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1901 2011
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1905
Adolf von Baeyer
Award Ceremony Speech
In regard to von Baeyer's work, Professor A. Lindstedt, President of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, made the following statement, on December 10, 1905
A characteristic feature of chemical
science is the close interaction between theory and practice,
between pure science and technology, which is here assuming ever
greater importance. This feature became especially prominent
during the last decades of the nineteenth century. Many a time
has a reaction, carried out with small quantities of substances
in the research worker's test tube, by being correctly evaluated
and systematically applied, achieved a revolution in the chemical
industry, and in such fashion that emphasis has shifted from one
industrial centre to another, or that completely new branches of
industry have been created.
One such new branch which was hardly dreamed of fifty years ago,
but which now provides work for many thousands and spreads its
products all over the world, is the preparation of organic
dyestuffs from coal tar.
Among the living research workers who have contributed directly
or indirectly to the unique development of the tar-dyestuff
industry the place of honour goes to the Professor at Munich
University, Adolf von Baeyer, for his researches into the
composition of indigo as well as into the triphenyl
methane dyestuffs.
Indigo, the gorgeous pigment of the indigo plant, has been
considered the most important of all organic pigments on account
of its beauty and colour fastness, and the annual tribute which
the West used to pay India for it amounted to a very considerable
sum. To reproduce the pigment by synthetic methods and make it
more easily obtainable was therefore an exceptionally inviting
task for chemical research.
The complex and unique composition of indigo, however, made this
also one of the hardest of tasks. Here there could be no question
of one of those casual discoveries, which by happy accident seem
to achieve half the work. Years of work were required for even
von Baeyer's acumen and experimental skill to achieve the
necessary insight into the pigment's chemical composition and to
be able to manufacture it from simpler constituents. Even after
the purely scientific part of the work had been completed it
still took a number of years to make the results obtained from
research applicable to technology.
Von Baeyer succeeded in producing indigo synthetically in three
principal ways, namely from ortho-nitrophenylacetic acid,
from ortho-nitrocinnamic acid and from
ortho-nitrobenzaldehyde and acetone. This paved the way
for the reproduction of indigo from raw material obtainable
without much difficulty from coal tar. And if the problem of
producing indigo industrially has now been solved from the
technical as well as the economic point of view, this is entirely
due to von Baeyer's basic work in the fields in question.
The result is striking. Already the price of indigo has fallen to
a third of its former price, and Germany's export of synthetic
indigo in 1904 could be valued at over 25 million marks. This
shows that the synthetic product has been able to compete with
decisive success against the natural product. The effects of this
discovery, which was made in the Munich University laboratory,
can already be traced as far as the banks of the Ganges, and the
time is probably not far distant when the immense fields, which
up to now have been used for cultivation of the indigo plant will
instead become available to produce cereals and other foodstuffs
for India's starving millions.
Simultaneously with his analyses within the indigo group,
analyses moreover which exerted a far-reaching influence upon the
development of organic chemistry and directed research into new
channels, von Baeyer was active with no less success in another
sphere of the chemistry of organic dyestuffs. The stimulus was
given by his discovery of a new group of beautifully coloured
compounds, the so-called phthaleins, of which only the
eosin pigments, highly important to industry, and the rhodamin
dyes derived from them, may have particular mention here. In a
series of masterly experiments von Baeyer demonstrated several
years ago the chemical nature of the phthaleins and showed that,
just like the already known rosaniline dyes, they may be
classified as derivatives of the hydrocarbon triphenylmethane. In
recent years - more exactly, from 1900 on - von Baeyer has
resumed his work on triphenylmethane, and from this a new
conception of the chemical composition of pigments and in general
of the connection between the optical properties of organic
substances and their interior atomic structure has been to a high
degree prepared.
The dyestuffs studied by von Baeyer belong to the main category
of organic substances usually classified under the name of
aromatic compounds, which differ decisively from the other
organic substances - the so-called aliphatic or fatty acid series
- both in their properties and in their behaviour in reaction. In
fact this difference has been considered so great that it has
caused the division of the whole of organic chemistry into two
separate halves: the chemistry of aliphatic, and of aromatic
substances. Nevertheless, one of the main tasks of scientific
research is to try to bridge the gulfs dividing different
sciences, or different branches of the same science. In this
respect, too, von Baeyer has carried out notable work in his
research, remarkable alike from the experimental as well as from
the theoretical point of view, on the so-called hydroaromatic
compounds. With these compounds, he has found the
transitional form between the two main series just mentioned and
by application of the new conception and the new method to the
terpenes and the species of camphor occurring in nature and also
important for technology, he has opened up fields for synthetic
work which were previously inaccessible.
The research-worker's way to a discovery varies according to the
nature of his goal. He may, after quite a short period of
trial-and-error, see unsuspected vistas open up before him, but
he may as well have to cut a slow and certain path to his goal by
stubborn persistence.
Von Baeyer's work in the fields here mentioned has been of this
latter variety. His relevant work is spread out over a long
period of time and has continued up to the present day, but only
in recent years has it been possible to appreciate and survey in
its full extent its exceptional importance. The Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences therefore feels it is acting in full accord
with the Nobel Charter in awarding this year's Nobel Prize for
Chemistry to the Professor at the University of Munich, Geheimrat
Adolf von Baeyer, for the services he has rendered to the
development of organic chemistry and the chemical industry
through his work concerning organic dyes and hydroaromatic
compounds.
As sickness prevents the recipient from being present here today,
the Prize will be conveyed to him through His Excellency, the
German Ambassador.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1905
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