Alfred Werner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Image:Alfred Werner.jpg Alfred Werner (December 12, 1866 - November 15, 1919) was a German chemist who was a professor at the University of Zurich. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1913 for proposing the octahedral configuration of transition metal complexes. Werner developed the basis for modern coordination chemistry. He also discovered hexol.
[edit] External links
- Biography at Nobelprize.org
- his work on the linkage of atoms in molecules by which he has thrown new light on earlier investigations and opened up new fields of research especially in inorganic chemistry.
- Alfred Werner – Biography.
|
1901: Hoff | 1902: E.Fischer | 1903: Arrhenius | 1904: Ramsay | 1905: Baeyer | 1906: Moissan | 1907: Buchner | 1908: Rutherford | 1909: Ostwald | 1910: Wallach | 1911: Curie | 1912: Grignard, Sabatier | 1913: Werner | 1914: Richards | 1915: Willstätter | 1918: Haber | 1920: Nernst | 1921: Soddy | 1922: Aston | 1923: Pregl | 1925: Zsigmondy |
bg:Алфред Вернер cs:Alfred Werner de:Alfred Werner es:Alfred Werner eo:Alfred Werner fr:Alfred Werner hr:Alfred Werner io:Alfred Werner it:Alfred Werner sw:Alfred Werner nl:Alfred Werner ja:アルフレッド・ウェルナー oc:Alfred Werner pl:Alfred Werner pt:Alfred Werner sk:Alfred Werner sr:Алфред Вернер sv:Alfred Werner

