Katharina Boll-Dornberger
Katharina Boll-Dornberger (2 November 1909 – 27 July 1981), also known as Käte Dornberger-Schiff, was an Austrian-German physicist and crystallographer.[1][2] She is known for her work on order-disorder structures.[1][3][4][5]
Life[]
Katharina Boll-Dornberger was born in Vienna in 1909 as the daughter of the university professor Walter Karl and Alice Friederike Schiff.[6] She studied physics and mathematics in Vienna and Göttingen.[7] She wrote her dissertation under supervision of V. M. Goldschmidt on the crystal structure of water-free zinc sulfate in Göttingen and handed it in in Vienna in 1934.[7][8] In 1937 she emigrated to England.[7] In England, she worked with John D. Bernal, Nevill F. Mott, and Dorothy Hodgkin.[6] She married Paul Dornberger in 1939.[6] Her sons were born in 1943 and 1946.[6] In 1946, she and her family returned to Germany. At first, she worked as a lecturer for physics and mathematics at the Hochschule für Baukunst in Weimar. Then, she moved to East Berlin. Starting in 1948, she was the head of a department at the Institut für Biophysik at the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin.[7] In 1952, she married Ludwig Boll.[6] In 1956, she became a professor at the Humboldt University.[6] In 1958, the Institut für Strukturforschung was created and she was head of the institute until 1968.[6] She died in 1981 in Berlin.[6]
Research[]
Her research focused on the crystallographic investigation of order-disorder structures.[1] She introduced groupoids to crystallography to describe disordered structures.[1] Roughly 2/3 of her 60 publications focused on order-disorder.[1] The other publications dealt with structure determination of organic and inorganic crystals, methods development in single-crystal diffraction, and the development of equipment for this purpose.[1]
Awards[]
For her work in crystallography, she was awarded two national awards by the German Democratic Republic:
- Patriotic Order of Merit in 1959[9][8]
- National Prize of the German Democratic Republic in 1960[10][8]
A street in Berlin is named after her.[8]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Steinike, U. (2002). "KATHARINA BOLL-DORNBERGER GEB. SCHIFF" (PDF). Mittelungen der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Kristallographie. 24: 62–75.
- ^ "Boll-Dornberger, Katharina". 12 December 2018.
- ^ Neels, H. (1979). "Laudatio Professor Käte Boll‐Dornberger". Krist. Techn. 14 (9): 1025–1026. doi:10.1002/crat.19790140902.
- ^ Dornberger-Schiff, K. (1964). Grundzüge einer Theorie der OD-Strukturen aus Schichten. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag.
- ^ Dornberger-Schiff, K. (1956). "On order-disorder structures (OD-structures)". Acta Crystallogr. 9 (7): 593–601. doi:10.1107/S0365110X56001625.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Biography Humboldt University. Retrieved in October 2018.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Exhibition Humbold University Retrieved in October 2018.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Neumann, Wolfgang; Benz, Klaus-Werner (2018). Kristalle verändern unsere Welt : Struktur - Eigenschaften - Anwendungen. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 253. ISBN 9783110439076. OCLC 1037980301.
- ^ "Hohe Auszeichnungen verliehen". Berliner Zeitung. 12 November 1959. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- ^ "Mit Nationalpreis 1960 geehrt". Neues Deutschland. 7 October 1960. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- 1981 deaths
- 1909 births
- Recipients of the National Prize of East Germany
- Recipients of the Patriotic Order of Merit
- Scientists from Vienna
- Humboldt University of Berlin faculty
- German women physicists
- 20th-century German physicists
- Crystallographers