Alexander Eibner | |
Birth Name: | Alexander Paul Friedrich Eibner |
Birth Date: | September 11, 1862 |
Birth Place: | Munich, German Empire (now Germany) |
Death Date: | May 1, 1935 |
Death Place: | Munich, Germany |
Burial Place: | Alter Südfriedhof |
Education: | Technical University of Munich (PhD) |
Occupation: | Painter, chemist, educator |
Spouse: | Martha Rosenberger (m. 1906–) |
Father: | Friedrich Eibner |
Alexander Paul Friedrich Eibner (1862–1935), was a German chemist, painter, and educator.[1] He was known for his technical painting techniques.
Alexander Eibner, was born September 11, 1862, in Munich.[2] He was the son of Luise Weissenberger, and painter Friedrich Eibner. Eibner studied chemistry at the Technical University of Munich, under Wilhelm von Miller and he obtained a doctorate degree in 1892.
By 1894, he qualified as a professor, and began researching aromaticity in organic chemistry. He studied the bleaching of pigment of Prussian Blue using zinc oxide.[3] [4] Through that research he introduced the concept of photocatalysis in 1911.[5]
In 1903, Eibner became assistant to chemist at the newly founded Research Institute and Information Center for Painting Techniques, promoting the scientific study of the nature and the properties of painting materials. Starting in 1907, Eibner lead the Research Institute and Information Center for Painting Techniques, which closed after his death.[6]
He died on May 1, 1935, in Munich. He is buried at Alter Südfriedhof cemetery, near his father.