Thomas
Graham
1805-1869
Thomas
Graham was born in 1805. His father, a textile manufacturer,
was convinced that he should enter the church, but Graham resisted
and in 1826 graduated from Glasgow University. This was followed
by postgraduate study in Edinburgh, where he presented his first
lectures in chemistry.
In
1828, Graham returned to Glasgow to work as an industrial consultant,
before being elected to lecture in chemistry and mechanics at
the Glasgow Mechanics Institution the following year. Then,
in 1830, he became the one of the first professors of the Andersonian
University, taking up the Chair of Chemistry.
Graham's
lectures were, unfortunately, not particularly enlightening
as far as his students were concerned. He is reported to have
been awful at teaching elementary classes - he couldn't keep
discipline, and he was hopeless at explaining his subject to
an audience. Where he did excel, however, was in practical laboratory
work. Graham was a brilliant experimentalist, who had the ability
to inspire his students to do excellent research.
Graham
was fascinated by the motion of atoms in gases and liquids,
and spent most his time studying the diffusion of gases, and
undertaking a study of the nature of phosphates. This work won
him the Keith medal from the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1833,
the Royal Medal of the Royal Society in 1838, and later led
to him being elected for fellowship.
His
work on the diffusion of gases was used in 1868 to discover
the chemical formula for ozone 03. Graham's investigations of
the behaviour of crystallised compounds passing through membranes,
as a method of separating large molecules from similar compounds,
led to the technique of dialysis. Graham's method is still in
use in hospitals today, for purifying the blood of patients
with kidney failure.
Return
To Scottish Scientists and Engineers
|