Boyle, Robert (1627-1691) was an English natural philosopher and one of the founders of
modern chemistry. He is best remembered for the law named after him
which states that, at a constant temperature, the volume of a given
mass of gas varies inversely as the pressure upon it. He was
instrumental in the founding of the Royal Society and a pioneer in
the use of experiment and the scientific method.
Boyle was born on 25 January 1627 in Lismore Castle, Ireland,
the fourteenth child and seventh son of the Earl of Cork. He learned
to speak French and Latin as a child and was sent to Eton College at
the early age of eight. In 1641 he visited Italy, returning to
England in 1644. He joined a group known as the Invisible College,
whose aim was to cultivate the 'new philosophy' and which met at
Gresham College, London, and in Oxford, where Boyle went to
live in 1654. The Invisible College became, under a charter granted
by Charles II in 1663, the Royal Society of London for Improving
Natural Knowledge, and Boyle was a member of its first
council. (He was elected President of the Royal Society in 1680, but
declined the office.) He moved to London in 1668 where he lived with
his sister for the rest of his life. He died there on 30 December
1691.
Boyle's most active research was carried out while he lived
in Oxford. By careful experiments he established Boyle's law.
He determined the density of air and pointed out that bodies alter
in weight according to the varying buoyancy of the atmosphere. He
compared the lower strata of the air to a number of sponges or small
springs which are compressed by the weight of the layers of air
above them. In 1660 these findings were published in a book,
shortened title The Spring of Air, and gave us the word elastic in
its present meaning.
A year later Boyle published The Sceptical Chymist in
which he criticized previous researchers for thinking that salt,
sulphur and mercury were the 'true principles of things'. He
advanced towards the view that matter is ultimately composed of
'corpuscles' of various sorts and sizes, capable of arranging
themselves into groups, and that each group constitutes a chemical
substance. He successfully distinguished between mixtures and
compounds and showed that a compound can have very different
qualities from those of its constituents.
Also in about 1660 Boyle studied the chemistry of
combustion, with the assistance of his pupil Robert Hooke
(1635-1703). They proved using an air pump that neither charcoal nor
sulphur burns when strongly heated in a vessel exhausted of air,
although each inflames as soon as air is re-admitted. Boyle
then found that a mixture of either substance with saltpetre
(potassium nitrate) catches fire even when heated in a vacuum and
concluded that combustion must depend on something common to both
air and saltpetre. Further experiments involved burning a range of
combustible substances in a bell-jar of air enclosed over water. But
it was left to Joseph Priestley in 1774 to discover the component of
air that vigorously supports combustion, which three years later
Antoine Lavoisier named oxygen.
The term analysis was coined by Boyle and many of the
reactions still used in qualitative work were known to him. He also
introduced certain plant extracts, notably litmus, for the
indication of acids and bases. In 1667 he was the first to study the
phenomenon of bioluminescence, when he showed that fungi and
bacteria require air (oxygen) for luminescence, becoming dark in a
vacuum and luminescing again when air is re-admitted. In this he
drew a comparison between a glowing coal and phosphorescent wood,
although oxygen was still not known and combustion not properly
understood. Boyle also seems to have been the first to
construct a small portable box-type camera obscura in about 1665. It
could be extended or shortened like a telescope to focus an image on
a piece of paper stretched across the back of the box opposite the
lens.
In 1665 Boyle published the first account in England of
the use of a hydrometer for measuring the density of liquids. The
instrument he described is essentially the same as those in use
today. He can also be credited with the invention of the first
match. In 1680 he found that by coating coarse paper with
phosphorus, fire was produced when a sulphur-tipped splint was drawn
through a fold in the treated paper. Boyle experimented in
physiology, although 'the tenderness of his nature' prevented him
from performing actual dissections! He also carried out experiments
in the hope of changing one metal into another, and was instrumental
in obtaining in 1689 the repeal of the statute of Henry IV against
multiplying gold and silver.
Besides being a busy natural philosopher, Boyle was
interested in theology and in 1665 would have received the
provostship of Eton had he taken orders. He learned Hebrew, Greek
and Syriac in order to further his studies of the scriptures, and
spent large sums on biblical translations. He founded the Boyle
Lectures for proving the Christian religion against 'notorious
infidels such as atheists, theists, pagans, Jews and Mahommedans
(but made the proviso that controversies between Christians were not
to be mentioned).
Boyle accomplished much important work in physics, with Boyle's
law, the role of air in propagating sound, the expansive force of
freezing water, the refractive powers of crystals, the density of
liquids, electricity, colour, hydrostatics and so on. But his
greatest fondness was researching in chemistry, and he was the main
agent in changing the outlook from an alchemical to a chemical one.
He was the first to work towards removing the mystique and making
chemistry into a pure science. He questioned the basis of the
chemical theory of his day and taught that the proper object of
chemistry was to determine the compositions of substances. His great
merit as a scientific investigator was that he carried out the
principles of Bacon, although he did not consider himself to be a
follower of him or any other teacher. After his death, his natural
history collections passed as a bequest to the Royal Society.
Author not available, Boyle, Robert
(1627-1691). , The Hutchinson Dictionary of Scientific
Biography, 01-01-1998.
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