Robert Boyle (1627-1691), Anglo-Irish chemist who established chemistry as a separate science. His work stressed the need for experiment, precision an


Robert Boyle (1627-1691), Anglo-Irish chemist who established chemistry as a separate science. His work stressed the need for experiment, precision and accurate observation. Boyle rejected the theory that four elements (fire, air, water and earth) were the basic constituents of the Universe. He formulated Boyle's law, which states that for a gas at a constant temperature the product of its pressure and volume is a constant. He also devised analytical tests, including the use of vegetable dyes as acid-base indicators and flame tests for metals. The Skeptical Chymist (1661) was his major work. Engraving from Vies des Savants Illustres (1876).


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