Agnes Pockels

Agnes Luise Wilhelmine Pockels (14 February 1862 21 November 1935) was a German chemist whose research was fundamental in establishing the modern discipline known as surface science, which describes the properties of liquid and solid surfaces and interfaces.

Agnes Pockels
Born(1862-02-14)14 February 1862
Died21 November 1935(1935-11-21) (aged 73)
Brunswick, Nazi Germany
NationalityGerman
Known forPioneer of surface science
AwardsLaura Leonard Award
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry/Physics

Pockels became interested in fundamental research in surface science through observations of soaps and soapy water in her own home while washing dishes. She devised a surface film balance technique to study the behavior of molecules such as soaps and surfactants at air-liquid interfaces. From these studies, Pockels defined the "Pockels Point" which is the minimum area that a single molecule can occupy in monomolecular films.

Pockels was an autodidact. She was not a paid, professional scientist and had no institutional affiliation and so is an example of a citizen scientist.

By contrast, her brother Friedrich Carl Alwin Pockels, for whom the Pockels effect was named, was a professor of theoretical physics at the University of Heidelberg.

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