Prof. Adolf Gogoll has examined Alfred Nobel's chemistry bottles

2021-03-04

What did Alfred Nobel actually keep in his glass bottles? Prof. Adolf Gogoll, within the Organic Chemistry research programme at the Department of Chemistry - BMC, has helped the Nobel Prize Museum and the Swedish National Heritage Board to analyze the contents of 43 old chemical bottles that come from Alfred Nobel's laboratories. 

Sara Norrehed, Swedish National Heritage Board, Prof. Adolf Gogoll, Department of Chemistry - BMC and Margrit Wettstein, Nobel Prize Museum.
Sara Norrehed, Swedish National Heritage Board, Prof. Adolf Gogoll, Department of Chemistry - BMC and Margrit Wettstein, Nobel Prize Museum. Photo: Dan Lepp

The bottles, with previously unknown contents, are part of equipment from Alfred Nobel's laboratories that were shipped to Stockholm after his death in 1896, and have in recent years been stored at the Nobel Museum in Karlskoga.

Alfred Nobel's chemistry bottles
Photo: Dan Lepp

The analyzes are now completed and what was found were different kinds of mixtures and traces of chemical reactions, heavy metals, such as lead and chromium, as well as substances used in dynamite production. 

Prof. Adolf Gogoll
Photo: Dan Lepp

The Swedish National Heritage Board and the Nobel Prize Museum turned to Uppsala University for help in analyzing the contents of the bottles, in order to ensure safe storage and exhibition of the bottles. The work has been going on since the spring of 2020 and a final report will be presented in 2021. 

More information

Addendum (March 15):

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Prof. Adolf Gogoll has examined Alfred Nobel's chemistry bottles

2021-03-04

What did Alfred Nobel actually keep in his glass bottles? Prof. Adolf Gogoll, within the Organic Chemistry research programme at the Department of Chemistry - BMC, has helped the Nobel Prize Museum and the Swedish National Heritage Board to analyze the contents of 43 old chemical bottles that come from Alfred Nobel's laboratories. 

Sara Norrehed, Swedish National Heritage Board, Prof. Adolf Gogoll, Department of Chemistry - BMC and Margrit Wettstein, Nobel Prize Museum.
Sara Norrehed, Swedish National Heritage Board, Prof. Adolf Gogoll, Department of Chemistry - BMC and Margrit Wettstein, Nobel Prize Museum. Photo: Dan Lepp

The bottles, with previously unknown contents, are part of equipment from Alfred Nobel's laboratories that were shipped to Stockholm after his death in 1896, and have in recent years been stored at the Nobel Museum in Karlskoga.

Alfred Nobel's chemistry bottles
Photo: Dan Lepp

The analyzes are now completed and what was found were different kinds of mixtures and traces of chemical reactions, heavy metals, such as lead and chromium, as well as substances used in dynamite production. 

Prof. Adolf Gogoll
Photo: Dan Lepp

The Swedish National Heritage Board and the Nobel Prize Museum turned to Uppsala University for help in analyzing the contents of the bottles, in order to ensure safe storage and exhibition of the bottles. The work has been going on since the spring of 2020 and a final report will be presented in 2021. 

More information

Addendum (March 15):