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         Faraday Michael:     more books (100)
  1. Michael Faraday and the Nature of Electricity (Profiles in Science) by Roberta Baxter, 2008-09
  2. Scientific Papers: Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy, Geology: Part 30 Harvard Classics by Michael Faraday, 2004-01-11
  3. Coils, Magnets, and Rings: Michael Faraday's World by Nancy Veglahn, 1976
  4. Michael Faraday and the Discovery of Electromagnetism (Uncharted, Unexplored, and Unexplained) by Susan Zannos, 2004-11
  5. The Subject Matter of a Course of Six Lectures on the Non-Metallic Elements by Michael Faraday, 2010-03-29
  6. Michael Faraday: A Biography (Da Capo Series in Science) by L. Pearce Williams, 1987-08
  7. Michael Faraday, his life and work by Silvanus Phillips Thompson, 2010-09-09
  8. Michael Faraday (What Would You Ask...?) by Anita Ganeri, Anita Gameri, 2000-08-18
  9. Michael Faraday, His Life and Work [ 1901 ] by Silvanus Phillips Thompson, 2009-08-10
  10. The Philosopher's Tree: Michael Faraday's life and work in his own words
  11. The Young Governess In Egypt (Past Venus historical) by Phoebe Gardener, 2007-09-01
  12. Advice to Lecturers: An Anthology Taken from the Writings of Michael Faraday and Lawrence Bragg by Michael Faraday, Sir Lawrence Bragg, 1974-09
  13. Michael Faraday, Apprentice to Science, (A People in the Arts and Sciences Book) by Samuel Epstein, Beryl Williams Epstein, 1971-06
  14. Michael Faraday and electricity (Pioneers of science and discovery) by Brian Bowers, 1974

21. NIELROW BOOKS LETTER F
Translate this page methodica plantarum(NW)* - Fakhr Ad Din Ar Razi Traité sur les noms divins(L)- faraday michael Experimental researches in electricity(WN) - Faraday
http://www.dprix.com/biblio/fpage.html
NIELROW BOOKS
TEXTES EN LIGNE / BOOKS ON LINE L =livre / C =copie papier / W =web / N HOME PREVIOUS NEXT
F
- Fabre Jean Henri : Souvenirs entomologiques(L)
- Fabricius Albertus : Bibliotheca latina Mediae et infimae aetatis(N-W)*
- Fabricius Philipp Conrad : Enumeratio methodica plantarum(N-W)*
- Faraday Michael : Experimental researches in electricity
(W-N)
- Faraday Michael : Histoire d'une chandelle(N)
- Faraday Michael : Lectures on the forces of matter
(N-W)
- Faraday Michael : Chemical history of a candle
W-N)
- Faraday Michael : Recherches sur les tables tournantes
(W-N)
- Fayol Henri : Notice sur les travaux scientifiques et techniques(N-W)*
- Felter Harvey Wickes : The Eclectic Medical Intitute(N-W)*
- Fermat Samuel de : Ad locos et solidos isagoge - Fermat Samuel de : De contractibus sphericis - Fermi Enrico : Thermodynamics(L) - Fermi Enrico : Sur la quantification du gaz parfait monoatomique (L) - Ferrari Giovanni Batista : Hesperides, sive de malorum aureorum cultura et usu(N-W)* - Ferri Enrico : La sociologie criminelle(C) - Ferri Enrico ; Sociologia criminale(N-W)*

22. Michael Faraday

http://www.chemie.uni-bremen.de/stohrer/biograph/faraday.htm
Michael Faraday
Faraday wurde am 22.September 1791 in Newington Butts geboren und starb am 25.August 1867 in London. Humphry Davy Davy Benzol und das Butylen Nach der Entdeckung des Elektromagnetismus durch Hans Christian Oersted wiederholten Davy Elektromotor "Convert magnetism into electricity" Transformator bezeichnen, den langgesuchten Effekt der elektromagnetischen Induktion . In den folgenden Monaten wurde der Effekt nach allen Richtungen erforscht. Dynamismus elektrolytischen Versuche Faradayschen Gesetzen Faraday-Effektes und bei der Erforschung des Magnetismus. "conditions of force" Energieprinzips von Julius Robert Mayer u.a. - ein 'energetisches' Argument gegen einen von Volta Nach der Entdeckung der Spektralanalyse durch Kirchhoff und Bunsen Spektrallinien Einsteins , Gravitattion und Elektrodynamik in einer Theorie zusammenzufassen. Resignierend schrieb Faraday:

23. Michael Faraday's Contributions To Electricity And Chemistry
faraday Follows in Franklin's Footsteps Following in the footsteps of Ben Franklin and other early scientists, michael faraday studied the nature of electricity. Born on September 22, 1791, this famous English physicist and chemist is best
http://sln.fi.edu/franklin/scientst/faraday.html
Faraday Follows in Franklin's Footsteps
Following in the footsteps of Ben Franklin and other early scientists, Michael Faraday studied the nature of electricity. Born on September 22, 1791, this famous English physicist and chemist is best remembered for his understanding of electromagnetism. Once Faraday discovered that electricity could be made by moving a magnet inside a wire coil, he was able to build the first electric motor. He later built the first generator and transformer. He introduced several words that we still use today to discuss electricity: ion, electrode, cathode, and anode. Faraday is also remembered for his contributions to the study of chemistry. Most noteworthy was his discovery of benzene, a common carbon compound. Later in life, Faraday became Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Institution. He was a powerful speaker and his lectures were popular. Every year on Christmas Day, he presented his Faraday Lectures for Children which were crowded with interested listeners. To honor his accomplishments, a unit of electricity was named after him. The "farad" measures capacitance, an amount of electrical charge. Faraday lived his whole life in England, where he died on August 25, 1867. Back to Scientist

24. The Royal Institution Of Great Britain
Portrait and detailed biography.Category Kids and Teens School Time Scientists faraday, michael...... michael faraday, the discoverer of electromagnetic induction, electro-magnetic rotations,the magneto-optical effect, diamagnetism, field theory and much else
http://www.rigb.org/heritage/faradaypage.html
Brief Biography Michael Faraday, the discoverer of electro-magnetic induction, electro-magnetic rotations, the magneto-optical effect, diamagnetism, field theory and much else besides, was born in Newington Butts (the area of London now known as the Elephant and Castle) on 22 September 1791. His father, James, was a blacksmith and a member of the Sandemanian sect of Christianity. James Faraday had come to London in the late 1780s from North-West England. Very little is known of the first few years of Faraday's life. In an autobiographical note Faraday recalled that he had attended a day school and had learnt the "rudiments of reading, writing, and arithmetic". In 1805 at the age of fourteen Faraday was apprenticed as a bookbinder to George Riebau of Blandford Street. During his seven year apprenticeship Faraday developed his interest in science and in particular chemistry. He read Jane Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry and the scientific entries from the Encyclopedia Britannica. He was also able to perform chemical experiments and he built his own electro-static machine. But, more importantly, Faraday joined the City Philosophical Society in 1810. In this society, which was devoted to self-improvement, a group of (youngish) men and women met every week to hear lectures on scientific topics and to discuss scientific matters. It was here that Faraday would give his first scientific lectures.

25. Michael Faraday's Contributions To Electricity And Chemistry
Following in the footsteps of Ben Franklin, michael faraday studied the nature of electricity.
http://physics.hallym.ac.kr/reference/physicist/Faraday.html
Origin : Franklin Institute Science Museum]
Michael Faraday
September 22, 1791 - August 25, 1867
Faraday Follows in Franklin's Footsteps
Following in the footsteps of Ben Franklin, Michael Faraday studied the nature of electricity. Born on September 22, 1791, this famous English physicist and chemist is best remembered for his understanding of electromagnetism. Once Faraday discovered that electricity could be made by moving a magnet inside a wire coil, he was able to build the first electric motor. He later built the first generator and transformer. He introduced several words that we still use today to discuss electricity: ion, electrode, cathode, and anode. Faraday is also remembered for his contributions to the study of chemistry. Most noteworthy was his discovery of benzene, a common carbon compound. Later in life, Faraday became Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Institution. He was a powerful speaker and his lectures were popular. Every year on Christmas Day, he presented his Faraday Lectures for Children which were crowded with interested listeners. To honor his accomplishments, a unit of electricity was named after him. The "farad" measures capacitance, an amount of electrical charge. Faraday lived his whole life in England, where he died on August 25, 1867.
Back to Scientist

26. Bibliomania: Free Online Literature And Study Guides
Large book (16 chapters) by 19th century physicist John Tyndall about the life, work and discoveries Category Science Physics History People faraday, michael......800+ texts of classic literature, drama, and poetry together with detailed literature study guides. Large reference book and nonfiction section
http://www.bibliomania.com/NonFiction/Tyndall/Faraday/
....This site uses HTML 4.01v; please ensure that you enable 'javascript' and that your browser is at least a version 4. Bibliomania - Free Online Literature and Study Guides Bibliomania brings you the internet's best collection of classic texts and study resources. The fiction section has the complete, fully searchable texts of hundreds of novels. The Poetry section has world famous poems by everyone from to Keats , together with the Oxford Collected English verse and Collected French verse
In the Drama section we have the complete works of Shakespeare , and many other plays from the Elizabethan, restoration and modern periods.
Bibliomania has created Literature Study Guides to more than 100 of the most studied texts. These will help students to get top grades, and non-students to get more out a reading of the text or a visit to a play.
Bibliomania's Reference books include Websters dictionary Hobson Jobson Brewer's Phrase and Fable Soules Synonymes and many other useful books.
Our Non-Fiction section includes Das Capital Culpepper's Herbal , and many more. We are building a collection

27. The Biblical Creation Society Home Page
Examines the faith that helped shape faraday's life and views.
http://www.pages.org/bcs/bcs010.html
Read our special issue of Origins , covering creation foundations and more. Read " Is Man descended from Adam? " by Reinhard Junker, published by the Biblical Creation Society, and make up your own mind! At all good Christian bookshops (or direct from BCS), price £2.80. This BCS booklet has a summary of what we think it means to be a biblical creationist. Read " The Bone of Contention " by Sylvia Baker
At all good Christian bookshops (or direct from BCS), price £3.50.
UPDATE This web site has moved ! You can find the new web site at:
www.biblicalcreation.org.uk To receive future updates about the Biblical Creation Society, complete this form: First name Last name E-mail Telephone The Bible has crucial things to say... ...on the origin and diversity of living things ...on 'life' issues and the nature of man ...and the environment Biblical guidelines on these and related matters are of supreme relevance to Christians, science and society today.

28. The Institution Of Electrical Engineers - Engineering The Future
michael faraday's scientific work laid the foundations of all subsequent Category Science Physics History People faraday, michael......michael faraday, michael faraday's scientific work laid the foundations of all subsequentelectrotechnology. michael faraday was born on 22nd September 1791.
http://www.iee.org/publish/faraday/faraday1.html
Login or Register Shop Help Search ... Contacts Michael Faraday
(Information provided by the IEE Archives department.) Michael Faraday's scientific work laid the foundations of all subsequent electro-technology. From his experiments came devices which led directly to the modern electric motor, generator and transformer. Faraday was also the greatest scientific lecturer of his day, who did much to publicise the great advances of nineteenth-century science and technology through his articles, correspondence and the Friday evening discourses which he established at the Royal Institution. The Royal Institution Christmas lectures for children, begun by Faraday, continue to this day. Michael Faraday was born on 22nd September 1791. At the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to a London bookbinder. Reading many of the books in the shop, Faraday became fascinated by science, and wrote to Sir Humphry Davy at the Royal Institution asking for a job. On 1st March 1813, he was appointed laboratory assistant at the Royal Institution. There Faraday immersed himself in the study of chemistry, becoming a skilled analytical chemist. In 1823 he discovered that chlorine could be liquefied and in 1825 he discovered a new substance known today as benzene. However, his greatest work was with electricity. In 1821, soon after the Danish chemist, Oersted, discovered the phenomenon of electromagnetism, Faraday built two devices to produce what he called electromagnetic rotation: that is a continuous circular motion from the circular magnetic force around a wire. Ten years later, in 1831, he began his great series of experiments in which he discovered electromagnetic induction. These experiments form the basis of modern electromagnetic technology.

29. Faraday, Michael (1791-1867) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogra
faraday, michael (17911867), English bookbinder who became interestedin electricity. Williams, L. P. michael faraday, A Biography.
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Faraday.html

Branch of Science
Chemists Branch of Science Physicists ... English
Faraday, Michael (1791-1867)

English bookbinder who became interested in electricity He obtained an assistantship in Davy's lab, then began to conduct his own experiments. He wrote a review article on current views about electricity and magnetism in 1821, for which he reproduced Oersted's experiment. He was one of the greatest experimenters ever. Because he was self trained, however, he had no grasp of mathematics and could therefore not understand a word of papers. In the course of his experiments, Faraday discovered that a suspended magnet would revolve around a current bearing wire, leading him to propose that magnetism was a circular force. He also discovered magnetic optical rotation, invented the dynamo (a device capable of converting electricity to motion) in 1821, discovered electromagnetic induction in 1831, and devised the laws of chemical electrodeposition of metals from solutions in 1857. He formulated the second law of electrolysis: "the amounts of bodies which are equivalent to each other in their ordinary chemical action have equal quantities of electricity naturally associated with them." He published many of his results in the three-volume Experimental Researches in Electricity (1839-1855). One of his most important contributions to physics was his development of the concept of a field to describe magnetic and electric forces in 1845. He first suggested that current produces a electric "tension" which produced an "electrotonic state," or polarization of matter molecules, and was responsible for transmitting the electric force. He experimented with dielectrics in a

30. MSN Learning & Research - System Difficulties
Article provides an overview of the scientist's life.
http://encarta.msn.com/find/Concise.asp?z=1&pg=2&ti=761577227

31. Faraday, Michael (1791-1867) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogra
Find a biography and a list of scientific achievements for the British scientist who invented the first electric generator.
http://www.treasure-troves.com/bios/Faraday.html

Branch of Science
Chemists Branch of Science Physicists ... English
Faraday, Michael (1791-1867)

English bookbinder who became interested in electricity He obtained an assistantship in Davy's lab, then began to conduct his own experiments. He wrote a review article on current views about electricity and magnetism in 1821, for which he reproduced Oersted's experiment. He was one of the greatest experimenters ever. Because he was self trained, however, he had no grasp of mathematics and could therefore not understand a word of papers. In the course of his experiments, Faraday discovered that a suspended magnet would revolve around a current bearing wire, leading him to propose that magnetism was a circular force. He also discovered magnetic optical rotation, invented the dynamo (a device capable of converting electricity to motion) in 1821, discovered electromagnetic induction in 1831, and devised the laws of chemical electrodeposition of metals from solutions in 1857. He formulated the second law of electrolysis: "the amounts of bodies which are equivalent to each other in their ordinary chemical action have equal quantities of electricity naturally associated with them." He published many of his results in the three-volume Experimental Researches in Electricity (1839-1855). One of his most important contributions to physics was his development of the concept of a field to describe magnetic and electric forces in 1845. He first suggested that current produces a electric "tension" which produced an "electrotonic state," or polarization of matter molecules, and was responsible for transmitting the electric force. He experimented with dielectrics in a

32. Faraday
IS DOCUMENTED ( SEE BIBLIOGRAPHY) THE INTERVIEW FORMAT IS AN ARTISTIC TOOL OR VEHICLEWITHIN WHICH TO STRUCTURE BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION ABOUT michael faraday.
http://step.sdsc.edu/projects95/chem.in.history/essays/faraday.html
FARADAY :
CHEMIST, PHYSICIST, NATURAL PHILOSOPHER
Dateline: Princeton, New Jersey, Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, July, 1992. This report of the famous scientist Michael Faraday is composed principally of the transcriptions of two interviews with Faraday, hitherto unpublished. The contents of the interviews indicate they were both with Faraday while he was the Director of the Laboratory at the Royal Institute, in London. Unfortunately, neither interview has any additional documentation attached. Both interviews were found loose leaf with no coversheet or introductory notes. Perhaps they are fragments of a greater work, still to be uncovered. Faraday, an individual well liked by the populace for the Cinderella quality to his life story; the greatest experimental physicist of his time; often not seriously accepted as a thinker or theorist by the scientific community of his day; is more wrote of than even Newton or Einstein. Hopefully these interviews will provide yet another view. The author has included both interviews as found, back to back, so the readers may more completely form, for themselves, the image and character of Michael FaradayÑChemist, Physicist, Natural Philosopher.
INTERVIEW # 1: THE DIALOGUE
HM: Sir, May I ask you some questions?

33. Inventor Michael Faraday
Fascinating facts about michael faraday inventor of the electricmotor, the dynamo, the transformer, and the generator.
http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventors/faraday.htm

34. Adventures In CyberSound: Faraday, Michael
ADVENTURES in CYBERSOUND. michael faraday 1791 1867. michael faraday's scientificwork laid the foundations of all subsequent electro-technology.
http://www.acmi.net.au/AIC/FARADAY_BIO.html
A D V E N T U R E S in C Y B E R S O U N D
Michael Faraday : 1791 -1867 Michael Faraday's scientific work laid the foundations of all subsequent electro-technology. From his experiments came devices which led directly to the modern electric motor, generator and transformer. Faraday was also the greatest scientific lecturer of his day, who did much to publicise the great advances of nineteenth-century science and technology through his articles, correspondence and the Friday evening discourses which he established at the Royal Institution. The Royal Institution Christmas lectures for children, begun by Faraday, continue to this day. Michael Faraday was born on 22nd September 1791. At the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to a London bookbinder. Reading many of the books in the shop, Faraday became fascinated by science, and wrote to Sir Humphry Davy at the Royal Institution asking for a job. On 1st March 1813, he was appointed laboratory assistant at the Royal Institution. There Faraday immersed himself in the study of chemistry, becoming a skilled analytical chemist. In 1823 he discovered that chlorine could be liquefied and in 1825 he discovered a new substance known today as benzene. However, his greatest work was with electricity. In 1821, soon after the Danish chemist

35. The 1827 Christmas Lectures Of Michael Faraday
The 1827 Christmas Lectures of michael faraday. A Project of the 1992 Summer Instituteof the Woodrow Wilson Woodrow Wilson Leadership Program in Chemistry.
http://www.woodrow.org/teachers/chemistry/institutes/faraday/
The 1827 Christmas Lectures
of Michael Faraday
A Project of the 1992 Summer Institute of the Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson Leadership Program in Chemistry
Introduction
Faraday on the Art of Lecture
Faraday's Lecture Notes
Bibliography ...
About this Module
Faculty
Participants
Substances Solids, Fluids, Gases and Chemical Affinity Original Modern
Atmospheric Air and its Gases Original Modern
Water and Its Gases Original Modern
Nitric Acid or Aquafortis Ammonia or Volatile Alkali Muriatic Acid or Spirit of Salt Chlorine Original Modern
Sulphur, Phosphorus, Carbon and their Acids Original Modern
Metals Oxides Earths Fixed Alkalies Salts Original Modern
This program was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant TPE-9155261. This module was converted into HTML by Paul Burchard. Opinions expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the contributing organizations.
Woodrow Wilson Leadership Program in Chemistry lpt@www.woodrow.org
The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation webmaster@woodrow.org

36. MICHAEL FARADAY
Note michael faraday was an interesting individual as well as a great scientist. Eachwhile similar, gives a different view of the person, michael faraday.
http://www.woodrow.org/teachers/chemistry/institutes/1992/Faraday.html
FARADAY :
CHEMIST, PHYSICIST, NATURAL PHILOSOPHER
Dateline: Princeton, New Jersey, Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, July, 1992.
This report of the famous scientist Michael Faraday is composed principally of the transcriptions of two interviews with Faraday, hitherto unpublished. The contents of the interviews indicate they were both with Faraday while he was the Director of the Laboratory at the Royal Institute, in London. Unfortunately, neither interview has any additional documentation attached. Both interviews were found loose leaf with no coversheet or introductory notes. Perhaps they are fragments of a greater work, still to be uncovered. Faraday, an individual well liked by the populace for the Cinderella quality to his life story; the greatest experimental physicist of his time; often not seriously accepted as a thinker or theorist by the scientific community of his day; is more wrote of than even Newton or Einstein. Hopefully these interviews will provide yet another view. The author has included both interviews as found, back to back, so the readers may more completely form, for themselves, the image and character of Michael Faraday - Chemist, Physicist, Natural Philosopher.
Interview # 1: The Dialogue
HM: Sir, May I ask you some questions?

37. Michael Faraday
michael faraday 1791 - 1867, Hauptseite/MainPage. michael faraday, michael faraday, michael faraday, michael faraday.
http://www.niester.de/p_natwis/michael_faraday/michael_faraday.html
Michael Faraday
Hauptseite/Main Page
Deutsch English Michael Faraday Michael Faraday Michael Faraday Michael Faraday ... Faraday's Experiments
Erstellt am:

38. Michael Faraday (1791 - 1867)
Translate this page Sala de Física. Biografias. michael faraday. (1791 - 1867). Origináriode uma família humilde, faraday era o terceiro filho de um
http://br.geocities.com/saladefisica9/biografias/faraday.htm
Biografias
Michael Faraday
(Sua casa em Londres) (Gaiola de Faraday) Pesquisas Experimentais em Eletricidade. ou simplesmente campo, farad. www.saladefisica.cjb.net

39. Faraday, Michel
Translate this page faraday, michael (1791-1867), físico y químico británico, conocido principalmentepor sus descubrimientos de la inducción electromagnética y de las leyes
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Plaza/4692/faraday.htm
Faraday, Michel
Faraday, Michel Faraday, Michael (1791-1867), físico y químico británico, conocido principalmente por sus descubrimientos de la inducción electromagnética y de las leyes de la electrólisis.. Nació el 22 de septiembre de 1791 en Newington (Surrey). Era hijo de un herrero y recibió poca formación académica. Mientras trabajaba de aprendiz con un encuadernador de Londres, leyó libros de temas científicos y realizó experimentos en el campo de la electricidad. En 1812 asistió a una serie de conferencias impartidas por el químico Humphry Davy y envió a éste las notas que tomó en esas conferencias junto con una petición de empleo. Davy le contrató como ayudante en su laboratorio químico de la Institución Real y en 1813 le llevó con él a un largo viaje por Europa. Faraday entró en la Sociedad Real en 1824 y al año siguiente fue nombrado director del laboratorio de la Institución Real. En 1833 sucedió a Davy como profesor de química en esta Institución. Dos años más tarde le fue concedida una pensión vitalicia de 300 libras anuales. Faraday recibió numerosos galardones científicos.. Realizó sus primeras investigaciones en el campo de la química bajo la dirección de Davy. Un estudio sobre el cloro le llevó al descubrimiento de dos nuevos cloruros de carbono. También descubrió el benceno. Faraday investigó nuevas variedades de vidrio óptico y llevó a cabo con éxito una serie de experimentos de licuefacción de gases comunes (véase Criogenia)..

40. Faraday, Michael
faraday, michael. The English chemist and physicist michael faraday (17911867),is known for his pioneering experiments in electricity and magnetism.
http://historia.et.tudelft.nl/wggesch/geschiedenis/personen/faraday/
Faraday, Michael
The English chemist and physicist Michael Faraday (1791-1867), is known for his pioneering experiments in electricity and magnetism. Many consider him the greatest experimentalist who ever lived. Several concepts that he derived directly from experiments, such as lines of magnetic force, have become common ideas in modern physics.
Michael Faraday (1791-1867), an English chemist and physicist, is shown here in an early daguerreotype holding a bar of glass he used in his 1845 experiments on the effects of a magnetic field on polarized light. Faraday is considered by many scientists to be the greatest experimentalist ever. (The Bettmann Archive)
Faraday was born at Newington, Surrey, near London. He received little more than a primary education, and at the age of 14 he was apprenticed to a bookbinder. There he became interested in the physical and chemical works of the time. After hearing a lecture by the famous chemist Humphry DAVY, he sent Davy the notes he had made of his lectures. As a result Faraday was appointed, at the age of 21, assistant to Davy in the laboratory of the Royal Institution in London. During the initial years of his scientific work, Faraday occupied himself mainly with chemical problems. He discovered two new chlorides of carbon and succeeded in liquefying chlorine and other gases. He isolated benzene in 1825, the year in which he was appointed director of the laboratory.

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