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Georg Ludwig Carius (August 24, 1829 – April 24, 1875) was a German chemist born in Barbis, in the Kingdom of Hanover. He studied under Friedrich Wöhler and was assistant to Robert Bunsen for 6 years.
Otto Diels Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner. Gerhard Damköhler; Ludwig Darmstaedter; Heinrich Debus; Gero Decher; Max Delbrück; Friedrich Wilhelm Hermann Delffs; Walter Dieckmann; Otto Diels
Georg Ludwig Carius (1829–1875), German chemist; Heinrich Caro (1834–1910), German chemist; Wallace Carothers (1896–1937), American chemist, known for the discovery of nylon; Emma P. Carr (1880–1972), American spectroscopist; Marjorie Constance Caserio (1929–2021), American chemist, winner of the American Chemical Society's Garvan Medal
Georg Ludwig Carius; Otto Crusius (1857–1918) D. Friedrich von der Decken; Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet; E. Ernst Ebeling; Karl von Einem; Carl Engel (musicologist)
His academic collaborators were some of the most important scientists in the world, including Robert Bunsen, Georg Ludwig Carius, Emil Erlenmeyer and Gustav Kirchhoff. He is the father of modern Greek chemical education. He wrote 73 books and dissertations.
K. Kajetan Georg von Kaiser; Karl Wilhelm Gottlob Kastner; August Kekulé; Ludwig Klages; Martin Heinrich Klaproth; Friedrich Ludwig Knapp; Emil Knoevenagel
German construction workers came across an incredible find that not only bears historical significance, but also may solve a 300-year-old cold case.
The Carius halogen method in analytical chemistry is a method for the quantitative determination of halogens in chemical substances. [ 1 ] A known mass of an organic compound is heated with fuming nitric acid in the presence of silver nitrate contained in a hard glass tube known as carius tube, in a furnace.