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A simple compound but a terrible poison. Up to that time, nobody had ever realized how extraordinary toxic phosgene is. It is more toxic than prussic acid. One single inhalation is lethal. We tested it out.
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At first the English were very surprised by our disregarding the Hague Convention. But from 1916 onward they used at least as much poison as we did.
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First we attacked the Russian soldiers with our gases, and then when we saw the poor fellows lying there, dying slowly, we tried to make breathing easier for them by using our own life-saving devices on them.
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Geheimrat Haber had seen chlorine as a possibility in gas warfare. There is chlorine in every chemical laboratory, and every chemist has worked with it at some time.
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Haber told me the French already had rifle bullets filled with gas, which indicated that we were not the only ones intending to wage war by that means. He also explained to me that using gas was the best way of bringing the war to end quickly.
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I felt profoundly ashamed, I was very much upset.
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I knew that the Hague Convention prohibited the use of poison in war. I didn't know the details of the terms of the Convention, but I did know of that prohibition.
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We volunteered, we offered our services. Of course it did take a bit of nerve, but we were specialists, after all, so we were best qualified to estimate the risks. Actually it was only Franck and myself who carried out the tests to establish how long newly manufactured gas-masks would remain effective against high concentrations of phosgene.
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You might say that Haber put my mind at rest. I was still against the use of poison gas, but after Geheimrat Haber had put his case to me and explained what was at stake, I let myself be converted and I then threw myself into the work wholeheartedly.

Biography

Otto Hahn (March 8, 1879 – July 28, 1968) was a German chemist. He received the 1944 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is considered a pioneer in the field of radioactivity.

Hahn was born in Frankfurt am Main and studied chemistry in Marburg and Munich. After receiving his PhD in 1901 he worked initially at Marburg university then, from 1904, at London, from 1905 at Montreal and from 1906 in Berlin.

Together with Lise Meitner and Otto von Baeyer, he developed a technique to measure the beta decay spectra of radioactive isotopes; this achievement was recognised by his securing the post of professor at the newly founded Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institute for Chemistry in Berlin in 1912.

In 1918, he, together with Meitner, discovered protactinium. When Meitner fled Nazi Germany in 1938, he continued work with Fritz Strassmann on elucidating the outcome of the bombardment of uranium with thermal neutrons. He communicated his results to Meitner who, in collaboration with her nephew Otto Robert Frisch, correctly interpreted them as evidence of nuclear fission (a phrase coined by Frisch).

Once the idea of fission had been accepted, Hahn continued his experiments
and demonstrated the huge amounts of energy that neutron-induced fission could produce, either for energy production or warfare.

After World War II Hahn was among those German scientists put under surveillance by the Allied ALSOS program who suspected him on working on the German nuclear energy project to develop an atomic bomb (his only connection was the discovery of fission, he did not work on the program). Hahn was awarded the 1944 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, but at the awards ceremony the chairman of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry announced, "Professor Hahn has informed us that he is regrettably unable to attend this ceremony." He was being held prisoner by the British who were seeking information from him about the failed German effort to develop an atomic bomb. There was also considerable controversy that he had downplayed the role of Lisa Meitner, a Jew and a woman, in their collaboration such that she was excluded in the credit and the Nobel Prize. Later historians considered her contributions to have been the greater and in a survey of Nobel Prize winners conducted forty years later, Lisa Meitner was voted the most deserving of those who had not received the award.

In the post-war era Hahn became an advocate against the use of nuclear weapons.

Proposals were made at different times that each of elements 105 and 108 should be named Hahnium in Hahn's honour, but neither proposal found approval (see Element naming controversy).However, one of the world's few nuclear-powered merchant ships, Otto Hahn, was named in his honor.

...(more on Wikipedia)

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Otto Hahn".
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