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The action of enzymes fascinated mankind long before they were rec
ognized for the complex chemicals that they are. The first
application of these remarkable compounds to produce ethanol by
fermentation is lost to antiquity. Payer and Persoz (Ann. Chim.
Phys., 53, 73 (1833ii)) appear to have provided the first step
toward understanding this com plex area when they reported the
isolation of diastase in 1833. These workers showed that diastase
could catalyze the hydrolysis of starches to sugars. Somewhat
earlier Kirchhoff (Schwigger's Journal, 4, 108 (1812)) had shown
that a small amount of dilute acid could hydrolyze a seemingly
endless amount of starch to sugars. The genius of Berzelius
recognized the commonality of these two observations in connection
with a few other isolated observations and in 1834 coined the term
catalysis to describe such actions. Professor Leibig was one of the
giants of the chemical world in 1840. In addition to his own work,
Liebig was training the world's next generation of chemists in his
laboratory in Giessen. This cadre of chemists were very impressed
by the master teacher so that is it only natural that Liebig's
views should dominate with this next generation of chemists. Leibig
was, in the 1830s and 1840s, developing his mastery of agricultural
chemistry. The mechanism of putrefication was of great concern to
Leibig, and he turned to the newly defined area of catalysis for an
explanation."
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