Franz Leopold Sonnenschein
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franz Leopold Sonnenschein (July 13, 1817 – February 26, 1879) was a German chemist from Cologne.
He taught himself pharmacy, and in the 1830's established a small laboratory in Berlin. He along studied with a physician other pharmacists for the state examination. At the same time he studied chemistry and set himself up in 1852 as a private lecturer. He dedicated himself to analytic chemistry and involved himself in a practical activities, for which he won a reputation unlike any chemist before him. Many technical enterprises owed their success to him. He promoted analytic and judicial chemistry by numerous scientific investigations. He died while a professor at the University of Berlin.
[edit] Works
His most notable works include:
- Anleitung zur chemischen Analyse (Guidance for the Chemical Analysis) (1852)
- Anleitung zur quantitativen chemischen Analyse (Guidance for the Quantitative Chemical Analysis) (1864)
- Handbuch der gerichtlichen Chemie (Manual of Judicial Chemistry) (1881)
- Handbuch der analytischen Chemie (Manual of Analytic Chemistry) (1870-71)
[edit] References
This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.