Jan Hendrik de Boer

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Jan Hendrik de Boer (19 March 1899 – 25 April 1971) was a Dutch physicist and chemist.

De Boer was born in Ruinen, De Wolden, and died in The Hague.[1] He studied at the University of Groningen and was later employed in industry.

Together with Anton Eduard van Arkel, de Boer developed a chemical transport reaction for titanium, zirconium, and hafnium known as the crystal bar process. In a closed vessel the metal reacts with iodine at elevated temperature forming the iodide. At a tungsten filament of 1700 °C the reverse reaction occurs, and the iodine and the metal are set free. The metal forms a solid coating at the tungsten filament and the iodine can react with additional metal, resulting in a steady turnover.[2]

M + 2I2 (>400 °C) → MI4
MI4 (1700 °C) → M + 2I2

This process is now known as Van Arkel–de Boer process.

However, in 1937 De Boer and Evert Verwey reported that many transition-metal oxides (such as NiO) with a partially filled d-band were poor conductors, often insulating. This led to the concept of metal–insulator transition.[3]

In 1940, De Boer became a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, and foreign member in 1947.[4]

References

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