MSU Gallery of Chemists' Photo-Portraits and Mini-Biographies

* Sir William Ramsay

1852-1916

 

Portrait: 102
Location - Floor: First - Zone: Room 136 - Wall: North - Sequence: 1
Source: Kedzie Collection
Sponsor: Keki Mistry


 
Sir William Ramsay
 

Henry Cavendish noted in 1785 that when an electric spark was passed through air, causing the nitrogen and oxygen to combine, a small residue, about 1%, of inert gas remained. This observation was explained a century later when Ramsay and Lord Rayleigh (John William Strutt) discovered and characterized a new element, argon, in the air. Ramsay went on to discover others of the Group VIII elements, helium, neon, krypton and xenon, and received the 1904 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Ramsay learned the art of glass blowing which enabled him to construct the specialized laboratory equipment needed for his exacting research.