Abstract

Abstract This article highlights Peter Paufler’s academic genealogy on the occasion of his 80th birthday. We describe the academic background since 1776, which covers 11 generations of scientists: Ritter, Ørsted, Han-steen, Keilhau, Kjerulf, Brøgger, Goldschmidt, Schulze, Paufler, Meyer, and Leisegang. The biographies of these scientists are described in spotlight character and references to scientists such as Dehlinger, Ewald, Glocker, Röntgen, Vegard, Weiss, and Werner are given. A path is drawn that begins in the Romanticism with electrochemistry and the invention of what is probably the first accumulator. It leads through the industrialization and the modern geology, mineralogy, and crystallography to crystal chemistry, metal and crystal physics and eventually returns to electrochemistry and the aluminum-ion accumulator in the era of the energy transition. The academic genealogy exhibits one path of how crystallography develops and specializes over three centuries and how it contributes to the understanding of the genesis of the Earth and the Universe, the exploration of raw materials, and the development of modern materials and products during the industrialization and for the energy transition today. It is particularly characterized by the fields of physics and magnetism, X-ray analysis, and rare-earth compounds and has strong links to the scientific landscape of Germany (Freiberg) and Scandinavia, especially Norway (Oslo), as well as to Russia (Moscow, Samara, St. Petersburg). The article aims at contributing to the history of science, especially to the development of crystallography, which is the essential part of the structural science proposed by Peter Paufler.

Highlights

  • Peter Paufler celebrated his 80th birthday on February 18, 2020

  • It leads through the industrialization and the modern geology, mineralogy, and crystallography to crystal chemistry, metal and crystal physics

  • Brøgger stated in the preface of his extensive work “The Silurian levels 2 and 3 in the Kristiania area and on Eker, their structure, fossils, stratigraphic faults, and contact metamorphoses” [56]: “When I look back on the finished work before me, which only gradually acquired its present scope, it is only with an unsatisfactory feeling that I send it out into the world

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Summary

Introduction

Peter Paufler celebrated his 80th birthday on February 18, 2020 Throughout his academic career, he devoted himself primarily to crystallography, as an editor and book reviewer for the German crystallographic journal Zeitschrift für Kristallographie, and as member of the board of the German Society for Crystallography (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kristallographie, DGK), as member of committees of the International Union of Crystallography (IUCr) and the European Crystallographic Association (ECA), and as chairman of the Association for Crystallography (Vereinigung für Kristallographie, VfK) in the former German Democratic Republic (GDR), the German Mineralogical Society (Deutsche Mineralogische Gesellschaft, DMG), and in particular the DGK. This article is the result of exactly this melange It aims at encouraging young scientists to continue on their chosen scientific path and to orientate themselves with regard to research topics towards their academic ancestors, perhaps even taking them as fixed anchor points. The aim is to give a brief overview of scientific history and to highlight those references that are connected to Peter Paufler’s research profile, the authors’ work, and especially to crystallography in Germany, Norway, and Russia

Academic genealogy and methodology
Hansteen
The academic genealogy of Peter
Conclusion
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