Louis Jacques Thénard - Wikipedia Louis Jacques Thénard (4 May 1777 – 21 June 1857) was a French chemist He was born in a farm cottage near Nogent-sur-Seine in the Champagne district [1] the son of a farm worker
Louis-Jacques Thenard | Inventor, Discoverer, Innovator | Britannica Louis-Jacques Thenard was a French chemist, teacher, and author of an influential four-volume text on basic chemical theory and practice (1813–16) A peasant’s son, Thenard endured extreme hardships to gain his scientific education
Lui-Zhak Thenard biography. French chemist Thénard's primary focus in chemistry was inorganic chemistry In collaboration with Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, he developed a method for producing potassium and sodium by reducing their hydroxides with iron under heat
Biography of Louis-Jacques Thenard Louis-Jacques Thenard, chemist, was born in the village of La Louptière, near Nogent-sur-Seine, today in the department of Aube, May 4, 1777 He died in Paris on June 21, 1857
Louis-Jacques Thenard He was a professor of chemistry at the École Polytechnique in Paris, France, who with Gay-Lussac prepared boron He also discovered hydrogen peroxide
Thenard, Louis Jacques - Encyclopedia. com Thenard’s quantitative study of “acetic ether” (ethyl acetate) may be regarded as a model for its time He studied both its preparation (in the presence of concentrated sulfuric acid) and its hydrolysis, always referring quantities of acid to equivalent weights of potash
Thenard, CA, Los Angeles, CA 90744, US - MapQuest The neighborhood of Thenard is located in Los Angeles County in the State of California Find directions to Thenard, browse local businesses, landmarks, get current traffic estimates, road conditions, and more
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Baron Louis-Jacques Thenard In a single month at the request of the Minister of the interior he invented Thénard blue, a pigment for the use of the great Sèvres factory The base of this is cobalt He was intimately associated in his scientific work with Gay-Lussac for many years
Louis Jacques Thénard - Philadelphia Museum of Art He was famous for discovering hydrogen peroxide and boron, and for inventing the pigment cobalt blue, also known as "Thénard’s Blue," one of the earliest synthetic pigments