Реферат: Chemistry Essay Research Paper Robert Boyle is
things common in all bodies were corpuscles, atom-like structures that were created by
God and that occupy all void space. He began to perform experiments, concentrating
on the color changes that took place in reactions. He started to devise a system of
classification based on the properties of substances. By showing that acids turned the blue
syrup of violets red, Boyle claimed that all acids react in the same manner with violet
syrup and those that did not, were not acids. Similarly, he showed that all alkalies turned
the syrup of violets green. Observing that the blue opalescence of the yellow solution of
lignum nephriticum was destroyed when the solution was acidified and could be restored
by the addition of alkali, Boyle used this experiment to test the strength of acids and
alkalies. His system therefore consisted of three categories: acids, alkalies, and those
substances that are neither acids nor alkalies. However, he purposefully avoided any
investigation of corpuscles. Boyle continued his work on acids and alkalies. He devised
tests for the identification of copper by the blue of its solutions, for silver by its ability to
form silver chloride, with its blackening over time, and for sulfur and many other mineral
acids by their distinctive reactions.
Therefore, knowing that it was not actually Boyle who discovered his law, but
Towneley and Power who did in 1662 and then Hooke who confirmed it soon thereafter,
it can be said that this was Boyle s greatest achievement. His achievement being the
conversion of scientific thought from one in which the spirits and the heavens were kept in
mind at all times, to one based on experimentation and the use of deduction, not
assumption. It cannot be stressed strongly enough what this did for science in general.
Boyle s work sparked the beginning of a new era, one in which careful experimentation
was the justification for a hypothesis, and thus he is accordingly bestowed with the honor
of being the founder of modern chemistry.
Boyle also did extensive work with the air pump, proving such things as the
impossibility for sound to be present in a vacuum, the necessity of air for fire and life, and
the permanent elasticity of air. Also using the air pump, Boyle discovered that fixed air
was present in all vegetables. Through other experimental methods, mainly the use of steel
filings and strong mineral acid, he also found hydrogen. Yet his greatest achievement,