Carl Bosch – Biography
Carl Bosch
was born at Cologne on August 27, 1874, and grew up there. From 1894
to 1896 he studied metallurgy and mechanical engineering at the
Technische Hochschule in Charlottenburg, but started reading
chemistry at Leipzig University in 1896. He graduated under
Professor Wislicenus with a paper on organic chemistry in 1898. He
entered the employ of the Badische Anilin- und Sodafabrik,
Ludwigshafen, Rhine as a chemist in April 1899 and participated
actively in the development of the then new industry of synthetic
indigo under the guidance of Dr. Rudolf Knietsch.
At the turn
of the century Bosch became interested in the problem of the fixing
of nitrogen and his first experiments in this field were done with
metal cyanides and nitrides; in 1907 he started a pilot plant for
the production of barium cyanide.
Bosch's opportunity for
really large-scale work came when in 1908 the Badische Anilin- und
Sodafabrik acquired the process of high-pressure synthesis of
ammonia, which had been developed by Fritz
Haber at the Technische Hochschule in Karlsruhe. Bosch was given
the task of developing this process on a large industrial scale.
This task involved the construction of plant and apparatus which
would stand up to working at high gas pressure and high reaction
temperatures. Haber's catalysts, osmium and uranium had to be
replaced by a contact substance which would be both cheaper and more
easily available. Bosch and his collaborators found the solution by
using pure iron with certain additives. Further problems which had
to be solved were the construction of safe high-pressurized blast
furnaces, a cheap way of producing and cleaning the gases necessary
for the synthesis of ammonia. Step by step Bosch went on to using
increasingly larger manufacturing units and thus created the
industry which deals with the production of synthetic ammonia
according to the high-pressure process.
From this work
resulted the second task of making the thus won ammonia available
for use in industry and agriculture. Bosch succeeded in working out
methods for the industrial production of nitrogen fertilizers, thus
providing practically every country in the world with sufficient
fertilizers for agricultural purposes. The Stickstoffwerke (Nitrogen
works) in Oppau were opened in 1913, followed by the even larger
Leunawerke near Merseburg in 1917, where the synthesis of methanol
and the hydrogenation of oil were added to the production programme.
Bosch was appointed Managing Director of the Badische Anilin- und
Sodafabrik in 1919 and in 1925 was made Principal of the I.G.
Farbenindustrie Aktiengesellschaft, which was created by the merger
of the German coal-tar dye works. In 1935 Bosch was appointed
Chairman of the Board of Directors of the I.G. Farbenindustrie
A.G.
Bosch was honoured in many ways and not only for his
achievements and inventions in the field of industry, but also for
his research in pure science, which he considered to be his duty. He
received the honorary doctorate of the Technische Hochschule in
Karlsruhe (1918), of the Landwirtschaftliche Hochschule (Agriculture
College), Berlin (1921), the Technische Hochschule in Munich (1922), of Halle
University (1927), the Technische Hochschule in Darmstadt (1928). The
distinctions of Honorary Senator of the Universities of Heidelberg
(1922) and Leipzig (1939), and of Honorary Citizen of Frankfurt
(1939) were conferred upon him.
He received the Liebig
Memorial Medal of the Association of German Chemists, the Bunsen
Medal of the German Bunsen Society, the Siemens Ring, the Golden
Grashof Memorial Medal of the VDI (Association of German Engineers),
the Exner Medal from the Austrian Trade Association, and the Carl
Lueg Memorial Medal from the Association of German Metallurgists. In
1931 he was awarded the highest international honour, the Nobel
Prize for Chemistry, jointly with Friedrich Bergius, for their
contributions to the invention and development of chemical high
pressure methods.
Bosch particularly enjoyed his membership
of various German and foreign scientific academies, and his
chairmanship of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society of which he became its
President in 1937.
He died after a prolonged illness on April
26, 1940.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1922-1941,
Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
This autobiography/biography
was written at the time of the award and later published in the book
series Les
Prix Nobel/Nobel
Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an
addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always
state the source as shown above.
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