Alfred
Werner, son of factory foreman J.A. Werner and his wife Jeanne, née
Tesche, was born on December 12, 1866, at Mülhausen in Alsace, where he
went to school. While he was at school he showed an interest in chemistry and
did, when he was only 18, his first independent chemical research.
From 1885 until 1886 he did his military service in Karlsruhe and, during this,
attended the lectures of Engler at the Technical High School in that city. In
1886 he attended lectures at the Federal Technical High School at Zurich and
in 1889 obtained there the Diploma in Technical Chemistry. During his studies
there he was much influenced by Professor A. Hantzsch.
In 1889 he was appointed Assistant in Professor Lunge's laboratory at the Zurich
Technical High School and he then began to cooperate with Professor Hantzsch
in research. In 1890 he took his degree in the University of Zurich with a thesis
on the spatial arrangements of the atoms in molecules containing nitrogen.
From 1890 until 1891 he did further work on this subject and visited Paris,
where he worked under Professor Berthelot at the Collège de France. In
1892 he returned to Zurich as a lecturer in the Technical High School, and in
1893 he was appointed Associate Professor in the University of Zurich, to succeed
Victor Merz and then gave the University lectures on organic chemistry.
In 1895 he became, when he was only 29 years old, Professor of Chemistry in
the University, giving the lectures on organic chemistry until, in 1902, he
took over the lectures on inorganic chemistry as well. In 1895 he was acquired
Swiss nationality and though he was offered posts at Vienna, Basle and Wurzburg,
he declined these, preferring to remain in Zurich.
Werner's name will always be associated with the theory of coordination which
he established and with his work on the spatial relationships of atoms in the
molecule, the foundations of which were laid in the work he did, when he was
only 24, for his doctorate thesis in 1892. In this work he formulated the idea
that, in the numerous compounds of tervalent nitrogen, the three valence bonds
of the nitrogen atom are directed towards the three corners of a tetrahedron,
the fourth corner of this being occupied by the nitrogen atom. In 1891 he had
published a paper on the theory of affinity and valence, in which he substituted
for Kekulé's conception of constant valence, the idea that affnity is
an attractive force exerted from the centre of the atom which acts uniformly
towards all parts of the surface of the atom.
In 1893 he stated, in a paper on mineral compounds, his theory of variable valence,
according to which inorganic molecular compounds contain single atoms which
act as central nuclei around which are arranged a definite number of other atoms,
radicals or other molecules in a simple, spatial, geometric pattern. The figure
which expresses the number of atoms thus grouped round a central nucleus was
called by Werner the coordination number, the most important of these coordination
numbers being 3, 4, 6 and 8, the number 6 occurring especially often. Thousands
of molecular compounds correspond to the number 6 type, and in all of these
there is a central atom with coordinated atoms at the corners of an octahedron.
For the next 20 years Werner and his collaborators studied and prepared new
series of molecular compounds and studied their configurations, publishing many
papers on them, 150 of which were by himself. Finally, his work culminated in
the discovery of optically-active isomers of the complexes studied, the existence
of which had been forecast by his hypothesis. More than 40 series of optically-active
complexes with octahedral symmetry were separated in optically-active forms,
with the result that the spatial configuration of the complexes to the coordination
number 6 was established as firmly as that of the tetrahedral carbon atom of
van 't Hoff and Le Bel.
Werner also worked on complexes with other coordination numbers, especially
4, for which the form can be tetrahedral or a plane square. As Paul Pfeiffer,
in his account of Werner's work published in Great Chemists (1961, Edited
by Eduard Farber, Interscience, New York) remarks the coordination theory of
Werner extended throughout the whole range of systematic inorganic chemistry
and into organic chemistry as well. For his work on it Werner was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Chemistry for 1913.
Werner was corresponding member of the Royal Society of Sciences (Königliche
Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften) at Göttingen and of the Physico-Medical
Society (Physikalisch-medizinische Sozietät) of Erlangen. He held an honorary
doctorate of the University of Geneva, and was an Honorary Member of the Society
of Physics and Natural History in the same town, of the Physical Association
(Physikalischer Verein) of Frankfurt/Main, of the German Bunsengesellschaft,
of the Société Vaudoise des Sciences Naturelles at Lausanne, and
of the Chemical Society of London. He was also a permanent member of the Imperial
Society of Friends of Natural History, Anthropology and Ethnography of Moscow.
France conferred upon him the Leblanc Medal of its Societe Chimique and the
distinction of Officier de l'Instruction Publique.
Werner was a very sociable man, whose recreations were billiards, chess and
the Swiss card game, Jass. He spent his holidays among the mountains and travelled
much to attend scientific meetings outside Switzerland. As a lecturer he was
a convincing and enthusiastic speaker with a gift for clear explanations of
difficult problems. Among his pupils were such distinguished men as Jantsch,
Karrer and Pfeiffer. Valuable for others were his books Neuere Anschauungen
auf dem Gebiete der anorganischen Chemie (New ideas in inorganic chemistry)
and Lehrbuch der Stereochemie (Textbook of stereochemistry), both published
in 1904.
In 1894, Werner married Emma Giesker of Zurich, a member of a German family.
They had one son, Alfred, and one daughter, Charlotte.
In 1913, the year in which he received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry, he was
already suffering from arteriosclerosis and by 1915 this had compelled him to
give up his general lectures on chemistry and in 1919 he had to give up his
Professorship. On November 15, 1919, he died at the early age of 53.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1966
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.