Wolfgang Krätschmer

Wolfgang Krätschmer (born 16 November 1942 in Berlin) is a German physicist.

Krätschmer studied physics in Berlin. After his Diplom he went to the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg and earned his PhD there in 1971 with a thesis on artificially etched tracks of accelerated heavy ions in quartz. In his career, he has worked on cosmic-ray heavy-ion tracks in lunar samples, as well as infrared and UV spectra of interstellar dust.

Together with his PhD student Konstantinos Fostiropoulos and with Donald Huffman from the University of Arizona he developed a procedure[1][2][3] for the synthesis of fullerenes. This procedure was the first to produce fullerenes in large amounts for chemical experiments. Since 1993 he is an honorary professor ("Honorarprofessor") at the University of Heidelberg.

Honors

gollark: No, ladybugs *created* the government.
gollark: Besides, you can go 100m up and 155m down, they changed sea level.
gollark: WRONG! Have you never seen falling sand?
gollark: You seriously believe in the sky? It's fake. There is nothing there above 100m.
gollark: Depends how broadly you define apocalypses.

References

  1. Krätschmer, Fostiropoulos, Huffman: "Search for the UV and IR spectra of C60 in laboratory-produced carbon dust", Dusty Objects in the Universe, September 1989, Capri, Italy", conference proceedings, page 89-93
  2. Krätschmer & Huffman (1993). "Production and discovery of fullerites: new forms of crystalline carbon". In Kroto, H. W.; Walton, D. R. M. (eds.). Fullerenes. Cambridge U. Press. pp. 33–38. ISBN 0-521-45917-6.
  3. Wolfgang Krätschmer (2011). "The story of making fullerenes". Nanoscale. 3 (6): 2485–2489. Bibcode:2011Nanos...3.2485K. doi:10.1039/C0NR00925C. PMID 21327257.
  4. Invention: Process for working with new form of carbon


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.