Sibylle Kemmler-Sack

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sibylle Kemmler-Sack (born November 18, 1934 in Leipzig ; died February 10, 1999 ) was a German chemist. She was a professor of chemistry at the University of Tübingen .

Life

Kemmler-Sack received his doctorate in 1962 on "Investigations on ternary uranium (V) oxides". She completed her habilitation in 1968 and the title of her habilitation thesis was "On spectroscopic and magnetic investigations on oxide fluorides of pentavalent uranium". She became a university professor in 1968, an associate professor in 1973, and a university professor in 1978. She was one of the leading scientists in the world.

Research topics

One focus of her work was the synthesis and characterization of perovskite phases. She systematically examined their luminescence and conductivity. In the 1990s she also synthesized bismuth and bismuth / lead cuprate superconductors and investigated how conductivity changed when Cu 2+ is gradually replaced by other transition metal ions.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Attempto: Messages for the Friends of the University of Tübingen 1968.
  2. ^ Catalog of the German National Library .
  3. a b News from chemistry, technology and the laboratory . Verlag Chemie., July 1994.
  4. Xavier Obradors, F. Sandiumenge, J. Fontcuberta: Applied Superconductivity 1999: Large scale applications . Taylor & Francis, 2000, ISBN 978-0-7503-0745-1 , pp. 563-.
  5. a b c d e f g Helmut Werner: History of inorganic chemistry: The development of a science in Germany from Döbereiner to today . Wiley, November 7, 2016, ISBN 978-3-527-33907-5 , pp. 489-.
  6. New dye for picture tubes . In: Spiegel Online , August 10, 1981. 
  7. ^ Catalog of the German National Library .
  8. Sibylle Kemmler: Investigations on ternary uranium (V) oxides 1962.