Innovators, deep fermentation and antibiotics: promoting applied science before and after the Second World War
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Bud, RobertEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Materia
Penicillin Organic acids Konrad Bernhauer Know-how Applied science Penicilina Ácidos orgánicos Saber-hacer Ciencia aplicada
Fecha
2011Referencia bibliográfica
Bud, Robert. «Innovators, deep fermentation and antibiotics : promoting applied science before and after the Second World War». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 2011, Vol. 31, Núm. 2, p. 323-341, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/253033.
Resumen
The historiography of penicillin has tended to overlook the importance of developing
and disseminating know-how in fermentation technology. A focus on this directs attention
to work before the war of a network in the US and Europe concerned with the production
of organic acids, particularly gluconic and citric acids. At the heart of this network was the
German-Czech Konrad Bernhauer. Other members of the network were a group of chemists at
the US Department of Agriculture who first recognized the production possibilities of penicillin.
The Pfizer Corporation, which had recruited a leading Department of Agriculture scientist at
the end of the First World War, was also an important centre of development as well as of
production. However, in wartime Bernhauer was an active member of the SS and his work
was not commemorated after his death in 1975. After the war new processes of fermentation
were disseminated by penicillin pioneers such as Jackson Foster and Ernst Chain. Because of
its commercial context his work was not well known. The conclusion of this paper is that the
commercial context, on the one hand, and the Nazi associations of Bernhauer, on the other,
have submerged the significance of know-how development in the history of penicillin.