Johannes Ludwig Ebert

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Johannes Ludwig Ebert (born June 19, 1894 in Würzburg , † November 2, 1956 in Vienna ) was a German chemist ( physical chemistry ). He was a professor at the University of Würzburg and the University of Vienna .

Ebert was the son of the businessman Emil Ebert, the founder of Ebert + Jacobi , and studied chemistry in Würzburg from 1912, interrupted his military service in the First World War and completed his doctorate under Hans von Halban in 1923. He was a post-doctoral student until 1925 Niels Janniksen Bjerrum in Copenhagen , then with Willem Hendrik Keesom in Leiden and from 1926 to 1928 with Fritz Haber at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry in Berlin. In 1928 he completed his habilitation in Berlin and became an associate professor in Würzburg, in 1934 a full professor at the TH Karlsruhe and in 1940 professor and director of the 1st Chemical Institute at the University of Vienna.

He dealt with electrolytes, thermodynamics of liquid mixtures, changes of state at high pressures and the theory of the melting point.

He was a member of the Academies of Science in Vienna, New York and Bologna.

Fonts

  • Anomalies of strong electrolytes, Yearbook of Radioactivity and Electronics, Volume 18, 1921, pp. 134-196.
  • Conductivity in liquid electrolytes, in: Wien / Harms : Handbuch der Experimentalphysik, Volume XII, 1, 1932, pp. 1–289.
  • Conversion numbers in liquid electrolytes, in: Wien / Harms: Handbuch der Experimentalphysik, Volume XII, 1, 1932, pp. 293-380.
  • Significance of the dielectric polarization in pure substances and mixtures, in: Journal for physical chemistry, Volume 113, 1924, pp. 1-27.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Claus-Christian Schuster : The Ebert Trio .