Ernst Hermann Riesenfeld
Ernst Hermann Riesenfeld was a German/Swedish chemist. Riesenfeld started his academic career with important contributions in electrochemistry by the side of his mentor Walther Nernst, and continued as a professor with work on the improvement of analytical techniques and the purification of ozone. Dismissed and prosecuted in Nazi Germany due to his Jewish origins, he emigrated to Sweden in 1934 and continued his ozone-related work there until retirement.
Biography
Riesenfeld was born in Brieg, the son of physician Dr. Emanuel Riesenfeld, and attended the local school. Following the family’s move to Breslau he attended the humanistic König-Wilhelms Gymnasium, which he left in 1897.He studied general natural sciences at the Universities of Heidelberg and Göttingen, beginning in 1899. At the latter university he mainly dealt with physical chemistry and electrochemistry, on which he submitted his PhD thesis “Ueber elektrolytische Erscheinungen und elektromotorische Kräfte an der Grenzfläche zweier Lösungsmittel” under the supervision of Walther Nernst. This pioneering work is remembered as the starting point of what is now known as electrochemistry at the interface between two immiscible electrolyte solutions, an independent research field in modern times. The determination of the free energies of ion transfer between aqueous and organic solutions, which Riesenfeld investigated, is of great importance for applications in biology, physiology, pharmacy, or in the chemical laboratory technique of liquid-liquid extraction. Riesenfeld, together with Nernst, also developed a highly sensitive torsion displacement balance which is known as ‘Nernst balance’.
After some years as a researcher under Nernst, in 1913 Riesenfeld was appointed as a professor at the University of Freiburg. In 1920 he became a professor at the University of Berlin, where he headed a laboratory tasked with the isolation and determination of properties of pure ozone, a task hitherto elusive due to the high explosion and toxicity risks in handling the concentrated chemical. Among others he supervised Georg-Maria Schwab, who was the first to prepare solid ozone.
Because of his Jewish origin, Riesenfeld lost his position in 1934 and moved to Sweden, where he worked until 1952 at the Nobel Institute of Physical Chemistry. During his time at the Nobel Institute, Riesenfeld worked on the thermal formation of ozone at high temperatures.
Riesenfeld was also the author of a well-known textbook and a laboratory manual on inorganic chemistry; his books were published in many editions and translations.
He died in Stockholm on 19 May 1957.