Some geologists and scholars think that the famous Greek
Oracle of Delphi (the
Pythia) went into her trance-like state as an effect of ethylene rising from ground faults. Ethylene appears to have been discovered by
Johann Joachim Becher, who obtained it by heating
ethanol with sulfuric acid; he mentioned the gas in his
Physica Subterranea (1669).
Joseph Priestley also mentions the gas in his
Experiments and observations relating to the various branches of natural philosophy: with a continuation of the observations on air (1779), where he reports that
Jan Ingenhousz saw ethylene synthesized in the same way by a Mr. Enée in Amsterdam in 1777 and that Ingenhousz subsequently produced the gas himself. The properties of ethylene were studied in 1795 by four
Dutch chemists, Johann Rudolph Deimann, Adrien Paets van Troostwyck, Anthoni Lauwerenburgh and Nicolas Bondt, who found that it differed from
hydrogen gas and that it contained both carbon and hydrogen. This group also discovered that ethylene could be combined with
chlorine to produce the
Dutch oil,
1,2-dichloroethane; this discovery gave ethylene the name used for it at that time,
olefiant gas (oil-making gas.) The term olefiant gas is in turn the etymological origin of the modern word "olefin", the class of hydrocarbons in which ethylene is the first member. In the mid-19th century, the suffix
-ene (an Ancient Greek root added to the end of female names meaning "daughter of") was widely used to refer to a molecule or part thereof that contained one fewer hydrogen atoms than the molecule being modified. Thus,
ethylene () was the "daughter of
ethyl" ().. The name ethylene was used in this sense as early as 1852. In 1866, the
German chemist
August Wilhelm von Hofmann proposed a system of hydrocarbon nomenclature in which the suffixes -ane, -ene, -ine, -one, and -une were used to denote the hydrocarbons with 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 fewer hydrogens than their parent
alkane. In this system, ethylene became
ethene. Hofmann's system eventually became the basis for the Geneva nomenclature approved by the International Congress of Chemists in 1892, which remains at the core of the
IUPAC nomenclature. However, by that time, the name ethylene was deeply entrenched, and it remains in wide use today, especially in the chemical industry. Following experimentation by Luckhardt, Crocker, and Carter at the University of Chicago, ethylene was used as an anesthetic. It remained in use through the 1940s, even while chloroform was being phased out. Its pungent odor and its explosive nature limit its use today.
Nomenclature The 1979 IUPAC nomenclature rules made an exception for retaining the non-systematic name
ethylene; however, this decision was reversed in the 1993 rules, and it remains unchanged in the newest 2013 recommendations, so the IUPAC name is now
ethene. In the IUPAC system, the name
ethylene is reserved for the
divalent group -CH2CH2-. Hence, names like
ethylene oxide and
ethylene dibromide are permitted, but the use of the name
ethylene for the two-carbon alkene is not. Nevertheless, use of the name
ethylene for H2C=CH2 (and propylene for H2C=CHCH3) is still prevalent among chemists in North America. ==Safety==