Journal article

Practising organometallic chemistry in nineteenth century Australia: David Orme Masson and diethyl magnesium

Ian D Rae

HISTORICAL RECORDS OF AUSTRALIAN SCIENCE | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2022

Abstract

By the late 1880s, the existence of alkyl derivatives of metals such as zinc and mercury was well established but diethyl magnesium had been poorly characterised and obtaining proof of its existence was a reasonable aim for chemists. Professor David Orme Masson and his student, Norman Wilsmore, at the university in the British colonial capital, Melbourne, accepted the challenge despite their distance from northern hemisphere centres of chemical research. The ‘tyranny of distance’ was tempered by their access to chemical journals and textbooks and by Masson’s connections at the ‘centre’, notably with William Ramsay. Wilsmore repeated the earlier experiments and also used methods that had been..

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University of Melbourne Researchers