Le Chatelier was born in Paris, the son of the inspector-general
of mines for France. He himself began studying mining engineering,
before becoming professor of chemistry at the School of Mines in
1877. He later became professor of mineral chemistry at the Collège
de France and finally took the chemistry chair at the Sorbonne in
1907.
He was particularly interested in metallurgy, cements, ceramics,
and glass, and his studies of flames led him to study heat and its
measurement.
He made a number of contributions to thermometry, the most
important of which was his first successful design of a platinum and
rhodium thermocouple for measuring high temperatures (1887). This
was based on the principle shown by Thomas Seebeck
in 1826 that if a circuit is made from two different metals and
heated, a current will flow, and that the current is proportional to
the temperature difference between the junctions. It was quickly
appreciated that the Seebeck effect could be used in a variety of
measuring devices; if one junction was placed on the object to be
measured and the other kept at a known constant temperature then the
first temperature could be calculated by measuring the current. By
using platinum and platinum-rhodium alloy rods, Le Chatelier
succeeded where many others had failed.
His most important discovery, Le Chatelier's
principle, was made in 1884. This simply states that any
change made in a system of equilibrium results in a shift of the
equilibrium in the direction that minimizes the change. In his
original 1884 version he referred only to pressure but soon
generalized the principle to cover any kind of external constraint.
Le Chatelier published his principle in 1888 as the Loi de
stabilité de l'equilibre chimique (Law of Stability of Chemical
Equilibrium). The principle is important in studies of chemical
equilibrium for predicting the effects of pressure and temperature
on an equilibrium reaction.
Le Chatelier's principle fitted in well with the law of mass
action recently formulated by Cato Guldberg and Peter Waage and the
new chemical thermodynamics of Josiah Willard Gibbs, whose work Le
Chatelier was responsible for introducing to France. The principle
was soon shown to have industrial implications, for Fritz Haber
successfully utilized it in his process for the production of
ammonia.