• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Thư mời cộng tác
  • Về chúng tôi

Tạp chí hóa học

Nơi gặp gỡ, trao đổi của những bạn yêu hóa học.

  • Home
  • Học Sinh
    • Chuyên Đề Hóa Học
      • Hóa học 10
      • Hóa học 11
      • Hóa học 12
      • Hóa học 8 – 9
      • Luyện thi vào 10 THPT
      • Luyện thi ĐH – CĐ
      • Bồi dưỡng HSG
    • Thư Viện Đề Thi
    • Bạn có biết
      • Khám phá thế giới hóa học
      • Hóa học vui – cười
      • Chuyện kể về các nhà hóa học
      • Chuyện kể các nguyên tố hóa học
  • Sinh viên – Giáo viên
    • Giáo án Hoá
    • Ôn Thi Cao Học
    • Phương Pháp Dạy – Học
    • Thiết kế – sáng tạo bài giảng
    • Luận văn – NCKH
    • Kinh Nghiệm Giảng Dạy
    • Kiến Thức Chuyên Ngành
    • Tài liệu bồi dưỡng giáo viên
  • Hóa học đời sống
    • Hóa học và thực phẩm
    • Hóa học và mỹ phẩm
    • Hóa học và môi trường
    • Hóa học và dược phẩm
    • Hóa học và công nghệ
  • Thông Tin
    • Dự án
    • Về chúng tôi
    • Thư mời cộng tác
  • Facebook
You are here: Home / Bạn có biết / Khám phá thế giới hóa học / The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1921-Frederick Soddy

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1921-Frederick Soddy

20/03/2011 By Thầy Ngô Xuân Quỳnh Leave a Comment

1. Tiểu sử

Frederick Soddy, the son of Benjamin Soddy, a London merchant, was born at Eastbourne, Sus***, England, on September 2, 1877. He was educated at Eastbourne College and the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth.

In 1895 he obtained a scholarship at Merton College, Oxford, from which University he graduated in 1898 with first class honours in chemistry. After two years of research at Oxford he went to Canada and from 1900 to 1902 was Demonstrator in the Chemistry Department of McGill University, Montreal. Here he worked with Professor Sir Ernest Rutherford on problems of radioactivity. Together they published a series of papers on radioactivity and concluded that it was a phenomenon involving atomic disintegration with the formation of new kinds of matter. They also investigated the gaseous emanation of radium.

Leaving Canada, Soddy then worked with Sir William Ramsay at University College, London where he continued the study of radium emanation. Here, Soddy and Ramsay were able to demonstrate, by spectroscopic means, that the element helium was produced in the radioactive decay of a sample of radium bromide and that helium was evolved in the decay of emanation.

From 1904 to 1914 Soddy was lecturer in physical chemistry and radioactivity in the University of Glasgow. Here he did much practical chemical work on radioactive materials. During this period he evolved the so-called “Displacement Law”, namely that emission of an alpha-particle from an element causes that element to move back two places in the Periodic Table. His peak was reached in 1913 with his formulation of the concept of isotopes, which stated that certain elements exist in two or more forms which have different atomic weights but which are indistinguishable chemically.

In 1914 he was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Aberdeen, but plans for research were hampered by the war. In 1919 he became Dr. Lees Professor of Chemistry at Oxford University, a post he held until 1937 when he retired, on the death of his wife.

After his period at Glasgow he did no further work in radioactivity and allowed the later developments to pass him by. His interest was diverted to economic, social and political theories which gained no general acceptance, and to unusual mathematical and mechanical problems.

His books include Radioactivity (1904), The Interpretation of Radium (1909), The Chemistry of the Radioactive Elements (1912-1914), Matter and Energy (1912), Science and Life (1920), The Interpretation of the Atom (1932), The Story of Atomic Energy (1949), and Atomic Transmutation (1953).

Soddy was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1910 and Oxford awarded him an honorary degree. He was awarded the Albert Medal in 1951.

He was a man of strong principles and obstinate views, friendly with students and prickly with colleagues.

ln 1908, he married Winifred Beilby. He died on September 22, 1956 at Brighton.

2. Nội dung giải Nobel

Title:The Origins of the Conception of Isotopes
Content:”for his contributions to our knowledge of the chemistry of radioactive substances, and his investigations into the origin and nature of isotopes”
Detail here

Filed Under: Khám phá thế giới hóa học

About Thầy Ngô Xuân Quỳnh

2). Khóa học của Gia Sư Toán – Lý – Hóa

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Điền địa chỉ email để nhận tin tức hàng ngày:

DANH MỤC

TỪ KHÓA HAY

bai tap nang cao bai tap trac nghiem bai tap tu luan bài giảng bài tập hóa học bảng tuần hoàn công nghệ thông tin Day day hoc intel de thi ebook ebook hóa học hoa hoa 10 hoa 11 hoa 12 hoc hóa chất hóa dược hóa học hóa học việt nam hóa học xanh hóa học đời sống kinh nghiem day hoc liên kết hóa học luyện thi ly luan nguyên tử nhận thức phan mem day hoc phan ung õi hoa - khu phim thi nghiem phim thi nghiem hoa hoc phuong phap day hoc phuong phap day hoc tich cuc phương pháp phản ứng sách hóa học thi dai hoc thiet ke bai giang thi thử tu lieu day hoc tu lieu day hoc hoa hoc ̜hóa học ứng dụng

Copyright © 2026 · Tạp chí Hóa Học

 

Loading Comments...