Julius Tafel Explained

Julius Tafel
Birth Date:2 June 1862
Birth Place:Courrendlin, Switzerland
Nationality:German
Death Place:Munich, German Empire
Field:Electrochemistry
Work Institution:University of Munich
Alma Mater:University of Munich
Doctoral Advisor:Hermann Emil Fischer
Known For:Tafel reaction
Tafel equation

Julius Tafel (2 June 1862  - 2 September 1918) was a Swiss chemist and electrochemist.

Work

He worked first with Hermann Emil Fischer on the field of organic chemistry, but changed to electrochemistry after his work with Wilhelm Ostwald. He is known for the discovery of an electrosynthetic rearrangement reaction of various alkylated ethyl acetoacetates to form hydrocarbons, now called the Tafel rearrangement, and the Tafel equation, which relates the rate of an electrochemical reaction to the overpotential. He is also credited for the discovery of the catalytic mechanism of hydrogen evolution (the Tafel mechanism). Tafel retired aged 48 due to ill health, but continued to write book reviews until his death.[1]

Life

Tafel suffered from insomnia and eventually had a complete nervous breakdown. He committed suicide in Munich in 1918.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: G., Compton, R.. Understanding voltammetry. 2011. Imperial College Press. Banks, Craig E.. 978-1848165861. 2nd. London. 47–49. 676743565.