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Discovering Air
Before the age of science, it was clear to most observers that air was a "vital
spirit," but beyond that, little was known about the physical properties of
air. Aristotle suggested that air was one of four elements that also included
earth, water, and fire, and for 2000 years this was the prevailing view. But
beginning in the 17th century, a new era of scientific inquiry and discovery
began to reveal the true nature and behavior of the air we breathe.
1618: Issac Beekman compares air to water, and the pressure water exerts at
depth, and comes up with the then radical suggestion that air has physical
properties. Even Galileo and Descartes steadfastly disagree.
1640: Gaspar Berti, through an inventive experiment with a lead tube and
bucket of water, demonstrates how an air vacuum can be created.
1643: Evangelista Torricelli conducts Berti's experiment with mercury instead
of water. This leads to the invention of the barometer, which measures
atmospheric pressure (a measure of the pressure exerted by the atmosphere on a
surface).
1646: Pierre Petit tests Blaise Pascal's theory that atmospheric pressure
decreases with height, by carrying a barometer to the top of a small mountain
in France. This experiment confirms that the atmosphere has weight.
1660: Robert Boyle is perhaps the first to predict weather using the
barometer. Boyle suggests that the process of combustion and respiration are
due to a "nitrous" substance in air. He also creates "Boyle's Law," which says
that the volume of air decreases as pressure on air increases (later applied to all gases).
1671: Robert Hooke creates the first decompression chamber. He climbs inside
a barrel, and has one tenth of the air sucked out, thereby simulating
conditions at 3,000 feet; Hooke notices only a slight pressure on the ears.
1674: About this time, Johann Baptista van Helmont first uses the word "gas"
to define a state of matter other than liquids or solids. John Mayow determines that
air is composed of at least two gases—one, which supports life and combustion,
and another which does not.
1723: George Stahl claims, wrongly, that all substances are composed of water
and three different kinds of earth—one of them combustible—which he
termed phlogiston. "Phlogiston theory" prevails well into the 18th century.
1727: Stephen Hales proves that "air" can be released from solids and liquids.
Other scientists soon begin trying to determine the properties of this
"air."
1770: Carl Scheele is the first to create oxygen (although he does not understand
what it is) from saltpeter, and is the
first to challenge the popular phlogiston theory. In 1781 he publishes his
book on gases.
1772: Antoine Lavoisier and Joseph Priestley conduct experiments similar to
Scheele's in a new study of gases. Over the next decade they work,
independently of each other, to identify many new "airs."
1778: Lavoisier first describes his oxygen theory of combustion—whereby
oxygen in air is the necessary component for combustion—not phlogiston in
solids. It would be many more years before oxygen's role in respiration would
be clearly understood.
1785: Based on his years of study, Lavoisier begins attacking the phlogiston
theory. While some (such as Priestley) stand by the phlogiston theory, by the
late 1790s, most have converted. Lavoisier continues work on gases and
identifying elements which Dmitri Mendeleev, in 1869, turns into the Periodic
Table of Elements. 200 years later, chemistry is still based on the
foundation developed by Lavoisier.
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