the ancient theory ofDemocritus, who had assumed that his atoms moved in a void.
The French philosopher and mathematician René Descartes and his followers developed a mechanicalview of matter in which the size, shape, and motion of minute particles explained all observed phenomena.
Most natural philosophers and iatrochemists at this timeassumed that gases had no chemical properties, hence their attention was centered on the physical behavior of gases.
A kinetic-molecular theory of gases began todevelop.
Notable in this direction were the experiments of Robert Boyle, the English physicist and chemist whose studies of the “spring of the air” (elasticity) led to theformation of what became known as Boyle's law, a generalization of the inverse relation between pressure and volume of a gas ( see Gases).
V PHLOGISTON: THEORY AND EXPERIMENT
While natural philosophers were thus speculating on mathematical laws, early chemists in their laboratories were attempting to use chemical theories to explain the veryreal chemical reactions they were observing.
The iatrochemists paid particular attention to sulfur and the theories of Paracelsus.
In the second half of the 17th century,the German physician, economist, and chemist Johann Joachim Becher built a system of chemistry around this principle.
He noted that when organic matter burned, avolatile material seemed to leave the burning substance.
His disciple, Georg Ernst Stahl, made this the central point of a theory that survived in chemical circles fornearly a century.
Stahl assumed that when anything burned, its combustible part was given off to the air.
This part he called phlogiston, from the Greek word for “flammable.” Therusting of metals was analogous to combustion and therefore also involved loss of phlogiston.
Plants absorbed the phlogiston from the air and thus were rich in it.Heating the calx, or oxides, of metals with charcoal restored phlogiston to them.
It followed from this that the calx was an element, and the metal a compound.
Thistheory is almost exactly the reverse of the modern concept of oxidation-reduction ( see Chemical Reaction), but it involves the cyclic transfer of a substance—even if in the wrong direction—and some observed phenomena could be explained by it.
However, recent studies of chemical literature of the period show that the phlogistonexplanation had only minor influence among chemists until it was attacked by the wealthy amateur French chemist Antoine Laurent Lavoisier in the last quarter of theeighteenth century.
A The 18th Century
At about the same time, another observation led to advances in the understanding of chemistry.
As more and more chemicals were studied, chemists saw that certainsubstances combined more easily with, or had a greater affinity for, a given chemical than did others.
Elaborate tables were drawn up showing relative affinities whendifferent chemicals were brought together.
Use of these tables made it possible to predict many chemical reactions before testing them in the laboratory.
All these advances led in the 18th century to the discovery of new metals and their compounds and reactions.
Qualitative and quantitative analytical methods began to.
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