Friedrich Karl Rudolf Bergius (
October 11,
1884 –
March 30,
1949) was a
German chemist known for the
Bergius process for producing
synthetic fuel from
coal,
Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1931, together with
Carl Bosch) in recognition of contributions to the invention and development of chemical high-pressure methods.
Bergius was born near Breslau (Wrocław), within the German Empire's Prussian Province of Silesia.
Academic career
Before studying chemistry, Bergius was sent to work for 6 months at the
steel works in
Mühlheim. His studies started at the
University of Breslau in 1903 and ended with a PhD in chemistry at the
University of Leipzig in 1907, after only 4 years. His thesis on
sulfuric acid as solvent was supervised by
Arthur Rudolf Hantzsch. In 1909 Bergius worked for one semester with
Fritz Haber and
Carl Bosch at the
University of Karlsruhe in the development of the
Haber-Bosch Process. On the same year he was invited to work at the
University of Hanover with
Max Bodenstein, who developed the idea of
chemical kinetics and held a position as professor.
Work
Synthetic fuel from coal
During his habilitation, techniques for the high-pressure and high-temperature chemistry of carbon-containing substrates were developed, yielding a patent on the
Bergius process in 1913. In this process
liquid hydrocarbons used as
synthetic fuel are produced by
hydrogenation of
lignite (brown coal). He developed the process well before the commonly-known
Fischer-Tropsch process.
Theodor Goldschmidt invited him to built an industrial plant at his factory the
Th. Goldschmidt AG in 1914. The production began only in 1919, after the
World War I ended, when the need for fuel was already declining. The technical problems,
inflation and the constant criticism of
Franz Joseph Emil Fischer, which changed to support after a personal demonstration of the process, made the progress slow and Bergius sold his patent to
BASF, where
Carl Bosch worked on it. Before
World War II several plants where built with an annual capacity of 4 million tons of synthetic fuel.
Sugar from wood
The hydrolysis of
wood to produce
sugar for industrial use became a hard task for Bergius. After he moved to Heidelberg he started to improve the process and planned an industrial scale production. The high costs and technical problems nearly led him to bankruptcy. A
bailiff followed Bergius to
Stockholm to get the money from his
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1931.
The autarcy movement before the World War II boosted the process and several plants were built. Bergius moved to Berlin were he was only marginally involved in the development. While he was in Bad Gastein Austria, his laboratory and his house where destroyed by an air raid. The rest of the war he stayed in Austria.
International engagement
After the war he worked as an advisor in Italy, Turkey, Switzerland and Spain. He emigrated to Argentina, where he didn't build any industrial plant. He died in Buenos Aires on March 30 1949
Awards
He and Carl Bosch won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1931 in recognition of their contributions to the invention and development of chemical high-pressure methods.
Further reading
*
- Anthony N. Stranges (1984). "Friedrich Bergius and the Rise of the German Synthetic Fuel Industry". Isis 75 (4): 642–667.
- Dietrich Stoltzenberg (1999). "Fritz Haber, Carl Bosch und Friedrich Bergius - Protagonisten der Hochdrucksynthese". Chemie in unserer Zeit 33 (6): 359–364.
- Robert Haul (1985). "Das Portrait: Freidrich Berguis (1884-1949)". Chemie in unserer Zeit 19 (2): 59–67.
External links