George de Hevesy
György de Hevesy | |
---|---|
Born |
Georg Karl von Hevesy 1 August 1885 Budapest, Austria-Hungary |
Died |
5 July 1966 80) Freiburg, West Germany | (aged
Citizenship | Germany |
Nationality | Hungarian |
Fields | Chemistry |
Institutions |
Ghent University University of Budapest Niels Bohr Institute ETH Zürich University of Freiburg University of Manchester Stefan Meyer Institute for Subatomic Physics |
Alma mater | University of Freiburg |
Doctoral advisor | Georg Franz Julius Meyer |
Doctoral students | Max Pahl |
Known for | |
Notable awards |
Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1943) Copley Medal (1949) Atoms for Peace Award (1958) Fellow of the Royal Society[1] |
Spouse | Pia Riis (m. 1924; 4 children) |
George Charles de Hevesy (German: Georg Karl von Hevesy; 1 August 1885 – 5 July 1966) was a Hungarian radiochemist and Nobel laureate, recognized in 1943 for his key role in the development of radioactive tracers to study chemical processes such as in the metabolism of animals. He also co-discovered the element hafnium.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Biography
Early years
Hevesy György was born in Budapest, Hungary to a wealthy and ennobled family of Hungarian Jewish descent,[7] the fifth of eight children to his parents Lajos (Louis) Bischitz and Baroness Eugenia (Jenny) Schossberger (ennobled as "De Tornya"). Grandparents from both sides of the family had provided the presidents of the Jewish community of Pest.[7] His parents converted to Roman Catholicism.[8] George grew up in Budapest and graduated high school in 1903 from Piarista Gimnázium. The family's name in 1904 was Hevesy-Bischitz, and Hevesy later changed his own.
De Hevesy began his studies in chemistry at the University of Budapest for one year, and at the Technical University of Berlin for several months, but changed to the University of Freiburg. There he came in contact with Ludwig Gattermann. In 1906 he started his Ph.D. thesis with Georg Franz Julius Meyer,[9] acquiring his doctorate in physics in 1908. In 1908 Hevesy got a position at the ETH Zürich, Switzerland, yet being independently wealthy, he was able to choose his research environment. Soon he worked with Fritz Haber in Karlsruhe, Germany, then with Ernest Rutherford in Manchester, England, where he also met Niels Bohr. Back at home in Budapest he was appointed professor in physical chemistry in 1918. In 1920 he settled in Copenhagen.
Research
In 1922 de Hevesy co-discovered (with Dirk Coster) the element hafnium (72Hf) (Latin Hafnia for "Copenhagen", the home town of Niels Bohr). Mendeleev's periodic table in 1869 put the chemical elements into a logical system, however there was missing a chemical element with 72 protons. On the basis of Bohr's atomic model Hevesy came to the conclusion that there must be a chemical element that goes there. The mineralogical museum of Norway and Greenland in Copenhagen furnished the material for the research. Characteristic X-ray spectra recordings made of the sample indicated that a new element was present. Later, in 1943, this would earn Hevesy the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. This account has been disputed by the likes of Mansel Davies and Eric Scerri who attribute the prediction that element 72 would be a transition element to the chemist Charles Bury.
Supported financially by the Rockefeller Foundation, Hevesy had a very productive year. He developed the X-ray fluorescence analytical method, and discovered the Samarium alpha-ray. It was here he began the use of radioactive isotopes in studying the metabolic processes of plants and animals, by tracing chemicals in the body by replacing part of stable isotopes with small quantities of the radioactive isotopes. In 1923, Hevesy published the first study on the use of the naturally radioactive 212Pb as radioactive tracer to follow the absorption and translocation in the roots, stems and leaves of Vicia faba, also known as the broad bean.[10][11]
In 1924 Hevesy returned to Freiburg as Professor of Physical Chemistry, and in 1930 went to Cornell University, Ithaca as Baker Lecturer. Four years later he took up again his activities at Niels Bohr's Institute which he terminated in 1952. From 1943 he was domiciled in Stockholm and was an Associate of the Institute of Research in Organic Chemistry. In 1949 he was elected Franqui Professor in the University of Ghent. In his retirement, he remained an active scientific associate of the University of Stockholm. Hevesy was offered and accepted a job from the University of Freiburg.
World War II and beyond
When Nazi Germany occupied Denmark from April 1940, during World War II, de Hevesy dissolved the gold Nobel Prizes of Max von Laue and James Franck with aqua regia; it was illegal at the time to send gold out of the country, and had it been discovered that Laue and Franck had done so to prevent them from being stolen, they could have faced prosecution in Germany. He placed the resulting solution on a shelf in his laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute. After the war, he returned to find the solution undisturbed and precipitated the gold out of the acid. The Nobel Society then recast the Nobel Prizes using the original gold.[12][13]
In 1943 Copenhagen was no longer seen as safe for a Jewish scientist and de Hevesy fled to Sweden, where he worked at the Stockholm University College until 1961. In Stockholm de Hevesy was received at the department of German by the Swedish professor and Nobel Prize winner Hans von Euler-Chelpin, who remained strongly pro-German throughout the war. Despite this, de Hevesy and von Euler-Chelpin collaborated on many scientific papers during and after the war.
During his time in Stockholm, de Hevesy received the Nobel Prize in chemistry. He later was inducted as a member of the Royal Society and received the Copley Medal, of which he was particularly proud. De Hevesy stated: "The public thinks the Nobel Prize in chemistry for the highest honor that a scientist can receive, but it is not so. Forty or fifty received Nobel chemistry prizes, but only ten foreign members of the Royal Society and two (Bohr and Hevesy) received a medal-Copley." George de Hevesy was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1942, and his status was later changed to Swedish member. He received the Atoms for Peace Award in 1958 for his peaceful use of radioactive isotopes.
De Hevesy married Pia Riis in 1924. They had one son and three daughters together, one of whom (Eugenie) married a grandson of the Swedish Nobel laureate Svante Arrhenius.[14] De Hevesy died in 1966 at the age of eighty and was buried in Freiburg. The corpse was in 2000 transferred to the Kerepesi Cemetery in Budapest, Hungary.[15] He had published a total of 397 scientific publications, one of which was the Becquerel-Curie Memorial Lecture, in which he had reminisced about the careers of pioneers of radiochemistry.[16] At his family's request, his ashes were interred at his birthplace in Budapest on 19 April 2001.
10 May 2005 the Hevesy Laboratory was founded at Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, now Technical University of Denmark, DTU Nutech. It was named after George de Hevesy as the father of the isotope tracer principle by the initiative of the lab's first head Prof. Mikael Jensen.
See also
References
- 1 2 Cockcroft, J. D. (1967). "George de Hevesy 1885-1966". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 13: 125–126. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1967.0007.
- ↑ Levi, H. (1976). "George von Hevesy memorial lecture. George Hevesy and his concept of radioactive indicators--in retrospect". European journal of nuclear medicine. 1 (1): 3–10. PMID 797570. doi:10.1007/BF00253259.
- ↑ Ostrowski, W. (1968). "George Hevesy inventor of isotope methods in biochemical studies". Postepy biochemii. 14 (1): 149–153. PMID 4870858.
- ↑ Dal Santo, G. (1966). "Professor George C. De Hevesy. In reverent memory". Acta isotopica. 6 (1): 5–8. PMID 4865432.
- ↑ "George De Hevesy". Triangle; the Sandoz journal of medical science. 91: 239–240. 1964. PMID 14184278.
- ↑ Weintraub, B. (April 2005), "George de Hevesy: Hafnium and Radioactive Traces; Chemistry", Bull. Isr. Chem. Soc. (18): 41–43
- 1 2 Levi, Hilde (1985), George de Hevesy : life and work : a biography, Bristol: A. Hilger, p. 14, ISBN 9780852745557
- ↑ http://www.geni.com/people/George-Charles-de-Havesey/6000000013761368687
- ↑ Norrby, Erling (2013), Nobel Prizes and Nature's Surprises
- ↑ Myers, W. G. (1979). "Georg Charles de Hevesy: The father of nuclear medicine". Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine. 20 (6): 590–594. PMID 395289.
- ↑ Hevesy, G. (1923). "The Absorption and Translocation of Lead by Plants: A Contribution to the Application of the Method of Radioactive Indicators in the Investigation of the Change of Substance in Plants". The Biochemical Journal. 17 (4–5): 439–445. PMC 1263906 . PMID 16743235. doi:10.1042/bj0170439.
- ↑ Hevesy, George (1962), Adventures in radioisotope research, 1, New York: Pergamon press, p. 27
- ↑ Birgitta Lemmel (2006). "The Nobel Prize Medals and the Medal for the Prize in Economics". The Nobel Foundation.
- ↑ Scripps Log obituaries, http://scilib.ucsd.edu/sio/biogr/ScrippsLogObits.pdf
- ↑ George Charles De Hevesy. findagrave.com
- ↑ De Hevesy, George C. (1961), "Marie Curie and her contemporaries" (PDF), Journal of nuclear medicine, 2: 169–82, PMID 13714019
External links
- Media related to George de Hevesy at Wikimedia Commons
- George de Hevesy – Biography
- Annotated bibliography for George de Hevesy from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues
- Eric Scerri, [A Tale of Seven Elements, Oxford University Press, New York, 2013]