Karl Zulkowsky

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karl Zulkowsky (born April 7, 1833 in Vítkovice , † December 23, 1908 in Prague ) was a chemist.

He studied chemistry at the Technical University of Vienna, where he was assistant for chemical technology for five years.

From 1860 to 1865 he was director of a steel mill. From 1869 he taught chemical engineering at the Brno University of Technology , succeeding Friedrich Marian , and was appointed professor in 1870. In 1875 he invented the soluble starch according to Zulkowsky . In 1887 he went to the German Technical University in Prague and worked there until his retirement in 1904.

In 1892 he was elected a member of the Leopoldina .

Publications

  • Comments on the rosaniline and rosolic acid question ; 1876 doi: 10.1002 / cber.18760090212
  • About an apparatus for the more convenient determination of nitrogen ; 1876
  • About an iodometric determination of chromic acid ; 1868
  • As a filter apparatus for preparative work 1879
  • Behavior of starch towards glycerine ; 1880 doi: 10.1007 / BF01356597
  • About the chemical composition of a mica slate from Monte Rosa and the Rapilli from Köhlerberge near Freudenthal in Silesia ; 1859, ( limited preview in Google Book search)
  • About the crystallizable components of the coralline ; 1880
  • Contribution to testing of fats ; 1883
  • About the constitution of andalusite and thistle doi: 10.1007 / BF01525996
  • A mineral mill ; 1887
  • About the Orceïn ; 1890

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Pavel Sisma: Teachers of physics and chemistry at the German Technical University in Brno (PDF; 581 kB)
  2. ^ Member entry by Karl Zulkowski at the German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina , accessed on November 30, 2016.