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German organic
chemist who synthesized the dye indigo 1880.
He discovered barbituric
acid 1863, later to become the parent substance of a major class of
hypnotic drugs.
In 1888 he carried
out the first synthesis of a terpene.
Nobel Prize for
Chemistry 1905.
Baeyer was born
in Berlin and studied there and at Heidelberg.
He became professor
of chemistry at the University of Strasbourg 1872 and three years later
at Munich, where he stayed for the rest of his career.
Baeyer discovered
fluorescein 1871.
He also found the
resinous condensation product of phenol and formaldehyde (methanal),
which Leo Baekeland later developed into the first thermosetting plastic
Bakelite.
His work with ring
compounds and the highly unstable polyacetylenes led him to consider
the effects of carbon-carbon bond angles on the stability of organic
compounds.
He concluded that
the more a bond is deformed away from the ideal tetrahedral angle, the
more unstable it is; this is known as Baeyer's strain theory.
It explains
why rings with five or six atoms are much more common, and stable, than
those with fewer or more atoms.
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