Hermann Emil Fischer
Hermann Emil Fischer was born on October 9, 1852,
at Euskirchen, in the Cologne district. His father was a
successful business man. After three years with a private tutor,
Emil went to the local school and then spent two years at school
at Wetzlar, and two more at Bonn where he passed his final
examination in 1869 with great distinction. His father wished him
to enter the family lumber business, but Emil wished to study the
natural sciences, especially physics and, after an unsuccessful
trial of Emil in the business, his father - who, according to the
laureate's autobiography, said that Emil was too stupid to be a
business man and had better be a student - sent him in 1871 to
the University
of Bonn to study chemistry. There he attended the lectures of
Kekulé, Engelbach and Zincke, and also those of August Kundt
on physics, and of Paul Groth on mineralogy.
In 1872, however, Emil, who still wished to study physics, was
persuaded by his cousin Otto Fischer, to go with him to the newly
established University of Strasbourg, where Professor Rose was
working on the Bunsen method of analysis. Here Fischer met
Adolf von Baeyer, under whose
influence he finally decided to devote his life to chemistry.
Studying under von Baeyer, Fischer worked on the phthalein dyes
which Rose had discovered and in 1874 he took his Ph.D. at
Strasbourg with a thesis on fluoresceine and orcin-phthalein. In
the same year he was appointed assistant instructor at Strasbourg
University and here he discovered the first hydrazine base,
phenylhydrazine and demonstrated its relationship to
hydrazobenzene and to a sulphonic acid described by Strecker and
Römer. The discovery of phenylhydrazine, reputed to have
been accidental, was related to much of Fischer's later
work.
In 1875 von Baeyer was asked to succeed Liebig at the University of Munich and Fischer went there with him
to become an assistant in organic chemistry.
In 1878 Fischer qualified as a Privatdozent at Munich, where he
was appointed Associate Professor of Analytical Chemistry in
1879. In the same year he was offered, but refused, the Chair of
Chemistry at Aix-la-Chapelle. In 1881 he was appointed Professor
of Chemistry at the University of Erlangen and in 1883 he was asked by
the Badische Anilin- und Soda-Fabrik to direct its scientific
laboratory. Fischer, however, whose father had now made him
financially independent, preferred academic work.
In 1888 he was asked to become Professor of Chemistry at the
University of Würzburg and here he remained
until 1892, when he was asked to succeed A. W. Hofmann in the
Chair of Chemistry at the University of Berlin. Here he remained
until his death in 1919.
Fischer's early discovery of phenylhydrazine and its influence on
his later work have already been mentioned. While he was at
Munich, Fisher continued to work on the hydrazines and, working
there with his cousin Otto Fischer, who had followed him to
Munich, he and Otto worked out a new theory of the constitution
of the dyes derived from triphenylmethane, proving this by
experimental work to be correct.
At Erlangen Fischer studied the active principles of tea, coffee
and cocoa, namely, caffeine and theobromine, and established the
constitution of a series of compounds in this field, eventually
synthesizing them.
The work, however, on which Fischer's fame chiefly rests, was his
studies of the purines and the sugars. This work, carried out
between 1882 and 1906 showed that various substances, little
known at that time, such as adenine, xanthine, in vegetable
substances, caffeine and, in animal excrete, uric acid and
guanine, all belonged to one homogeneous family and could be
derived from one another and that they corresponded to different
hydroxyl and amino derivatives of the same fundamental system
formed by a bicyclic nitrogenous structure into which the
characteristic urea group entered. This parent substance, which
at first he regarded as being hypothetical, he called purine in
1884, and he synthesized it in 1898. Numerous artificial
derivatives, more or less analogous to the naturally-occurring
substances, came from his laboratory between 1882 and 1896.
In 1884 Fischer began his great work on the sugars, which
transformed the knowledge of these compounds and welded the new
knowledge obtained into a coherent whole. Even before 1880 the
aldehyde formula of glucose had been indicated, but Fischer
established it by a series of transformations such as oxidation
into aldonic acid and the action of phenylhydrazine which he had
discovered and which made possible the formation of the
phenylhydrazones and the osazones. By passage to a common
osazone, he established the relation between glucose, fructose
and mannose, which he discovered in 1888. In 1890, by
epimerization between gluconic and mannonic acids, he established
the stereochemical nature and isomery of the sugars, and between
1891 and 1894 he established the stereochemical configuration of
all the known sugars and exactly foretold the possible isomers,
by an ingenious application of the theory of the asymmetrical
carbon atom of Van't Hoff and Le
Bel, published in 1874. Reciprocal syntheses between different
hexoses by isomerization and then between pentoses, hexoses, and
heptoses by reaction of degradation and synthesis proved the
value of the systematics he had established. His greatest success
was his synthesis of glucose, fructose and mannose in 1890,
starting from glycerol.
This monumental work on the sugars, carried out between 1884 and
1894, was extended by other work, the most important being his
studies of the glucosides.
Between 1899 and 1908 Fischer made his great contributions to
knowledge of the proteins. He sought by analysis effective
methods of separating and identifying the individual amino acids,
discovering a new type of them, the cyclic amino acids: proline
and oxyproline. He also studied the synthesis of proteins by
obtaining the various amino acids in an optically-active form in
order to unite them. He was able to establish the type of bond
that would connect them together in chains, namely, the peptide
bond, and by means of this he obtained the dipeptides and later
the tripeptides and polypeptides. In 1901 he discovered, in
collaboration with Fourneau, the synthesis of the dipeptide,
glycyl-glycine and in that year he also published his work on the
hydrolysis of casein. Amino acids occurring in nature were
prepared in the laboratory and new ones were discovered. His
synthesis of the oligopeptides culminated in an octodecapeptide,
which had many characteristics of natural proteins. This and his
subsequent work led to a better understanding of the proteins and
laid the foundations for later studies of them.
In addition to his great work in the fields already mentioned,
Fischer also studied the enzymes and the chemical substances in
the lichens which he found during his frequent holidays in the
Black Forest, and also substances used in tanning and, during the
final years of his life, the fats.
Fischer was made a Prussian Geheimrat (Excellenz), and held
honorary doctorates of the Universities of Christiania, Cambridge (England),
Manchester and
Brussels. He was also awarded the Prussian Order of Merit and the
Maximilian Order for Arts and Sciences. In 1902 he was awarded
the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on sugar and purine
syntheses.
At the age of 18, before he went to the University of Bonn,
Fischer suffered from gastritis, which attacked him again towards
the end of his tenure of the Chair at Erlangen and caused him to
refuse a tempting offer to follow Victor Meyer at the Federal
Technical University at Zurich and to take a year's leave of
absence before he went, in 1888, to Würzburg. Possibly this
affliction was the forerunner of the cancer from which he
died.
Throughout his life he was well served by his excellent memory,
which enabled him, although he was not a naturally good speaker,
to memorize manuscripts of lectures that he had written.
He was particularly happy at Würzburg where he enjoyed walks
among the hills and he also made frequent visits to the Black
Forest. His administrative work, especially when he went to
Berlin, revealed him as a tenacious campaigner for the
establishment of scientific foundations, not only in chemistry,
but in other fields of work as well. His keen understanding of
scientific problems, his intuition and love of truth and his
insistence on experimental proof of hypotheses, marked him as one
of the truly great scientists of all time.
In 1888 Fischer married Agnes Gerlach, daughter of J. von
Gerlach, Professor of Anatomy at Erlangen. Unhappily his wife
died seven years after their marriage. They had three sons, one
of whom was killed in the First World War; another took his own
life at the age of 25 as a result of compulsory military
training. The third son, Hermann Otto Laurenz Fischer, who died
in 1960, was Professor of Biochemistry in the University of
California at Berkeley.
When Fischer died in 1919, the Emil Fischer Memorial Medal was
instituted by the German Chemical Society.
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