Gottlieb Kirchhoff


Gottlieb Sigismund Constantin Kirchhoff was a Russian chemist of German origin. In 1792–1802, Assistant Director and then Director of the Head Pharmacy at Saint Petersburg. Corresponding member and since 1812 Full member of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences. In 1811, he became the first person to convert starch into a sugar, by heating it with sulfuric acid in acid-catalyzed reaction. This sugar was eventually named glucose. He also developed a method of refining vegetable oil, and established a factory that prepared two tons of refined oil a day.
Since the sulfuric acid was not consumed, it was the first documented example of catalysis in organic chemistry.