The Faculty of Chemistry and Earth Sciences is one of twelve faculties at the University of Heidelberg. It comprises the Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, Institute of Organic Chemistry, Institute of Physical Chemistry, Institute of Geography, Institute of Geology and Paleontology, Institute of Mineralogy, and the Institute of Environmental Geochemistry.
Chemistry was established as a separate discipline at the University of Heidelberg in 1817 with Leopold Gmelin being appointed ordinary professor of chemistry and medicine.[1] 1895 is considered to be the date of foundation of Geography at the University of Heidelberg as it was from this year on that lectures in physical and mathematical geography were held on a regular basis. In 1899 the first professorship in geography was established, filled by Alfred Hettner.[2]
Institute of Inorganic Chemistry
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The first professorship in geography was established in 1899, filled by Alfred Hettner. The earth scientist Bernhard Eitel is currently the rector of the University of Heidelberg.
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Prof. German Müller established the Institute of Environmental Geochemistry in 1993. The main research areas of the institute are:
the rates and mechanisms of chemical weathering of rock-forming minerals, including surface studies of reactions at the mineral-water interface
chemical and isotopic evolution of atmospheric aerosols derived from rock-weathering, and their variation with Holocene climate change
geochemical studies of lake sediments and peat bog archives of these records, including chemical weathering and early diagenesis
physical and chemical processes at mineral-water interfaces such as adsorption, desorption, and redox transformations
the chemical and isotopic evolution of natural waters, including diffusion chamber studies of early diagenetic reactions in sediments
transformation of element species in soils and sediments and natural waters intensity and rates of humification of natural organic matter
natural halogenation and de-halogenation of organic molecules development of hyphenated instrumental techniques (HPLC-AAS, HPLC-ICP-AES, GC-MS) and pyrolytic methods for species analysis