First in a series of articles in which writers debate which scientific discipline was responsible for the most important scientific discovery. Daniel
Rollins argues for Chemistry.
Antoine
Lavoisier (1743 –1794) was a French aristocrat who has been called the “father
of modern chemistry”. As well as helping develop the metric system naming both
hydrogen and oxygen and first identifying sulphur as an element, he is
responsible for many of Chemistry’s basic theories. He proved, for example,
that oxygen combined with other elements upon combustion disproving earlier
theories about burning. His most significant contribution, however, was his
careful quantitative method of experimentation, the weighing out and measuring of
chemicals with accurate balances using sealed glass containers to prevent gases
escaping. It was through this method that he discovered one of chemistry’s most
fundamental laws: the Law of Conservation of Mass.
In his book,
Elements of Chemistry (1785),
Lavoisier wrote:
"Nothing is created, either in the operations
of art or in those of nature, and it may be considered as a general principle
that in every operation there exists an equal quantity of matter before and
after the operation; that the quality and quantity of the constituents is the
same, and that what happens is only changes, modifications. It is on this
principle that is founded all the art of performing chemical experiments; in
all such must be assumed a true equality or equation between constituents of
the substances examined, and those resulting from their analysis."
He proved
this by burning several compounds and elements in sealed containers and
discovering that the total weight of the container did not change from before
the substance was burned to after it had been burnt. In one of his experiments,
he burnt sulphur in a sealed container and found that, while the total content
of the container kept the same mass, the piece of sulphur he had burnt had
increased in mass, showing that that sulphur was reacting with a gas in the air
later identified as oxygen. He repeated this experiment with phosphorous and
other elements such as tin and lead and found the same result. He also
decomposed lead calx (lead oxide) and mercury clax (mercury oxide) and, while
the compounds seemed to lose mass as they were burnt, the total mass of the
container still remained constant, suggesting that the compounds decomposed and
gave off a gas: oxygen.
In yet
another experiment Lavoisier proved this was not only true in inorganic
reactions but in natural biological processes as well. He placed fruit into one
of his sealed glass containers and left it in a warm place for several days to
decompose into a putrid pile of rotten matter. After this, he observed that,
while the colour, shape and texture of the fruit had changed and water had
condensed onto the sides of the glass, the total mass of the container remained
unchanged, yet again proving that in any chemical reaction, while the state and
combination of elements change, the mass of the matter does not.
Lavoisier,
unfortunately, came to an untimely and gruesome end; during the French
Revolution, because of his membership of the Ferme Générale, an unpopular group of tax collectors and because of
his protection of foreign scientists, he was branded a traitor and executed. He
was later exonerated by the French government; the Italian scientist, Lagrange,
said of Lavoisier’s death, “It took them
only an instant to cut off his head, but France may not produce another such
head in a century.” His contribution to Chemistry, although cut short, has
remained significant to this day, as he made many of the discoveries that we
take for granted now, including the existence of oxygen and hydrogen, the fact
that the diamond is a form of carbon and that burning and rusting are reactions
with oxygen. His Law of the Conservation of Mass and his methodology, however,
are probably his most significant contributions to Chemistry. The entire field
of Stoichiometry, in which the relative quantities of reactants and products
are predicted and measured, is based almost entirely upon these principles.
The use of
closed containers also revolutionised chemistry, moving it from its vague
alchemistic past into the modern age. While it may seem obvious now that lost
gases affect the results of experiments, it was Lavoisier who insisted on
keeping his experiments in “closed systems”, a concept that has now been
applied to many areas of Chemistry and even Physics, ensuring that any changes
in a reaction are able to be measured accurately and to be reliably understood.
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