Nikolai Semenovich Kurnakov | |
---|---|
Born | 6 December 1860 Nolinsk, Russia |
Died | 19 March 1941 Barvikha, USSR |
(aged 80)
Nationality | Russian |
Fields | Chemist |
Known for | Kurnakov test |
Nikolai Semenovich Kurnakov (Russian: Никола́й Семёнович Курнако́в; 6 December, 1860 – 19 March, 1941) was a Russian chemist.
Kurnakov was born in Nolinsk, Kirov Oblast. He attended a high school at Nizhny Novgorod and later studied at the mining institute in St. Petersburg. He published his first paper on alum crystallization and sodium thioantimoniate in 1882.[1] In the same year he graduated as a mining engineer. During his visit to France, Germany and Austria Kurnakov studied salt manufacturing in several locations. The scientific work of this trip became his Ph.D. thesis, which he completed in 1884. He then worked for several years at the mining institute, mostly on the formation of salts and potash deposits and mining and benefication of salt and potash. In 1893, Kurnakov became professor of inorganic chemistry for his work on the reactions of cis- and trans- platinum complexes with thiourea, today known as the Kurnakov test.[2][3] In 1902 he became professor at the Saint Petersburg Polytechnic Institute, which he established together with Dmitri Mendeleev and Nikolai Aleksandrovich Menshutkin. He held the position until 1930. In his later years, he focused his work on platinum chemistry and platinum production. He received several prizes, for example the Mendeleev Prize in 1936, the Order of the Red Banner of Labour in 1939 and the Stalin Prize in 1941. He was also awarded a Doctor honoris causa by University of Moscow in 1909. After the death of his wife in 1940 his health deteriorated and he died in a sanatorium in Barvikha on 19 March 1941.[3][4]
A mineral was named kurnakovite in his honor.[5][6]