Biography:Svante Arrhenius

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Svante Arrhenius
Svante Arrhenius
Svante Arrhenius
Born 19 February 1859
Vik, Sweden
Died 2 October 1927
Stockholm, Sweden


Known for Electrolytic dissociation, Arrhenius equation, greenhouse-effect calculations
Awards Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1903)

Svante August Arrhenius (1859-1927) was a Swedish scientist, originally trained as a physicist and later known as one of the founders of physical chemistry. He received the 1903 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on electrolytic dissociation, which explained how salts and other substances can form ions in solution.[1][2]

Scientific work

Arrhenius proposed that certain compounds separate into charged particles when dissolved in water. This theory of electrolytic dissociation gave a physical explanation for electrical conductivity in solutions and became an important step in the development of modern chemistry.

His name is also associated with the Arrhenius equation in chemical kinetics and with early scientific work on the greenhouse effect. In the context of atomic and plasma physics, his ion theory is most directly relevant because it connected chemical behavior with charged microscopic constituents.

Relevance to quantum and atomic physics

Arrhenius's work clarified the role of ions in solutions and helped establish the idea that matter can contain mobile charged species. This concept remains important for atomic physics, plasma physics, electrochemistry, radiation detection, and the interpretation of ionized matter.

See also

References


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Biography:Svante Arrhenius