Guido Bodländer

Guido Bodlaender ( born July 31, 1855 in Breslau, † December 25, 1904 in Braunschweig ) was a German chemist.

Life

Guido Bodlaender visited the Maria Magdalena Gymnasium in Breslau until graduation in 1878. Afterwards he studied until 1882 at the University of Breslau. After his doctorate, he was from 1882 to 1883 and again in 1888 assistant in the private laboratory of Moritz Traube in Breslau, who examined issues of activation of oxygen and autoxidation at this time. Later Bodlaender was, inter alia, worked at the Institute of Pharmacology at Bonn and at the Institute of Physical Chemistry in Göttingen. It was founded in 1899 full professor of physical chemistry and chemical technology in Braunschweig. Bodlaender invented a Gasgravimeter in collaboration with Richard Abegg. As the successor of Walther Nernst (1864-1941) at the Department of Physical Chemistry in Göttingen provided his early death prevented the appeal.

Sources and Literature

  • JC Poggendorff: Biographic- Literary Handwörterbuch the history of the exact sciences. Volume 4, p 141, 1904.
  • J. Tröger: Guido Bodlaender. in: Naturw. Rundschau. 20 pp. 78-79. In 1905.
  • W. Nernst: Bodländers work. in: Journal of Electrochemistry. 11, pp. 157-161. In 1905.
  • A. Coehn: Guido Bodlaender. in: Ber. d Dt. Chem Ges 38 pp. 4263-4290. In 1906.
  • Annual Report 1878 of the High School of St. Mary Magdalene at Breslau.
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