Walter Hieber (original) (raw)
- Walter Otto Hieber (* 18. Dezember 1895 in Stuttgart; † 29. November 1976 in München) war ein deutscher Chemiker. (de)
- Walter Hieber (18 December 1895 – 29 November 1976) was an inorganic chemist, known as the father of metal carbonyl chemistry. He was born 18 December 1895 and died 29 November 1976. Hieber's father was Johannes Hieber, an influential evangelical minister and politician. Hieber was educated at Tübingen, Würzburg, and Heidelberg. In 1935 he was appointed Director of the Inorganic Chemical Institute at the Technical University in Münich. Among his numerous research findings, Hieber prepared the first metal carbonyl hydrides such as H2Fe(CO)4 and HMn(CO)5. He discovered that metal carbonyls undergo nucleophilic attack by hydroxide, the “Hieber base reaction.” He and his students discovered several metal carbonyl compounds such as Re2(CO)10 and Os3(CO)12 He pioneered the development of metal carbonyl sulfides. Hieber is also known for his work with the cis effect, also known as the labilization of CO ligands in the cis position in octahedral complexes. Hieber was highly decorated for his work, including in 1951 the Alfred Stock Prize. One of his most famous students was Nobel prize winner Ernst Otto Fischer. His first foreign student was John Anderson, FRS, in 1931. (en)
- Walter Hieber (Stoccarda, 18 dicembre 1895 – Monaco di Baviera, 29 novembre 1976) è stato un chimico tedesco. Suo padre, , era un politico che ricoprì diverse importanti cariche istituzionali. Dopo essersi laureato nel 1924 a Tubinga si unì al suo insegnante a Würzburg. Ottenuta l'abilitazione insegnò ad Heidelberg e nel 1935 divenne direttore dell'Istituto di Chimica-Inorganica all'Università Tecnica di Monaco. Hieber è il fondatore della moderna chimica dei metallocarbonili. Tra le sue scoperte si annoverano i metallocarbonilidruri come H2Fe(CO)4 o HMn(CO)5, il riconoscimento delle reazioni fondamentali a cui partecipano i metallocarbonili e inoltre diede un contributo fondamentale alla sintesi di molti cluster metallocarbonilici, complessi che contengono un legame metallo-metallo, come ad esempio Re2(CO)10. Molti suoi allievi divennero più tardi degli importanti cattedratici, tra i quali spicca il premio Nobel Ernst Otto Fischer. (it)
- 1895-12-18 (xsd:date)
- 1976-11-29 (xsd:date)
- 7678782 (xsd:integer)
- 3674 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
- 1033300665 (xsd:integer)
- dbr:Metal_carbonyl
- dbr:Hydroxide
- dbr:University_of_Greifswald
- dbr:University_of_Marburg
- dbr:University_of_Tübingen
- dbr:University_of_Würzburg
- dbr:Inorganic_chemistry
- dbr:Nucleophilic
- dbc:1895_births
- dbc:1976_deaths
- dbc:Technical_University_of_Munich_faculty
- dbc:University_of_Greifswald_faculty
- dbr:Triosmium_dodecacarbonyl
- dbr:Alfred_Stock
- dbr:Ernst_Otto_Fischer
- dbr:John_Stuart_Anderson
- dbr:Technical_University_Munich
- dbr:Hydride
- dbc:20th-century_German_chemists
- dbr:Dirhenium_decacarbonyl
- dbr:Cis_effect
- dbr:University_of_Heidelberg
- 1895-12-18 (xsd:date)
- Walter Hieber (en)
- 1976-11-29 (xsd:date)
- Walter Hieber (en)
- dbr:University_of_Greifswald
- dbr:University_of_Marburg
- dbr:Technical_University_Munich
- dbr:University_of_Heidelberg
- dbc:1895_births
- dbc:1976_deaths
- dbc:Technical_University_of_Munich_faculty
- dbc:University_of_Greifswald_faculty
- dbc:20th-century_German_chemists
- owl:Thing
- foaf:Person
- dbo:Person
- dul:NaturalPerson
- wikidata:Q19088
- wikidata:Q215627
- wikidata:Q5
- wikidata:Q729
- dbo:Animal
- dbo:Eukaryote
- dbo:Scientist
- dbo:Species
- schema:Person
- wikidata:Q901
- yago:CausalAgent100007347
- yago:Chemist109913824
- yago:LivingThing100004258
- yago:Object100002684
- yago:Organism100004475
- yago:Person100007846
- yago:PhysicalEntity100001930
- yago:WikicatGermanChemists
- yago:YagoLegalActor
- yago:YagoLegalActorGeo
- yago:Scientist110560637
- yago:Whole100003553
- yago:Wikicat20th-centuryChemists
- yago:WikicatEthnicGermanPeople
- Walter Otto Hieber (* 18. Dezember 1895 in Stuttgart; † 29. November 1976 in München) war ein deutscher Chemiker. (de)
- Walter Hieber (18 December 1895 – 29 November 1976) was an inorganic chemist, known as the father of metal carbonyl chemistry. He was born 18 December 1895 and died 29 November 1976. Hieber's father was Johannes Hieber, an influential evangelical minister and politician. Hieber was educated at Tübingen, Würzburg, and Heidelberg. In 1935 he was appointed Director of the Inorganic Chemical Institute at the Technical University in Münich. (en)
- Walter Hieber (Stoccarda, 18 dicembre 1895 – Monaco di Baviera, 29 novembre 1976) è stato un chimico tedesco. Suo padre, , era un politico che ricoprì diverse importanti cariche istituzionali. Dopo essersi laureato nel 1924 a Tubinga si unì al suo insegnante a Würzburg. Ottenuta l'abilitazione insegnò ad Heidelberg e nel 1935 divenne direttore dell'Istituto di Chimica-Inorganica all'Università Tecnica di Monaco. Hieber è il fondatore della moderna chimica dei metallocarbonili. Tra le sue scoperte si annoverano i metallocarbonilidruri come H2Fe(CO)4 o HMn(CO)5, il riconoscimento delle reazioni fondamentali a cui partecipano i metallocarbonili e inoltre diede un contributo fondamentale alla sintesi di molti cluster metallocarbonilici, complessi che contengono un legame metallo-metallo, come (it)
- Walter Hieber (de)
- Walter Hieber (it)
- Walter Hieber (en)
- freebase:Walter Hieber
- http://viaf.org/viaf/74612850
- yago-res:Walter Hieber
- http://d-nb.info/gnd/116796782
- wikidata:Walter Hieber
- http://arz.dbpedia.org/resource/والتر_هيبر
- http://azb.dbpedia.org/resource/والتر_هیبر
- dbpedia-de:Walter Hieber
- dbpedia-fa:Walter Hieber
- dbpedia-it:Walter Hieber
- dbpedia-nds:Walter Hieber
- https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4wAxh
- Walter Hieber (en)
is dbo:doctoralAdvisor of
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
- dbr:Metal_carbonyl
- dbr:Metal_carbonyl_hydride
- dbr:Rhodium_carbonyl_chloride
- dbr:List_of_nominees_for_the_Nobel_Prize_in_Chemistry
- dbr:Triiron_dodecacarbonyl
- dbr:Alfred_Stock_Memorial_Prize
- dbr:Ernst_Otto_Fischer
- dbr:John_Stuart_Anderson
- dbr:List_of_German_chemists
- dbr:Hexadecacarbonylhexarhodium
- dbr:Dirhenium_decacarbonyl
- dbr:Organometallic_chemistry
- dbr:Transition_metal_hydride
- dbr:Walter_hieber
is dbp:doctoralAdvisor of
is foaf:primaryTopic of