Presentation Speech by Professor A. Ölander, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesties, Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
Analytical chemistry is a science, fundamental not only to the
other branches of scientific chemical research, but also to
applied chemistry, the chemical industry. Further it is important
for the other natural sciences, both within inorganic and organic
Nature, for medical research, and for many humanistic and even
jurisprudential sciences.
The striving of analysts is not only to develop methods yielding
accurate results, but even more important for practical work is
that the analysis can be carried out rapidly, that it can be done
using as small samples as possible, and that very small
percentages of various substances can be detected and
ascertained.
Polarography is one of these micro-methods which are available to
the modern analyst.
Professor Bohumil Kucera of Prague once suggested to the young
Jaroslav Heyrovsky that he should study certain irregularities in
connection with the capillarity of mercury and attempt to
disclose their origin. This was one of the innumerable small
problems constituting science. Heyrovsky let the mercury flow
through a glass capillary and weighed the drops. It was a slow
and tedious method, and he resolved instead to measure the
electric current obtained when he put a tension between the
mercury in the capillary and that collecting at the bottom. The
glass capillary does not terminate in the air, but in a solution,
through which the current now will flow.
Heyrovsky found that this device could be used for something much
more important than the original problem. It could be used for
ascertaining very small quantities of the most diverse substances
dissolved in the water, and moreover, to measure their
percentages.
Important new discoveries are found where they are not expected.
Spectacular advances in our time have been achieved by great
teams, and some people are saying that only teamwork is
worth-while, whereas a single scientist nowadays can do nothing.
Well, teamwork can be efficient, and is organized when you have
been able to set an aim for the work. But the new discoveries are
made by some scientist who noticed something strange, possibly by
two, independently and in different countries. Then it is
important that future team leaders and authorities granting funds
do not keep him too strictly to attend his job, but give him a
chance to pick up the unexpected new things, in spite of the
chance of finding them being diminutive. When Heyrovsky put a
small electric tension between the dropping mercury and that
collecting at the bottom, he found in accordance with earlier
experience that the current increased by steps when the tension
was raised over certain fixed values. Earlier people usually
introduced the current into the solution by means of a platinum
foil. But various substances will stick to the surface of a
solid, disturbing the course of the experiment. Because the
mercury drop is falling off after a few seconds and a new one
then will be forming, this method always ensures us a new clean
surface against the solution, and disturbances are avoided.
The current will increase perceptibly even at very small
percentages of such substances that will undergo a chemical
reaction at the surface of the mercury drop when the current
passes. The increase will not be unlimited, but is proportional
to the percentage. The tension needed is a characteristic of each
substance, and therefore the method gives us information
concerning both which substances are present in the solution and
their quantities.
Heyrovsky together with his Japanese collaborator Shikata built
an apparatus which registered how these electric currents varied
with the tension applied. This apparatus, named the polarograph,
traces a curve, from which can be read both place and height of
the various steps.
About a decade elapsed before the method found some use outside
Heyrovsky's own laboratory. But when this at last happened,
people found that for example impurities of a metal sample could
be easily and accurately ascertained. Earlier, this problem, of
great importance to industry, often was very laborious,
time-consuming and the results uncertain.
Heyrovsky and his collaborators, at home and abroad, disclosed
the theoretical foundations of the methods and worked out its
applications to more and more types of problems. Almost all
chemical elements can be analysed with the aid of the
polarographic method and in Organic Chemistry it is equally
useful for the most diverse groups of substances.
Heyrovsky also has elaborated modifications of his method which
are extremely valuable for special kinds of investigations. For
example, it is possible to squirt a jet of mercury into the
solution instead of dropping it and the registration will be
effected with an oscillograph. But, when speaking of
polarography, one primarily thinks about the classical
polarograph and its step curves. A great number of instrument
makers the world over are producing these recording instruments,
which are nowadays found in every well-equipped analytical
laboratory. In contrast to certain other versatile instruments
employed in modern analysis, they sell at a reasonable price.
Thousands of polarographs scattered over the world facilitate
chemical and medical research, and in the industrial laboratories
they contribute in cutting prices of both necessities of life and
of more advanced results of material production.
Professor Heyrovsky. You are the originator
of one of the most important methods of contemporary chemical
analysis. Your instrument is extremely simple, only falling
droplets of mercury, but you and your collaborators have shown
that it can be used for the most diverse purposes.
Several years elapsed before the polarographic method was noticed
outside your own country. But after that, its significance has
ever increased, not suddenly, attracting the attention of
outsiders, but steadily your method has won the confidence of
analytical chemists.
On behalf of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences I wish to
extend to you our warmest congratulations.
May I ask you to advance and receive the Nobel Prize for
Chemistry for this year from the hands of our King.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1959