Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => High School Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: Chemd00d on April 17, 2005, 12:51:28 PM
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I'm sorry if I have the wrong place and the wrong forum, but this was the only place on the 'net where I could find Chem buffs. I have a report to do on a famous chemist, and I was assigned Lewis Bronsted. Now here's the problem. I've searched Google, Biography.com, and Nobelprize.com, and can't find any information on Lewis Bronsted. However, I can find webpages on Lewis vs Bronsted, and I have found two people with the last names of Lewis and Bronsted seperately, and not as one person. My question is, is there an actual Lewis Bronsted? Was/is he one person? Or did my teacher make a stupid mistake and assign me two people? Thanks for any and all help, and please respond ASAP, because this assignment is due in 10 days, and I'm still stuck on researching a guy that could actually be two people.
Thanks
-Eric
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Lewis and Bronsted are 2 different people.
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Thanks so much. I think I need to have a talk with my teacher about this...she made it seem like they were one. She told me all about him (but really them) and their involvements with acids/bases, so now I have something to catch her on. Thanks again.
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I also have another question. Are Bronsted/Lowery acids the same thing as the Lewis-Bronsted acids, or did Lewis and Bronsted work on something completely different?
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There are Bronsted Lowry acids and Lewis acids. Every BL acid is Lewis acid, but not every Lewis acid is BL acid - these are different things. Lewis theory is more general.
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Thanks, you guys really helped me a lot.