Heyrovsky-Ilkovic-Nernst Lecture

Heyrovsky-Ilkovic-Nernst Lecture

The Heyrovsky-Ilkovic-Nernst Lecture is the only lecture in trilateral cooperation to date. The German Chemical Society established the Heyrovsky - Ilkovic - Nernst Lecture in 2002 together with the Ceská Spolecnost Chemická and the Slovenská Chemická Spolocnost. The lecture took place for the first time in 2006.

The lecture was named after three important physical chemists from the three nations involved. The Czech professor Jaroslav Heyrovský developed polarography, for which he received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1959. Polarography is a method for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of ions in a solution using a mercury drop electrode. Heyrovský was also a member of the Leopoldina.

The Slovak chemist Professor Dionýz Ilkovič worked in Heyrovský's laboratory in 1930. In 1934 he published the Ilkovič equation named after him, which made it possible to calculate concentrations from the measured currents in polarography. The associated derivation was published in 1938. Until 1976, Ilkovič was a professor at the Comenius University in Bratislava.

In 1920, German professor Walther Hermann Nernst received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in the field of thermochemistry. Nobody who deals with chemistry can ignore Nernst. The Nernst equation named after him is part of the basic knowledge of every chemist. It describes the concentration dependence of the electrode potential of a redox couple. The third theorem of thermodynamics also goes back to Nernst.

Excellent people so far

2022 - Christine Kranz, University of Ulm

Prof. Dr. Christine Kranz works at the Institute for Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry (IABC) at the University of Ulm. There she heads the surface sciences group, with her research focus on (electrochemical) scanning probe microscopy, miniaturized (bio)sensors for bioanalytical applications and the use of scanning probe microscopy in light-driven photocatalysis and in energy-related research of light-driven photocatalysis.

The titles of her lectures were "Unraveling interfacial processes by scanning (electrochemical) probe microscopy", "Miniaturized electrochemical (bio)sensors: applications from in vitro cell measurements to light-driven catalysis" and "Microscale electrochemistry to study processes at energy relevant materials".

More information about Professor Kranz

2020 - Ernest Beinrohr, Bratislava, Slovakia

Professor Ernest Beinrohr conducts research in the field of device development both at the University of Bratislava and in his own company in Slovakia.

More information on Professor Ernest Beinrohr

Lecturer since 2006

2022

Christine Kranz, University of Ulm

2020

Ernest Beinrohr, Bratislava/Slovakia

2019 Fred Lisdat, Wildau
2015

Jana Roithová, Prague/Czech Republic

2014 Wolfgang Schuhmann, Bochum
2013 Miroslav Fojta, Brno/Czech Republic
2011 Jan Labuda, Bratislava/Slovakia
2010 Frank-Michael Matysik, Regensburg
2008

Jirí Barek, Prague/Czech Republic

2006 Christian Näther, Kiel

Commission of the Heyrovsky - Ilkovic - Nernst Lecture

Prof. Dr. Fred Lisdat, Technical University of Applied Sciences Wildau (lead management)
Prof. Dr. Katja Heinze, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Maison, University of Hamburg
Prof. Dr. Nicole Strittmatter, Technical University of Munich

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last modified: 22.03.2024 15:29 H from Translator