PRELUDE TO MODERN CHEMISTRY (1400-1799) |
LEONARDO DA VINCI: Fire consumes air.
ECK VON SULZBACH: First notes an increase in weight of metals on calcination. (ca. 1490)
1500 {contemporary people, events and developments} {Return to top}
The TRIA PRIMA of PARACELSUS; all matter consists of
PARACELSUS is the first to describe zinc.
CARDANUS attributes gain in weight on calcination to loss of celestial fire (1553)
DANIEL SENNERT substituted water (in the TRIA PRIMA) for mercury.
GLAUBER postulated two elements: air and water. Water -- earth, in trees, etc.JEAN REY: Increase in weight of calx due to air absorbed by the metal, just as water is absorbed by a solid. (1630)
ROBERT BOYLE:"The first chemist whose efforts are employed primarily in the noble impulse to investigate nature." ---- Koop
"Certain Primitive and Single, or perfectly unmingled bodies which not being made of any other bodies, or of one another, are the ingredients of which all those called perfectly mixed bodies are immediately compounded."
ROBERT BOYLE's experiments on "ponderable fire particles" (1673) led to the idea by
"There may be dispersed through the rest of the atmosphere some odd substance on whose account the air is so necessary to the substance of flame."
NEWTON explains "BOYLE'S LAW" by repulsion of atoms.
"For burning of things it is necessary that nitro-aerial particles should either be already in the burning mass or be supplied from the air."BECHER in his "PHYSICAE SUBTERRANEAE" (1669)
G. E. STAHL (1697) in his "ZYMOTECHNIA FUNDAMENTALS" conceives PHLOGISTON (=TERRA PINGUIS) to be a single principle. Burning of sulfur and other substances is analogous to calcination of metals (that is, it involves loss of phlogiston). On heating the calx with carbon or other substances containing phlogiston, the calx recombines with the phlogiston, reducing the original metal. Phlogiston has negative weight, hence the calx weighs more than the metal. (By the early 1700's, Stahl himself came to doubt Phlogiston.)
Convinced phlogistonists included:
GEOFFROY (1718): first serious attempt to tabulate chemical affinities.
STEPHEN HALES:ABBÉ NOLLET (1748): first osmotic experiments.
HOFFMAN and BOERHAAVE ("anti-phlogistic converts") reject the analogy between combustion and calcination, leading to the ultimate downfall of the Phlogiston Theory.
HENRY CAVENDISH: "EXPERIMENTS ON FACTITIOUS AIR.":
experimented with inflammable air (H2) from metals plus acids.
"The principle which combines with metals during calcination and which augments the weight of them is no other than that more pure portion...which we breathe." "Fixed air is the result of the combination of the eminently respirable portion of the air with the carbon." ( new theory of combustion)
The "TRAITÉ" was a complete and detailed exposition of LAVOISIER'S new system of chemistry; it was a truly modern text and it laid the foundations of modern chemistry. The "TRAITÉ" included a table of 33 simple substances or elements---another milepost of modern chemistry.