Carlo Avogadro



  1. Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro
  2. Amedeo Carlo Avogadro
  3. Amedeo Carlo Avogadro
  4. Biografia De Carlo Avogadro

Amedeo Avogadro Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro de Quaregna e di Cerreto - better known as Amedeo Avogadro - was born in Turin, the capital city of Piedmont (now part of northern Italy) on June 9th, 1776. Avogadro is well known for his hypothesis known as Avogadro's Law. His law states that a given temperature, equal volumes of gases contain the same number of molecules equal to 6.02252.

The Italian physicist and chemist Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro, Conte di Quaregna e di Cerreto (1776-1856), authored the hypothesis known as Avogadro's law, which ultimately clarified the foundations of molecular chemistry and physics.

Born in Turin on Aug. 9, 1776, Amedeo Avogadro came from an ancient legal family, whose name derived from the Latin de advocatis (concerning the law). He took a degree in philosophy in 1789, a baccalaureate in jurisprudence in 1792, and a doctorate in ecclesiastical law a few years later.

Romano

After several years of legal experience, Avogadro found his true avocation in the study of the physical sciences. Though largely self-taught, he achieved an extensive knowledge of the then-expanding studies of matter in the gaseous state. In 1809 he was appointed professor of physics in the Royal College at Vercelli. Up to that time his only scientific paper had concerned a topic in the new field of electricity.

His Great Memoir

In July 1811 Avogadro published his memoir in the Paris Journal de physique. He began by drawing attention to the discovery by the French chemist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac that when gases combine they do so in simple integral proportions by volume. Gay-Lussac supplied the experimental evidence to generalize this property of volume ratios for all gases; that is, two volumes of ammonia (NH3) are composed of one volume of nitrogen and three volumes of hydrogen, and so forth for many similar cases of simple, integral proportions.

On the basis of this type of evidence, Avogadro drew the logical conclusion that the number of 'integrant molecules' in all gases is always the same for equal volumes. He also concluded that the ratios of the masses of the molecules are the same as those of the densities of the different gases at equal temperature and pressure and that the relative number of molecules in a given compound is given at once by the ratio of volumes of the gases that form it.

Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro

In a supplementary paper sent to the Journal de physique in 1814, Avogadro deduced the correct formulas for COCl2, H2S, and CO2, and from postulating an analogy between carbon and silicon he asserted the correct composition of silica, SiO2. From available data he calculated approximately correct atomic weights for carbon, chlorine, and sulfur. He contributed massively to an understanding of the properties and reactions of the new and 'changerous' element fluorine. He published these and related findings in a four-volume work entitled Fisica de' corpi ponderabili, ossia trattato della constituzione generale de' corpi (1837-1841). This book influenced Michael Faraday's great career of discovery.

Amedeo Carlo Avogadro

The simplicity and clarity of Avogadro's views, though cited by leading scientists, such as André Marie Amp'e, were not compelling to the majority of contemporary chemists. This lack of interest was due in part to the novelty of the atomic theories which had been presented to the world a few years before by John Dalton; furthermore, the methodological temper of the times, deeply experimentalistic and empirical, prevented careful consideration of a purely logical inference from chemical facts unsupported by masses of laboratory data.

Another confusing aspect of the Avogadro memoir was the use of the ambiguous term 'molecule.' Not only did this conflict with the vigorous Newtonian atomism of the English and French schools, but it implied a sequence of chemical reactions for which no decisive evidence was forthcoming. Dalton, for example, had postulated that water was formed by the simple addition of the element hydrogen to the element oxygen, or H + O → HO, whereas the correct process implicit in Avogadro's hypothesis was 2H2+ O2 (in the molecular form) → 2H2O.

Other Activities

When the first Italian chair in mathematical physics was established at the University of Turin in 1820, Avogadro received the professorship. Two years later, because of the turmoil gripping the country, the chair was suppressed. Avogadro returned to his position in 1834 and held it until his retirement in 1850. He married Donna Felicita Mazzi, by whom he had six sons. Two sons rose to positions of distinction: Luigi, who became general of the Italian army, and Felici, who became president of the Court of Appeal.

Carlo Avogadro

Avogadro also served Italy as a competent and honest civil servant. He held positions in the National Bureau of Statistics, helped to establish a national meteorological service, and in 1848 became a member of the Superior Council on Public Instruction. Modest and retiring, he was indifferent to honors and scrupulously avoided those public struggles for priority which were a characteristic of Continental scientific society in the mid-19th century.

Carlo

Some indication of the fundamental nature of Avogadro's law may be seen in the fact that when modern thermodynamic theory was established at the end of the 19th century, the great German scientist and eventual Nobel laureate Walter Nernst entitled his textbook Theoretical Chemistry from the Standpoint of Avogadro's Rule and Thermodynamics.

Further Reading on Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro

A discussion of Avogadro's life and work appears in J. R. Partington, A History of Chemistry, vol. 4 (1964). See also Sir William Augustus Tilden, Famous Chemists: The Men and Their Work (1921); Eduard Farber, The Evolution of Chemistry: A History of Its Ideas, Methods and Materials (1952; 2d ed. 1969); Henry M. Leicester and Herbert S. Klickstein, eds., A Source Book in Chemistry, 1400-1900 (1952); and Isaac Asimov, A Short History of Chemistry: An Introduction to the Ideas and Concepts of Chemistry (1965).

Additional Biography Sources

Morselli, Mario, Amedeo Avogadro, a scientific biography, Dordrecht; Boston: D. Reidel Pub. Co.; Hingham, MA: Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1984.

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Avogadro, Amedeo

Born Aug. 9, 1776, in Turin; died there July 9, 1856. Italian physicist and chemist.

Avogadro trained in jurisprudence but then turned to physics and mathematics. He became a corresponding member of the Turin Academy of Sciences in 1804, a full member in 1819, and then director of the department of physical-mathematical sciences. He taught physics at the university lyceum between 1806 and 1819, and was professor at the University of Turin during 1820–22 and 1834–50.

Avogadro’s scientific works deal with various branches of physics and chemistry, including electricity, electrochemical theory, specific heat, capillarity, atomic volumes, and the nomenclature of chemical compounds. In 1811 he advanced the hypothesis that the molecules of simple gases consist of one or more atoms. On the basis of this hypothesis, Avogadro formulated one of the fundamental laws of ideal gas behavior and a method of determining atomic and molecular masses. His molecular hypothesis was not accepted by the majority of physicists and chemists during the first half of the 19th century. The universal constant, or the number of molecules in one mol of an ideal gas, is named after him. Avogadro was the author of a four-volume textbook of physics, the first handbook on molecular physics, which included elements of physical chemistry.

WORKS

Opere scelte [precedute da un discorso storico-critico d’Icilio Guareschi]. Turin, 1911.
Fisica de’ corpi ponderabili ossia Trattato della costituzione generale dei corpi, vols. 1–4. Turin, 1837–41.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Amedeo Carlo Avogadro


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