This type of condenser is named after the German chemist
Justus von Liebig, even though he only perfected and popularized it. The earliest water-cooled laboratory condenser was invented in 1771 by the
Swedish-
German chemist
Christian Weigel (1748–1831). Weigel's condenser consisted of two coaxial
tin tubes, which were joined at their lower ends, forming a water jacket, and open at their upper ends. Cold water entered the jacket via an inlet at the bottom and spilled out of the jacket's open upper end. A glass tube carrying vapors from a distillation flask passed through the inner tin tube. Weigel subsequently replaced the inner tin tube with a glass tube, and he devised a clamp to hold the condenser. However, an anonymous pamphlet published in 1781 claimed that a countercurrent condenser had been conceived in 1770 and tested in 1773. Illustrations in the pamphlet show a retort to which a tube was fitted. The tube carried the retort's vapors through a rectangular box, which acted as a condenser and in which cold water flowed from the condenser's lower end to its upper end—a counter-current condenser. In 1794, the German
pharmacist Johann Friedrich August Göttling (1753–1809), who was a former student of Weigel, improved the design by sealing both ends of the water jacket. In 1778, in what seems to be an independent invention,
Finnish pharmacist
Jakob Gadolin (1719–1802) proposed condensers for use in distilleries and in laboratories, consisted of a metal jacket which surrounded the discharge tube from a distillation vessel and through which a countercurrent of cold water flowed. Also independently of Weigel,
Pierre-Isaac Poissonnier (1720–1798), a physician to the king
Louis XV of France, published in 1779 a design of a still for producing freshwater from seawater aboard a ship. The apparatus consisted of a retort for boiling the seawater, a tube extending from the retort through a rectangular box filled with flowing cold water, fed by a separate tank. Liebig himself incorrectly attributed the design to Göttling. ==Design==