Emil Striebeck

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Emil Striebeck (* around 1850 in Burtscheid ; † September 4, 1900 in Konstanz ) was a German process engineer.

Life

Emil Striebeck studied engineering at the Karlsruhe Polytechnic . In 1870 he became a member of the Corps Franconia Karlsruhe . He took part in the Franco-German War as a soldier. In the summer semester of 1871 he switched to the Royal Rhenish-Westphalian Polytechnic School in Aachen . On December 3, 1871, together with another member of the Corps Franconia Karlsruhe and a member of the Corps Teutonia Hanover, he reconstituted the Corps Rhenania Zurich, which had been suspended at the ETH Zurich in 1865 .

After graduation and a university doctorate as Dr. phil. Striebeck was involved in procedural matters. He made lasting contributions to the development and optimization of the ammonia-soda process . In addition to the Solvay process and the Mallet-Boulouvard process , the Striebeck process , later also called Striebeck-Honigmann process , was one of the industrially important processes for the production of high-purity soda. It was used in the Staßfurt soda factory , at the Nuremberg Sodafabrik AG and the chemical factory Kalk as well as in soda factories in Inowrocław , Slovyansk , Lukavac and Podgórze .

The closed Thelen pans with oscillating scrapers, which he introduced in 1882, became the standard technology for soda calcination and in the majority of factories they have displaced the previously common calciners.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Corpslist of Franconia Karlsruhe 1839–1929 , No. 228
  2. ^ 150 years Corps Rhenania Zurich-Aachen-Braunschweig, 1855-2005 , Braunschweig 2005, p. 310.
  3. ^ Fritz Ullmann (editor): Ullmanns Enzyklopädie der Technischen Chemie , 1st edition, 1920, volume 8, pp. 411-416. ( Digitized version )
  4. ^ Fritz Ullmann (editor): Ullmanns Enzyklopädie der Technischen Chemie , 2nd edition, 1931, Volume 8, pp. 33-37. ( Digitized version )
  5. ^ Fritz Ullmann (editor): Ullmanns Enzyklopädie der Technischen Chemie , 2nd edition, 1931, volume 8, p. 28 ( digitized version )