Paul Sabatier (November 5, 1854 – August 14, 1941) was a French chemist, born
at Carcassonne. He taught science classes most of his life before he became Dean
of the Faculty of Science in 1905.
Sabatier's earliest research concerned the thermochemistry of sulfur and
metallic sulfates, the subject for the thesis leading to his doctorate. In
Toulouse, he continued his physical and chemical investigations to sulfides,
chlorides, chromates and copper compounds. He also studied the oxides of
nitrogen and nitrosodisulfonic acid and its salts and carried out fundamental
research on partition coefficients and absorption spectra.
Sabatier greatly facilitated the industrial use of hydrogenation. In 1897, he
discovered that the introduction of a trace of nickel as a catalyst facilitated
the addition of hydrogen to molecules of carbon compounds.
Sabatier is best known for the Sabatier process and his works such as La
Catalyse en Chimie Orgarnique (Catalysis in organic chemistry) which was
published in 1913. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry jointly with fellow
Frenchman Victor Grignard in 1912.
Sabatier was married with four daughters, one of whom wed the famous Italian
chemist Emilio Pomilio.
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