Litcius/Paper detail

Perovskite: Name Puzzle and German‐Russian Odyssey of Discovery

Eugene A. Katz

2020Helvetica Chimica Acta140 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Today the term ‘perovskite’ is used to designate the crystalline structure of a wide variety of ABX 3 ionic compounds. However, historically this name was used for a specific material, having been coined for a mineral, calcium titanate (CaTiO 3 ). This mineral was discovered in the Ural Mountains, Russia. The first sample of the mineral was transferred from Saint Petersburg to Berlin in 1839 by the Russian mineralogist Alexander Kämmerer , who gave the sample for further investigation to the German mineralogist and crystallographer Gustav Rose. Rose determined its properties and chemical composition and named the mineral after the Russian politician and mineralogist Lev Perovski . The present essay describes the background of this discovery as well as the life stories of the personalities involved.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryGermanMineralPerovskite (structure)Saint petersburgMineralogyHumanitiesArchaeologyCrystallographyArtHistoryOrganic chemistryGeographyRussian federationRegional scienceSolid-state spectroscopy and crystallographyCrystal Structures and PropertiesPolyoxometalates: Synthesis and Applications