From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julius Fedorovich Fritsche - chemist, member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences.

Carl Julius Fritzsche (17 October 1808 in Neustadt – 8 June 1871) was a German pharmacist and chemist. He was a nephew of pharmacist Friedrich Adolph August Struve (1781–1840).

After five years spent working at his uncle's pharmacy in Dresden, he moved to Berlin, where he worked for two and a half years in the laboratory of chemist Johann Gottfried August Helming (1770–1830). In 1830 he became an assistant to Eilhard Mitscherlich at Berlin, subsequently receiving his doctorate with a thesis on pollen, Dissertatio de plantarum polline (1833). In 1844 he became an associate professor in St. Petersburg, where in 1852 he attained a full professorship. [1] [2]

In his studies of anthracene, he discovered that "paranthracene" was an isomeric modification of anthracene when anthracene was exposed to sunlight. [1] Also, he was able to obtain the crystalline compounds of picric acid with hydrocarbons ( benzene, naphthalene, etc.) [3] In addition, he studied the nature of murexide and recognized it as the ammonium salt of purpuric acid. [1]

He is credited with coining the term " aniline" from the Sanskrit word for the indigo plant. In 1841 he obtained aniline by distilling indigo with caustic potash. [4] The mineral " fritzscheite" in named in his honor. [5]

References

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julius Fedorovich Fritsche - chemist, member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences.

Carl Julius Fritzsche (17 October 1808 in Neustadt – 8 June 1871) was a German pharmacist and chemist. He was a nephew of pharmacist Friedrich Adolph August Struve (1781–1840).

After five years spent working at his uncle's pharmacy in Dresden, he moved to Berlin, where he worked for two and a half years in the laboratory of chemist Johann Gottfried August Helming (1770–1830). In 1830 he became an assistant to Eilhard Mitscherlich at Berlin, subsequently receiving his doctorate with a thesis on pollen, Dissertatio de plantarum polline (1833). In 1844 he became an associate professor in St. Petersburg, where in 1852 he attained a full professorship. [1] [2]

In his studies of anthracene, he discovered that "paranthracene" was an isomeric modification of anthracene when anthracene was exposed to sunlight. [1] Also, he was able to obtain the crystalline compounds of picric acid with hydrocarbons ( benzene, naphthalene, etc.) [3] In addition, he studied the nature of murexide and recognized it as the ammonium salt of purpuric acid. [1]

He is credited with coining the term " aniline" from the Sanskrit word for the indigo plant. In 1841 he obtained aniline by distilling indigo with caustic potash. [4] The mineral " fritzscheite" in named in his honor. [5]

References


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