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Johann Wilhelm Hittorf : 1824 - 1914


c. 1885: Johann Wilhelm Hittorf (b. Bonn, March 27 d. Munster, Nov. 28) drew on Heinrich Hertz's discoveries and the earlier work on gaseous conduction using high voltages and vacua, to pave the way for the vacuum tube.


Source: Cambridge Biographical Dictionary


Johann Wilhelm Hittorf (b. March 27, 1824, Bonn, Prussia [now in Germany] d. Nov. 28, 1914, Münster, Ger.), German physicist who first computed the electricity-carrying capacity of charged atoms and molecules (ions), an important factor in understanding electrochemical reactions.

Hittorf's early investigations were on the allotropes (different physical forms) of phosphorus and selenium. Between 1853 and 1859 his most important work was on ion movement caused by electric current. He measured the changes in the concentration of electrolyzed solutions, computed from these the transport numbers (relative carrying capacities) of many ions, and, in 1869, published his laws governing the migration of ions.

He became professor of physics and chemistry at the University of Münster and director of laboratories there from 1879 until 1889. He also investigated the light spectra of gases and vapours, worked on the passage of electricity through gases, and discovered new properties of cathode rays (electron rays).


Source: Britannica Online


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