Stanislao Cannizzaro
Stanislao Cannizzaro Kingdom of Two Sicilies | |
---|---|
Died | 10 May 1910 | (aged 83)
Known for | Cannizzaro reaction |
Awards | Faraday Lectureship Prize (1872) Copley Medal (1891) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Chemistry |
Stanislao Cannizzaro FRS (/ˌkænɪˈzɑːroʊ/ KAN-iz-AR-oh,[1] US also /-ɪtˈsɑːr-/ -it-SAR-,[2] Italian: [staniˈzlaːo kannitˈtsaːro]; 13 July 1826 – 10 May 1910) was an Italian chemist. He is famous for the Cannizzaro reaction and for his influential role in the atomic-weight deliberations of the Karlsruhe Congress in 1860.[3]
Biography
Cannizzaro was born in Palermo in 1826.[4] He entered the university there with the intention of making medicine his profession, but he soon turned to the study of chemistry. In 1845 and 1846, he acted as assistant to Raffaele Piria (1815–1865), known for his work on salicin, and who was then professor of chemistry at Pisa and subsequently occupied the same position at Turin.[5]
During the
In the autumn of 1855, Cannizzaro became professor of chemistry at the
Apart from his work on organic chemistry, which includes also an investigation of santonin, Cannizzaro rendered great service to chemistry with his 1858 paper Sunto di un corso di Filosofia chimica, or Sketch of a course of chemical philosophy, in which he insisted on the distinction, previously hypothesized by Amadeo Avogadro, between atomic and molecular weights.[7][8][9] Cannizzaro showed how the atomic weights of elements contained in volatile compounds can be deduced from the molecular weights of those compounds, and how the atomic weights of elements of whose compounds the vapour densities are unknown can be determined from a knowledge of their specific heats. For these achievements, of fundamental importance to atomic theory, he was awarded the Copley Medal by the Royal Society in 1891.[5]
In 1871, Cannizzaro's scientific eminence secured him admission to the Italian senate,[10] of which he was vice-president,[11] and as a member of the Council of Public Instruction and in other ways he rendered important services to the cause of scientific education in Italy.[5]
He is best known for his contribution to the then-existing debate over atoms, molecules, and atomic weights. He championed Avogadro's law that equal volumes of gas at the same pressure and temperature held equal numbers of molecules or atoms, and the notion that equal volumes of gas could be used to calculate atomic weights. In doing so, Cannizzaro provided a new understanding of chemistry.[12]
Works

- Sunto di un corso di filosofia chimica, Genova, 1858
- Sketch of a course of chemical philosophy. Edinburgh: Livingstone. 1947.
- Scritti intorno alla teoria molecolare ed atomica ed alla notazione chimica, "Lo Statuto" (Palermo), 1896, available at Gallica.
- Scritti vari e lettere inedite nel centenario della nascita, Roma, 1926
See also
References
- ^ "Cannizzaro, Stanislao". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2 September 2022.
- ^ "Cannizzaro reaction". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
- doi:10.1021/ed038p83. Archived from the originalon 28 September 2007. Retrieved 24 August 2007.
- ^ "Stanislao Cannizzaro". Science History Institute. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- ^ a b c d e public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cannizzaro, Stanislao". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 188. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
- .
- ^ Cannizzaro, Stanislao (1858). Il Nuovo cimento (in Italian). Vol. 7. Società italiana di fisica. pp. 321–366.
- doi:10.1021/ed028p421. Archived from the originalon 28 September 2007. Retrieved 29 August 2007.
- S2CID 58453894.
- ^ "Scheda senatore CANNIZZARO Stanislao". notes9.senato.it. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- ^ For an intervention by him in the Presidency Council of the Senate, see Giampiero Buonomo, Il "piccolo Senato": un caso di paronimia giuridica?, MemoriaWeb – Trimestrale dell'Archivio storico del Senato della Repubblica – n.30 (Nuova Serie), giugno 2020, p. 8.
- ^ "Stanislao Cannizzaro – Chemistry Encyclopedia – reaction, water, elements, gas, number, molecule, atom". www.chemistryexplained.com. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
External links
- Sketch of a course of chemical philosophy by Cannizzaro (1858) – Edinburgh: Alembic Club Reprint No. 18 (1911).
- Thomas Edward Thorpe (1902). Essays in Historical Chemistry. Macmillan and co., limited. by Thomas Edward Thorpe in Essays in Historical Chemistry, London: Macmillan, pages 500 – 513 (also Nature, 6 May 1897).
- , a set of Cannizzaro's papers