Friedrich Krollpfeiffer

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Friedrich Krollpfeiffer (born February 26, 1892 in Uelzen , † November 6, 1957 in Gießen ) was a German chemist and university professor.

His parents were the wine merchant Wilhelm Krollpfeiffer (1849–1926) and his wife Marie Roloff (1852–1916).

After graduating from high school, Krollpfeiffer studied chemistry at the universities of Marburg, Göttingen and Munich. During his studies in Marburg he became a member of the Academic-Musical Association Fridericiana . He received his doctorate in 1914 . In 1920 Krollpfeiffer took on a teaching position for technical chemistry at the University of Marburg and completed his habilitation two years later. His habilitation thesis dealt with spectrochemical studies on polynuclear aromatic compounds in solutions . From 1923 Krollpfeiffer worked as a scientific advisor at the Behring Works , and one year later he was appointed to head the chemical department. In 1931, after returning to the University of Marburg a year earlier, Krollpfeiffer was appointed professor and took on a professorship at the University of Giessen the following year .

He married Mathilde Reinhard (1892–1973) in Marburg in 1916 . The couple had two sons and a daughter. The daughter Ilse married the geneticist Hans-Günther Keyl.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Association of Alter SVer (VASV): Address book. Membership directory of all old men. As of October 1, 1937. Hanover 1937, p. 128.

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