Chemistry- Timeline of the Measurement of Pressure

By devynl
  • Feb 15, 1564

    Galileo Galilei

    Galileo Galilei is born.
  • Otto von Guericke

    Otto von Guericke is born.
  • Evangelista Torricelli

    Evangelista Torricelli is born.
  • Blaise Pascal

    Blaise Pascal is born.
  • Christiaan Huygens

    Christiaan Huygens is born.
  • Galileo's Contribution

    He developed the suction pump. He used air to draw underground water up a pump, similiar to how a syringe draws water. He was perplexed as to why there was a limit to the height water could be raised. He was 66 years old when he invented this.
  • Torricelli's Contribution

    He developed the first barometer. He continued Galileo's work by determining that the limit to the height Galileo's pump could draw water was due to atmospheric pressure. He invented a closed-end tube filled with mercury that, in turn, was suspended in a hollow dish filed with liquid mercury. The height of the column of mercury in the tube, which was measured in mmHg, was equal to the atmospheric pressure acting on the mercury in the dish. He was 35 when he invented the barometer.
  • Guericke's Contributation

    He made a pump that could creat a vacuum so strong tha a team of 16 horses could not pull two metal hemisperes apart. He reasoned that the metal hemispheres were held together by the mechanical force of the atmospheric pressure, rather than the vacuum. This experiment went on for two years (until 1645). He was 41 years old when it started.
  • Pascal's Contribution

    He carried a mercury barometer like Torricello's from the base to the top of the French mountain, Puy de Dome. He discovered that the atmospheric pressure changed as he moved up and down the moutain. He was 25.
    The unit Pascal was named after him because of this experiment.
  • Huygens' Contribution

    He invented the manometer to measure the elastic forces in gases. He was 32 years old.
  • John Dalton

    John Dalton is born.
  • Amadeo Avogadro

    Amadeo Avogadro is born.
  • Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac

    Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac is born.
  • Dalton's Contribution

    He stated that in a mixture of gases, the total pressure is equal to the sum of the pressure of each gas, as if it were in a container alone. The pressure exerted by each gas is called its partial pressure. This is called Dalton's law. Dalton was 35 when his law was publushed.
  • Gay-Lussac's Contribution

    He observed the volume of comnining gases. His law states that the volumes of gases that interact to give a gaseous product are in the ratio of small whole numbers to each other and that each bears a similar relation to the volume of the product. He made the observation when he was 30 years old.
    For example, two volumes of hydrogen combined with one volume of oxygen would form to become two volumes of water.
  • Avogadro's Contribution

    He suggested, from Gay-Lussac's experiment, which was performed three years earlier, that the pressure in a container is directly proportional to the number of particles in that container. This is known as Avogadro's Hypothesis. This hypothesis can be illustrated by blowing up a balloon, ball or tire: the more air that is added the larger the container becomes. This is due to increased pressure. Avogadro wrote his hypothesis when we was 35.