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Fritz Haber (Berlin 9 December 1868, Breslau – 29 January 1934 Basel) was a German chemist and a pioneer of chemical warfare. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1918 for the synthesis of ammonia from the chemical elements hydrogen and nitrogen.

Life

Fritz Haber was born into an assimilated Jewish family. His father, Siegfried Haber, ran a business of dye pigments, paints, and pharmaceuticals. For quite a number of years he also served as alderman of Breslau (then a German city, now the Polish city of Wrocław). At Fritz's birth, serious medical complications occurred and his mother, Paula—née Haber, a first cousin of Siegfried—died three weeks later. It seemed that Fritz' father blamed the child for the mother's death. This is probably the reason that father and son later in life never became close and that tensions between them arose often.

Haber attended the humanistic gymnasium St. Elizabeth in Breslau, where the curriculum contained German language and literature, Latin, Greek, mathematics and some physics, but hardly any chemistry. Fritz had a keen interest in chemistry, already as a school boy he performed chemical experiments. After finishing the gymnasium (September 29, 1886 at the age of seventeen) he went to the Friedrich-Wilhelms Universität (usually briefly referred to as the University of Berlin) to study chemistry. This choice was somewhat against his father's wishes who had preferred a commercial education for his son. In Berlin August Wilhelm von Hofmann was director of the chemistry department. Von Hofmann, who was close to seventy at the time, was a poor teacher, the chemistry lab was in a bad shape, and altogether Haber found his first semester in Berlin rather disappointing. He decided, as was often done by 19th century German students, to switch universities. He chose the University of Heidelberg, where he arrived in the summer semester of 1887 and continued his studies under Robert Wilhelm Bunsen. He did his second through fourth semester in Heidelberg. From mid 1889 until mid 1890 Haber spent time in the army.

In the fall of 1890 he went back to Berlin, this time to the Technische Hochschule of Charlottenburg (now the Technical University Berlin). He worked here under Carl Liebermann who had a cross appointment at the Berlin University. Charlottenburg did not have the the right to grant doctorates (it received it later, in 1899). Having done his thesis work at Charlottenburg, Haber received formally his doctorate in organic chemistry at the University of Berlin (May 29, 1891) on basis of a thesis entitled Über einige Derivate des Piperonal (on some derivatives of Piperonal).

After completing his university studies Fritz's father, who had not given up his hope that his son would become a business man, insisted that he do a few apprenticeships in chemical industry. Although Haber acquired a taste for chemical engineering during these apprenticeships, they also bored him and he convinced his father that he should return to academia to advance his technical knowledge. His father agreed that he spend a semester with Georg Lunge, professor of chemical technology and a distant relative of the Habers, at the Institute of Technology in Zurich. After that he worked for six months in his father's business, which finally made Haber senior realize that his son's future was not as a business man.

So his father finally agreed that he take up a scientific career and he went for one and a half years to work with Ludwig Knorr at the University of Jena, publishing with him a paper.[1] . In Jena in 1893, Haber converted to the Protestant-Christian faith, against his father's wishes.

Still uncertain whether to devote himself to chemical engineering or physical chemistry, he traveled in the spring of 1894 to the Technical University of Karlsruhe, without being certain of a position there. Having worked as an unpaid assistant for several months, the professor of Chemical Technology, Hans Bunte, gave him (12-16-1894) a paid assistantship. Two years later Haber made his Habilitation with a dissertation entitled Experimentelle Untersuchungen über Zersetzung und Verbrennung von Kohlenwasserstoffen (Experimental Studies on the Decomposition and Combustion of Hydrocarbons) (1896) and Haber received the title Privat-Dozent. Bunte was especially interested in combustion chemistry and Carl Engler, who was also in Karlsruhe, introduced Haber to the study of petroleum and Haber's subsequent work was greatly influenced by these two colleagues. Haber remained in Karlsruhe until 1911 and made a great reputation for himself during those years, especially in electrochemistry and chemical thermodynamics. In 1898, Haber published the textbook Grundriss der Technischen Elektrochemie (Fundamentals of technical electrochemistry) and obtained the honorary title of außerordentliche (extraordinary) professor in technical electrochemistry. In 1906 he succeeded Max Julius Le Blanc to the chair of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry. Le Blanc obtained the prestigious chair in Leipzig held previously by Wilhelm Ostwald.

In 1901, Haber married Clara Immerwahr, daughter of respected Jewish family in Breslau, whom he had known as a teenager. Clara, who also had converted to the protestant religion, matched Fritz in ambition and determination, having fought against prejudice and opposition to become the first woman to obtain a doctorate in science at Breslau University. She committed suicide the night of May 1, 1915, shooting herself with Fritz’s army pistol, supposedly after heated arguments over Fritz’s involvement with the poison gas campaign.

From 1904 on Haber worked on the catalytic formation of ammonia. In 1905 he published his book Thermodynamik technischer Gasreaktionen (Thermodynamics of technical gas reactions), which treats the foundations of his subsequent thermochemical work.


  1. Ludwig Knorr and Fritz Haber, Ueber die Konstitution des Diacetbernsteinsäureesters (On the constitution of diaceto amber acid ester), Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft Vol. 27, pp. 1151 – 1167