Nernst, Walther Hermann

Nernst, Walther Hermann
born June 25, 1864, Briesen, Prussia
died Nov. 18, 1941, Muskau, Ger.

German scientist, one of the founders of modern physical chemistry.

He taught at the Universities of Göttingen and Berlin until forced to retire in 1933 by the Nazi regime. Nernst's researches on the theory of electric cells (see battery), the thermodynamics of chemical equilibrium, the properties of vapours at high temperatures and of solids at low temperatures, and the mechanism of photochemistry have had important applications. His formulation of the third law of thermodynamics gained him a 1920 Nobel Prize. He also invented an improved electric light and an electronically amplified piano.

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▪ Prussian chemist
Introduction
born June 25, 1864, Briesen, Prussia [Ger.]
died Nov. 18, 1941, Muskau, Ger.

      German scientist who was one of the founders of modern physical chemistry (chemistry). His theoretical and experimental work in chemistry, including his formulation of the heat theorem, known as the third law of thermodynamics (thermodynamics), gained him the 1920 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

Education
      Nernst was educated at the University of Zürich in Switzerland, the University of Graz in Austria, and then in Germany at the University of Berlin before earning his doctorate in 1887 from the University of Würzburg. After graduation, he became an assistant to Wilhelm Ostwald (Ostwald, Wilhelm), who, with his colleagues at the University of Leipzig, Jacobus van't Hoff (Hoff, Jacobus Henricus van 't) and Svante Arrhenius (Arrhenius, Svante August), was establishing the foundations of a new theoretical and experimental field of inquiry within chemistry. Through their joint investigations of phenomena in solutions, in particular the transport of electricity and matter, these investigators, who became collectively known as the Ioner (Ionists), not only obtained important new insights into chemical reactions (chemical reaction) but also established the independence of what became known as modern physical chemistry.

Early research
      In Leipzig, Nernst devoted himself to the calculation of the diffusion coefficient of electrolytes (electrolyte) for infinitely dilute solutions and to the establishment of a relationship between ionic mobility, diffusion coefficients, and the electromotive force in concentration cells. He developed this work more fully in his habilitation (university teaching certificate) thesis of 1889, in which he established a fundamental connection between thermodynamics and electrochemical solution theory (the Nernst equation). As a result, he was appointed associate professor at the University of Göttingen in 1891. During his early years there, Nernst published an important textbook, Theoretische Chemie vom Standpunkte der Avogadroschen Regel und der Thermodynamik (1893; Experimental and Theoretical Applications of Thermodynamics to Chemistry), in which he stressed the central importance of Avogadro's law, thermodynamics, and both physics and chemistry in the treatment of chemical processes.

      In 1894 Nernst was offered academic positions in Munich and Giessen. Instead, he obtained a chair of physical chemistry at the newly created Institute for Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry in Göttingen (the only such institute in Germany at the time), where he launched an ambitious research program into chemical equilibria (chemical equilibrium), solution theory, osmotic pressure, and electrochemistry.

      Significantly, the years in Göttingen were also devoted to the development of a novel electric lightbulb. Immersed in both chemistry and electrotechnology, Nernst spent a decade of intensive research into improving the incandescent lamp. He found that magnesium oxide, which is a nonconductor at room temperature, becomes a perfect electric conductor at higher temperatures, emitting a brilliant white light when employed as a filament. In 1897 he began work on the electric lightbulb, for which he obtained numerous patents in Europe and the United States. The Nernst lamp was manufactured for several years by Allgemeine Elektrizitätsgesellschaft (AEG (AEG AG)) in Berlin, and thousands of Nernst lamps decorated a specially constructed German pavilion at the 1900 Paris International Exhibition. Nernst's work on a number of similar dielectric bulbs and his research on metal filaments greatly spurred the development of modern conventional lightbulbs. Although his own designs, which required a preheating mechanism, had only short-lived and limited success, his “Nernst glower,” or “Nernst globar,” has survived as an important instrument in time-resolved infrared spectrophotometry.

Third law of thermodynamics
      In 1905 Nernst was appointed professor and director of the Second Chemical Institute at the University of Berlin and a permanent member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences. The next year he announced his heat theorem, or third law of thermodynamics. Simply stated, the law postulates that the entropy (energy unavailable to perform work and a measure of molecular disorder) of any closed system tends to zero as its temperature approaches absolute zero (−273.15 °C, or −459.67 °F). In practical terms, this theorem implies the impossibility of attaining absolute zero, since as a system approaches absolute zero, the further extraction of energy from that system becomes more and more difficult. Modern science has attained temperatures less than a billionth of a degree above absolute zero, but absolute zero itself can never be reached.

      The calculation of chemical equilibria from thermal measurements (such as heats of reaction (reaction, heat of), specific heats (specific heat), and their thermal coefficients) had been an elusive goal for many of Nernst's predecessors. It had been hoped that the direction of a chemical reaction and the conditions under which equilibrium is attained could be calculated only on the basis of the first two laws of thermodynamics and thermal measurements. These calculations had been hampered, however, by the indeterminate integration constant J, which obtained when integrating the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation relating the free energy change ΔF to the heat content change ΔH and the entropy change ΔS,

ΔF = ΔH − TΔS.

      Nernst's great achievement was to recognize the special behavior of ΔF and ΔH as functions of the change in temperature in the vicinity of absolute zero. From the empirical data, Nernst hypothesized that, as they approach absolute zero, the two curves F and H become asymptotically tangent to each other—that is to say, in the vicinity of absolute zero, ΔF − ΔH → 0 (the difference approaches zero). From this form of the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation, it was then possible to calculate the integration constant on the basis of calorimetric measurements carried out in the laboratory.

      Originally, Nernst's heat theorem strictly applied only to condensed phases, such as solids. However, Nernst proceeded to extrapolate the validity of his theorem to gaseous systems. For this purpose, he embarked on a series of difficult and time-consuming experiments at low temperatures, where gaseous substances could be considered to be in a condensed phase. Between 1905 and 1914, Nernst and his many students and collaborators in Berlin designed a number of ingenious instruments, such as a hydrogen liquefier, thermometers, and calorimeters. These were used for the determination of specific heats for a series of substances. In a paper published in 1907, Albert Einstein (Einstein, Albert) had shown that the new theory of quantum mechanics, developed initially by the German theoretical physicist Max Planck (Planck, Max) in 1900, predicts that, in the vicinity of absolute zero temperature, the specific heats of all solids tend toward absolute zero. Thus, Nernst's heat theorem and his empirical results reinforced the revolutionary quantum theory; conversely, Nernst felt that Einstein's and Planck's work confirmed his Wärmetheorem and established it, conceivably, as a new, third law of thermodynamics, despite the fact that it could not be deduced from the other two laws. As a result, Nernst became one of the earliest wholehearted supporters of Einstein and quantum mechanics. In particular, Nernst was instrumental in organizing the First Solvay Congress in Physics, held in Brussels in November 1911, which was devoted to a thorough evaluation of the new quantum hypothesis by a group of leading European physicists.

Later years
      Nernst was engaged in military and administrative efforts, including chemical warfare (chemical weapon) research, during World War I, in which his two sons were killed. Following the war, he returned to academic life and engaged in myriad pursuits, among them studying photosynthesis, astrophysics, and cosmology and constructing an electronic piano with loudspeaker amplification, called the Neo-Bechsteinflügel.

      Nernst was the chair of the physical chemistry department at the University of Berlin (Humboldt University of Berlin) from 1905, the school's rector from 1921, and the director of the school's Institute for Experimental Physics from its founding in 1924, until his retirement in 1933. Between 1922 and 1924, Nernst was president of the German national bureau of physical standards.

Diana L. Kormos-Buchwald

Additional Reading
Diana Kormos Barkan, Walther Nernst and the Transition to Modern Physical Science (1999), is a fascinating account of the intersection of academic and industrial science in Germany prior to World War II. Two other noteworthy biographies are Kurt Mendelssohn, The World of Walther Nernst: The Rise and Fall of German Science, 1864–1941 (1973); and Hans-Georg Bartel, Walther Nernst: Pioneer of Physics and of Chemistry (2007).Diana L. Kormos-Buchwald

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Nernst,Walther Hermann — Nernst (nĕrnst), Walther Hermann. 1864 1941. German physicist and chemist. He won a 1920 Nobel Prize for his work in thermochemistry, particularly his proposal of the third law of thermodynamics (1906). * * * …   Universalium

  • Nernst , Walther Hermann — (1864–1941) German physical chemist Nernst, who was born at Briesen in Germany, studied at the universities of Zurich, Berlin, Würzburg, and Graz. After working as assistant to Wilhelm Ostwald in Leipzig from 1887 he became professor of chemistry …   Scientists

  • Nernst, Walther Hermann — ► (1864 1941) Físico y químico alemán. Fue premio Nobel de Química en 1920, por enunciar el tercer principio de la termodinámica. * * * (25 jun. 1864, Briesen, Prusia 18 nov. 1941, Muskau, Alemania). Científico alemán, uno de los fundadores de la …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Walther Hermann Nernst — Naissance 25 juin 1864 Briesen (Prusse Occidentale) Décès 18 novembre 1941 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Walther Hermann Nernst — Walther Nernst Walther Nernst (* 25. Juni 1864 in Briesen (Westpreußen); † 18. November 1941 in Zibelle, Oberlausitz bei Bad Muskau; vollständiger Name Walther Hermann Nernst) war ein deutscher Physiker und Chemiker (Nobelpreis für Chemie 1920) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Walther Hermann Nernst — noun German physicist and chemist who formulated the third law of thermodynamics (1864 1941) • Syn: ↑Nernst • Instance Hypernyms: ↑chemist, ↑physicist …   Useful english dictionary

  • Hermann Walther Nernst — Walther Hermann Nernst Walther Hermann Nernst Walther Hermann Nernst (25 juin 1864 18 novembre 1941) est un physicien et chimiste allemand. Il a mené de nombreuses recherches dans les domaines de l électrochimie, la thermodynamique, la chimie du… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Walther Nernst — Walther Hermann Nernst Walther Hermann Nernst Walther Hermann Nernst (25 juin 1864 18 novembre 1941) est un physicien et chimiste allemand. Il a mené de nombreuses recherches dans les domaines de l électrochimie, la thermodynamique, la chimie du… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Nernst — Walther Hermann Nernst Walther Hermann Nernst Walther Hermann Nernst (25 juin 1864 18 novembre 1941) est un physicien et chimiste allemand. Il a mené de nombreuses recherches dans les domaines de l électrochimie, la thermodynamique, la chimie du… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chemienobelpreis 1920: Walther Hermann Nernst —   Der Deutsche erhielt den Nobelpreisfür Chemie als Anerkennung für seine thermochemischen Arbeiten.    Biografie   Walther Hermann Nernst, * Briesen 25. 6. 1864, ✝ Gut Ober Zibelle (bei Bad Muskau) 18. 11. 1941; 1883 87 Physikstudium in Z …   Universal-Lexikon

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