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The Karlsruhe Congress of 1860
Excerpts relating to establishment of data leading to the periodic table
From: https://pubs.acs.org/cen/science/88/8836sci1.html, article by Sarah Everts, quotes of Alan Rocke interview

History of the Periodic Table International conferences are so common now that it's hard to imagine academic life without them, but 150 years ago this was not the case.
History of the Periodic Table The very first international scientific conference was held in Karlsruhe, Germany on Sept. 3, 1860.
History of the Periodic Table It was an science landmark also, essential for clearing up several major difficult problems that were blocking the advance of chemistry.
History of the Periodic Table Clearing up the element sequence (using weights at that time) took place by Cannizzaro's interpretation of Avogadro's Law.

History of the Periodic Table Using this better ordered list enabled the French geologist Alexandre Émile de Chancourtois to publish the first periodic element arrangement - that is, the first showing the periodically recurring element properties. Elements were aligned in a spiral of unbroken sequence on a vertical tube, with these similarities above and below each other.
History of the Periodic Table Later, German chemist Lothar Meyer, and the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev, who had both been in attendance at Karlsruhe, also constructed element arrangements using the Cannizzaro numbers - on tables: with the elements arranged in rows and columns - for schoolbooks. History of the Periodic Table
History of the Periodic Table History of the Periodic Table When the 1860 conference began, chemistry was in a total state of disarray. Although most chemists believed in atoms and molecules, nobody could agree on molecular formulas. Even simple molecules such as water were hotly debated: Most leading chemists at the time claimed that water’s molecular formula was OH, and a minority argued that it was H2O. More complex molecules were an even bigger battleground: At least 19 different representations of acetic acid were being used in textbooks of that era.
History of the Periodic Table The foundation of the discipline was insecure, students were confused, dissension among the elite was increasing, and misunderstandings abounded.“
History of the Periodic Table One major stumbling block at the time was that nobody knew the correct atomic weights for elements. Chemists debated whether oxygen’s atomic weight was 8 or 16, and carbon’s 6 or 12. Fifty years before the Karlsruhe conference, the Italian chemist Amedeo Avogadro had proposed a theory that equal volumes of gases under equal conditions contain equal numbers of molecules. That supposition could have settled the debate, but it had been “uniformly rejected,“ Rocke says. “If you believed Avogadro’s theory, then you could get the correct molecular formula for molecules, as well as the correct atomic weights, which was the groundwork required to construct the periodic table,“ he says.
History of the Periodic Table Another common misconception was promoted by J&oumilns Jacob Berzelius, a powerful Swedish chemist of that era, says Michael Laing, a retired chemistry professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, in Durban, South Africa, who has written several chemical history articles about the Karlsruhe conference. Berzelius had correctly figured out that electrostatic forces were important for ionic bonding in salt, but then he had incorrectly concluded that all molecular bonding was forged by electrostatic attraction. Using this faulty reasoning, Berzelius argued that diatomic molecules such as H2 and O2 were impossible because the atoms would repel each other in the same way that like charges do. By not accepting the existence of diatomic molecules, it was impossible to get the correct formula for water formation, and water itself (H2 + 1/2 O2➝H2O). “The trouble with famous scientists then and now is that it can be very difficult for others to successfully attack their theories,“ Laing says.
History of the Periodic Table By 1860, a potpourri of different systems for describing atoms, molecules, and their formulas was in circulation. Of the theories, the most accurate was proposed by two French chemists, Charles Gerhardt and Auguste Laurent. They were ostracized for their socialistic political views, a fact that didn’t help the acceptance of their science. But their theory had a small fan base, which included a trio of chemists who decided to organize the first international conference.

History of the Periodic Table History of the Periodic Table The “secret agenda,“ of the Karlsruhe organizers, Rocke says, was to bring the international community of chemists together to promote Gerhardt and Laurent’s theory—which included accepting Avogadro’s theory as well as the existence of diatomic molecules. But there was also an open rationale for the conference, he says: “Everyone in the field of chemistry—old and young, conservatives and reformers—agreed that confusion and dissension were severe.“
History of the Periodic Table The actual idea to organize the conference originated with August Kekulé, a young German chemist in his 30s working in Ghent, Belgium, who first proposed that carbon is tetravalent. Kekulé discussed the possibility of the conference with a young French chemist named Adolphe Wurtz, who was based in Paris. The two friends went looking for a third, more established scientist to be the official conference organizer—someone who would successfully attract the high-profile chemists required to make the meeting a success. They approached a German chemist in Karlsruhe named Karl Weltzien. He had the added benefit of living in the German state of Baden, which was near the Black Forest, a very desirable holiday destination during that era. Baden also happened to have a rich ruler, Grand Duke Friedrich, who was a supporter of science and who footed part of the bill, Laing says.
History of the Periodic Table These days, conferences are planned at least a year in advance, but that was not so for the Karlsruhe event. Things got serious in March 1860, when the organizers approached several elite scientists to ask whether their names could be included in an official invitation, which was circulated by early July. The conference was held two months later, in September. “It blows you away that they could plan the conference so efficiently“ without e-mail or widespread electricity, Rocke says.
History of the Periodic Table Despite the short notice, some 140 scientists traveled from across Europe—and even from as far away as Mexico—to attend the symposium. Recognizable names such as Robert Bunsen, of the now-famous burner, and Emil Erlenmeyer, who developed the omnipresent flask, were in the audience. In all probability, the contentious debates about molecular formulas ensured high attendance—if only so that participants could make sure their voices were heard. History of the Periodic Table When the 1860 conference began, chemistry was in a total state of disarray. But there was also some skepticism about the meeting. For example, Meyer wrote a sarcastic letter to a friend before the conference in which he described the event as an “idiotic church-council in Karlsruhe,“ where he expected participants would “propose the election of an infallible [molecular] formula-pope,“ Rocke notes.


History of the Periodic Table History of the Periodic Table Like most current-day conferences, on opening night, “the members fraternized. ... Although this particular meeting was not mentioned in the programme, it was by no means the least relished,“ wrote one delegate. A Russian chemist named Alexander Borodin, who is better remembered as a composer of several symphonies and the opera “Prince Igor,“ was in attendance and likely performed music during the gathering, the University of Karlsruhe’s Podlech says.
History of the Periodic Table Participants broke into groups to discuss contentious issues, such as stoichiometry or representation of molecular formulas, and then they would return to the plenary hall to share their deliberations, Podlech says. However, sometimes a group’s consensus was undermined by the presenter’s personal opinions.
History of the Periodic Table In fact, the conference was mostly dominated by voices from the old guard—so much so that the organizers began to fear their efforts were in vain and that the conference was going to be a complete failure. But just before the meeting’s close, a relatively unknown Italian chemist named Stanislao Cannizzaro gave a long, impassioned, and eloquent lecture that argued for Avogadro’s perspective on molecules. After Cannizzaro’s lecture, one of his friends handed out a paper that effectively reiterated his speech and that several important delegates read on their trips home.
History of the Periodic Table “It was as though the scales fell from my eyes; doubt vanished, and it was replaced by a feeling of peaceful certainty,“ wrote Meyer, who would later go on to construct a correct periodic table around the same time as Mendeleev put his together. Mendeleev wrote that the meeting “produced such a remarkable effect on the history of our science that I consider it a duty ... to describe all the sessions ... and the results.“
History of the Periodic Table But Cannizzaro’s plea needed some time to sink in, and it took about a decade before scientists hashed out the correct molecular weights that enabled the periodic table to emerge. “On that last day in Karlsruhe, there were no cheers, no sudden enlightenment, no ovation,“ Rocke notes. “The assembled chemists simply quietly filed out of the hall and went home. In fact, other than very brief notices that appeared in the British Chemical News and the French Moniteur Scientifique, the Karlsruhe Congress appeared to have vanished without a trace—a total failure,“ he adds.
History of the Periodic Table But it was actually quite the opposite, Rocke says. Like much in science, it just took a healthy dose of time and perseverance before the result of the conference—the periodic table—came to fruition.

The Karlsruhe Congress of 1860

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