Leopold Rügheimer
Leopold Rügheimer (May 5, 1850 - May 24, 1917) was a notable German chemist whose name is connected to the Staedel-Rügheimer pyrazine synthesis, a reaction that was discovered by himself and Wilhelm Staedel. Rügheimer was born in Walldorf (near Meiningen) in 1850 as the son of a merchant. He studied at the universities of Leipzig, Würzburg and Tübingen. He died in Kiel in 1917 after a successful academic career.
Career
Rügheimer's professional career:
width="100%" 1873 Promotion at the University of Tübingen 1875 Assistant at the Chemical Institute of Leiden University 1877 Assistant at the Chemical Institute of the University of Kiel 1889 Position as Professor ordinarius or physical and pharmaceutical chemistry at the university of Kiel
Scientific contributions:
- Published an article together with Wilhelm Staedel concerning the synthesis of pyrazines by reacting α-haloketones with ammonia. This procedure is now known as the Staedel-Rügheimer pyrazine synthesis.
- First synthesis of tropic acid in 1880, together with Albert Ladenburg.
- First synthesis of piperine (1882).
See also
References
- W Pötsch. Lexikon bedeutender Chemiker (VEB Bibliographisches Institut Leipzig, 1989) (ISBN 3-323-00185)
- E von Lippmann. Zeittafeln zur Geschichte der organischen Chemie (Julius Springer, 1921)
- A J Humphrey, D O'Hagan. Tropane alkaloid biosynthesis. A century old problem unresolved. Nat. Prod. Rep. 18 (2001) 494-502 (doi:10.1039/b001713m)