Bohuslav Brauner
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Rare-earth elements
Bohuslav Brauner | |
|---|---|
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| Born | 8 May 1855 |
| Died | 15 February 1935 (aged 79) |
| Alma mater | Charles University |
| Known for | Determination of atomic weights Rare-earth elements |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Inorganic chemistry |
| Institutions | Charles University |
Bohuslav Brauner (8 May 1855 – 15 February 1935) was a Czech chemist. He worked at the University of Prague, where he investigated the properties of the rare earth elements, especially the determination of their atomic weights. Brauner predicted the existence of the rare earth element promethium ten years before the existence of the gap was confirmed experimentally (although the element was still undiscovered).[1][2][3] In the 1880s, when he already had started lecturing in Prague, he still competed internationally in cycling races.[4]
Brauner was a student of Robert Bunsen at the University of Heidelberg and later of Henry Roscoe at the University of Manchester. Brauner became lecturer for chemistry at the Charles University of Prague in 1883, assistant professor as of 1890, and full professor as of 1897.[5] During the course of his career, he corresponded frequently with Dmitri Mendeleev, and they influenced each other as models for periodicity of the elements were developed.[6]
Brauner retired from the Charles University of Prague in 1925 and died of pneumonia in 1935.[6]
