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How has
research in the low temperatures contributed to the
becoming of physical chemistry?
Abstract
It
is commonly assumed that the
various developments in the liquefaction of gases led in
a rather straightforward manner to the establishment of
another sub-branch of physics that of low-temperature
physics. It is, indeed, the case that after the
discovery of superconductivity in 1911 and of the
various properties of liquid helium below 2.9 degrees K
in the early 1930s, research at low temperatures has
been almost completely dominated by physicists. It
should, however, be noted that this was not the case in
the early stages where work was almost wholly devoted to
the liquefaction of gases and the investigation of their
properties at low temperatures.
The most important landmarks of gas
liquefaction are situated in a period characterised by
the application of thermodynamics and chemical theory
and the elaboration of increasingly complex equipment
and skills. Chemists were,
also, actively involved in early low-temperature
research.
This
paper will attempt to show some aspects of a more
general thesis: that the history of low temperature
research, and especially the period between the
liquefaction of oxygen in 1877 and the liquefaction of
helium in 1908, has been an integral part of the history
of physical chemistry. It was the period when physical
chemistry was articulating its
own autonomous language with respect to both physics and
chemistry, when it was charting its own research agenda
and formulating its own theoretical framework. It was
the time when the (sub)disciplinary
boundaries were drawn and re-drawn, and these processes
had been deeply influenced by the different cultures of
physicists and chemists. In this paper, I will try to
bring to surface the involvement of the chemists, both
in the actual researches in low temperatures as well as
in the early days of the International Association of
Refrigeration.
En
col·laboració amb la Residència d'Investigadors (CSIC).
Lloc:
Auditori de la Residència d’Investigadors, CSIC
, 19h.
Carrer Hospital 64. |