Otto Wallach – Biography
Otto Wallach was born on March 27, 1847,
in Königsberg, Germany, the son of Gerhard Wallach and his wife,
née Otillie Thoma. His father was a high-ranking civil
servant, who later became Auditor General at Potsdam.
During
his early school years at the humanistic "Gymnasium" at Potsdam,
Wallach had a profound liking for history and art - in those days
subjects like chemistry were hardly taught at secondary-school
level.
In 1867 he went to Göttingen to study chemistry with
Wöhler, Fittig and Hübner but soon left for Berlin to study for one
semester under A.W. Hofmann and G. Magnus. After his return to
Göttingen he worked so hard that he managed to obtain his doctor's
degree - in 1869 under Hübner - after studying for only five
semesters. (At that time working hours at the Wöhler laboratory were
from 7 a.m. till 5 p.m., after which gas was turned off and some
work had to be rounded-off under the light of privately bought
candles.) His thesis dealt with the position isomers in the toluene
series.
In 1869 and 1870 he was assistant to H. Wichelhaus in
Berlin, with whom he worked on the nitration of b-naphthol. Easter
1870 found him in Bonn with
Kekulé. The latter, himself an artist at heart and who once
seriously considered making architecture his profession, had written
to Wallach: "It will not hurt you to come to Bonn. Here we are
leading a scientific artist life." That same year, however, Wallach
had to leave Bonn for military service in the Franco-Prussian
war.
After the war he tried for the third time to establish
himself in Berlin, working with a newly founded firm
"Aktien-Gesellschaft für Anilin-Fabrikation" (later "Agfa"), but his
fragile health could not stand the noxious fumes of the factory, and
in 1872 he returned to Bonn, where he stayed for 19 years. He first
became assistant in the organic laboratory, and later was appointed
Privatdozent. In 1876 came his appointment as Professor
Extraordinary. When in 1879 the Chair of Pharmacology became vacant
he was obliged to occupy it, which forced him to specialize in this
direction. It was during this period that he discovered the
iminochlorides by the action of phosphorus pentachloride on the acid
amides. But when Kekulé drew his attention to the existence of an
old forgotten cupboard full of bottles containing essential oils,
and invited him to make a study of the contents, he became absorbed
in the matter, thus entering a field of study in which he was to be
the eminent pioneer for more than a decade, and which was to be his
main life-work, crowned with the highest possible
distinction.
Already in his first publication (1884) he
raised the question of the diversity of the various members of the
C10H16 group, which in current practice at
that time came under a multitude of names ranging from terpene to
camphene, citrene, carvene, cinene, cajuputene, eucalyptine,
hesperidine, etc. Utilizing common reagents such as hydrogen
chloride and hydrogen bromide, he succeeded in characterizing the
differences between the structure of these compounds. A year later
he could establish that many of them were indeed identical. In 1909
he published the results of his extensive studies in his book
Terpene und Campher, a volume of 600 pages dedicated to his
pupils.
Mention should also be made of his other
investigations; the conversion of chloral into dichloroacetic acid,
the series of studies on the amide chlorides, imide chlorides,
amidines, glyoxalines, etc., his work on azo dyes and diazo
compounds, and many others. They all denote his practical skill:
like Emil
Fischer and Adolf
von Baeyer, he relied more on carefully performed experiments
than on theoretical deliberations.
In 1889 he was appointed
Victor Meyer's successor in Wöhler's Chair, which made him at the
same time Director of the Chemical Institute at Göttingen. He
retired in 1915 from these posts when at the start of World War I
six of his assistants were killed in action.
Wallach received
the Nobel Prize in 1910 for his work on alicyclic compounds. His
other honours included Honorary Fellowships of the Chemical Society
(1908), Honorary Doctorates of the Universities of Manchester, Leipzig and the
Technological Institute
of Braunschweig. In 1912 he became Honorary Member of the Verein
Deutscher Chemiker. He received the Kaiserlicher Adlerorden III.
Klasse (Imperial Order of the Eagle) in 1911, the Davy Medal in Gold
and Silver in 1912, and in 1915 the Königlicher Kronorden II. Klasse
(Royal Order of the Crown).
Wallach remained a bachelor
throughout his life, and died on February 26, 1931.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1901-1921,
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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