In chemistry, he contributed to knowledge on: • the double decomposition of salts (1811) •
nitrous acid (1815) • the
oxides of
phosphorus (1816) • the oxides of
nitrogen •
catalysis by metals (1823, with Thénard). Dulong also discovered the dangerously sensitive
nitrogen trichloride in 1811, losing three fingers and an eye in the process. The fact that Dulong kept the accident a secret meant that
Humphry Davy's investigation of the compound had the same unfortunate consequence, although Davy's injuries were less severe. In addition to his accomplishments in chemistry, Dulong has been hailed as an interdisciplinary expert. His contemporaries in the
Royal Society of London acknowledged his "command of almost every department of physical science". In 1815, Dulong collaborated for the first time with
Alexis Thérèse Petit, in publishing a paper on heat expansion. The two would continue to collaborate, researching the specific heats of metals. In 1819, Dulong and Petit showed that the mass heat capacity of
metallic
elements are inversely proportional to their
atomic masses, this being now known as the
Dulong–Petit law. For this discovery Dulong was honored by the
French Academy in 1818. This law helped develop the periodic table and, more broadly, the examination of atomic masses. He made the first precise comparison of the mercury- and air-temperature scales. In 1830, he was elected a foreign member of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. He died of stomach cancer in
Paris. At the time of his death, he was working on the development of precise methods in
calorimetry. His last paper, published the year of his death, examined the heat released from chemical reactions. == Personality ==