Strassmann, Fritz
born Feb. 22, 1902, Boppard, Ger.
died April 22, 1980, Mainz,
W.Ger.
German
physical chemist who, with Otto Hahn, discovered neutron-induced nuclear
fission in uranium (1938) and thereby opened the field of atomic energy.
Strassmann received his Ph.D.
from the Technical University in Hannover in 1929. He
helped develop the rubidium-strontium method of dating widely used in geochronology.Beginning in 1934 he joined Hahn and Lise Meitner in their
investigations of the radioactive products formed when uranium is bombarded by
neutrons. Strassmann's mastery of analytic chemistry
contributed to the team's recognition of the lighter elements produced from
neutron bombardment, which were the result of the
splitting ofthe uranium atom into two lighter atoms.
After serving briefly
on the staffs of the Hannover and Kaiser Wilhelm
institutes (destroyed in 1944), Strassmann in 1946
became professor of inorganic and nuclear chemistry at the University of Mainz,
where he established the Institute of Inorganic Chemistry (later the Institute
of Nuclear Chemistry). From 1945 to 1953 he was director of the chemistry
department at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry.