Industry laboratories supplied theoretical concepts as well as industrial processes. The concept of pH was introduced in 1909 by the Danish chemist Søren Sørensen (18681939) as a convenient way of expressing aciditythe negative logarithm of hydrogen ion concentration.
Søren Sørensen visting Cornell University in 1924.
Courtesy Edgar Fahs Smith Memorial Collection, Department of Special Collections, University of Pennsylvania Library.
A Ph.D. from the University of Copenhagen, Sørensen was the director of the chemical department of the Carlsberg Laboratory, which was supported by the beer company of the same namebrewing being one of the oldest chemical industries. At the time, he was working on the effect of ion concentration in the analysis of proteins. Sørensen subsequently became a leader in the application of thermodynamics to proteins chemistry, and in this work he was assisted by his wife, Margrethe Høyrup Sørensen.
The context for the introduction of pH was the slow changeover from the old color-change tests for indicating the degree of acidity or basicity to electrical methods. In the latter, the current generated in an electrochemical cell by ions migrating to oppositely charged electrodes was measured, using a highly sensitive (and delicate) galvanometer. Until Sørensen developed the pH scale, there was no widely accepted way of expressing hydrogen ion concentrations.

