Talk:Carl Josef Bayer

Untitled
Adding sections about personal life, work before Bayer, and Bayer's work. Labzq3 (talk) 21:56, 12 April 2019 (UTC)

Added some information about personal life and education. Have the sources but am having difficulties adding them onto the page. Will fix once the method is figured out. "Life and Education Carl Bayer was born (March 4, 1847) in what is currently Poland, but at the time of birth a province in the Austrian Empire known as Silesia.[4] He attended Heidelberg university in Germany where he studied chemistry under Robert Bunsen from 1869-1871, the namesake of the Bunsen burner. At Heidelberg, Bayer received his doctorate degree with a dissertation on the recently discovered metal of indium in 1871.[4] After obtaining his doctorate, Bayer lectured for two years at Technische Hochschule in Bmo, and then left to establish his own research and consulting company." Labzq3 (talk) 16:51, 8 March 2019 (UTC)

Acording to to the source given in the German Article Friedrich Bayer is not the father of Carl Josef (written with C in the Artikel, but K in the source). Bayer ist a comman name in Germany and Austria, at this time different spelling of names especially the K/C is not uncommaon.--Hagen Graebner (talk) 22:05, 6 October 2010 (UTC)

Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment
This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 23 January 2019 and 10 May 2019. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Labzq3, Jcr9r2. Peer reviewers: Swinkleman, RandyGreeves.

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Purposed Edits
Bayer had been working in Saint Petersburg at the Tentelev chemical plant to develop a method to provide alumina to the textile industry that used it as a fixing agent in the dyeing of cotton. In 1887, he discovered that alumina found in bauxite ore can be selectively dissolved when reacted in an autoclave with sodium hydroxide. The formed aluminium hydroxide can be precipitated from the alkaline solution when enoculated with alumina hydrate. This can be filtered and washed more easily to produce crystalline alumina than that precipitated from an acid medium by neutralization. Jcr9r2 (talk) 19:53, 8 March 2019 (UTC)