• DE
  • EN
  • “Three alarm clocks often went off in the morning”

    Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus, Senior Professor of Physical Chemistry and GDNÄ board member, talks about her path as a scientist in a male-dominated discipline, careers with children and why combustion research is indispensable.

    Professor Kohse-Höinghaus, we are taking International Women’s Day on 8 March as an opportunity to talk about your recently published autobiography. In it, you describe your path as a woman in a technical field, as the subtitle says. Do you see yourself as a pioneer?
    Yes, definitely. For a long time, there were hardly any women in physical chemistry and especially in research on combustion processes. When I started at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in Stuttgart in 1979 as a newly graduated chemist, I was the only woman scientist there. At first, I was eyed sceptically, but then I was accepted. Later, when I applied for professorships, I learned behind closed doors that they were looking for an established man for the position. And not a young mother with a baby and a husband with his own career, as was the case with me. Fortunately, this changed and women were increasingly recognised in my discipline as well. 

    How did that become noticeable?
    To give an example, condescending behaviour towards female colleagues became increasingly rare. For me personally, there were two events that made me feel I had arrived: in 2007, I was the first woman to be appointed chair of the German Bunsen Society, and in 2012, I was the first woman to be elected president of the Combustion Institute, the leading international professional society, for a four-year term. Both of these achievements have also paved the way for other female scientists. 

    Who is your book aimed at?
    Above all, for young people who are pursuing a career in science. I want to show them, using my example, how winding career paths can be and encourage them to follow their own compass. But in principle, anyone who is interested in the development of science and technology over the last fifty years can benefit from the book. It is richly illustrated and I have tried to write in a way that is easy to understand, entertaining and vivid. That’s another reason why I think the volume would make a good gift or prize for special achievements.

     © from the book “Burning for Science”

    Doctorate in 1978, here with supervisor Professor Friedrich Stuhl.

    You wrote the book in English. Why not in German?
    English is the global language of science today and my academic network is international. I want my colleagues around the world to be able to read the book easily. Young people are familiar with English anyway, so I don’t see any problems there. 

    That wasn’t the case when you were young. And it wasn’t foreseeable back then that you would become a professor of physical chemistry.
    That’s right. I grew up in the Ruhr area in a family of teachers, and my parents weren’t thrilled when I wanted to study chemistry. Would you even be able to find a husband with a degree like that? Today it’s hard to imagine, but back then people worried about things like that. It wasn’t easy for me at university either. I came from a grammar school that specialised in modern languages, had deficits in maths and physics and had to catch up on a lot during the first semesters at the University of Bochum. I often set three alarm clocks to make sure I didn’t miss a course. It was exhausting, but also a good time with a lot of freedom. 

    Can you give us an example?
    The first thing that comes to mind is how I built a laser at the end of the 1970s that was important for my doctorate in atmospheric chemistry. A lot was happening in this field of research in the 1970s and there was a great deal of public interest in it. The background to this was the increasing air pollution, especially in the Ruhr area. For my laser, I had to delve deeply into physics, which I really enjoyed. My doctoral supervisor Friedrich Stuhl spent a research semester in the US during that time. When he came back, I was able to hand him my completed dissertation. 

    Now the big wide world of science was open to you. Which stations were decisive for you?
    I got my first permanent position in 1979 at the DLR in Stuttgart. I had already said goodbye to atmospheric chemistry – now I wanted to find out where air pollution actually came from and what could be done about it. So, scientifically, I had switched to combustion research and at the DLR I was able to examine such high-temperature processes in detail using laser spectroscopy.

    © from the book “Burning for Science”

    Farewell poster of the Stuttgart working group 1994.

    A permanent research position at the age of 27 – that’s what many young researchers dream of today.
    I was also very happy to receive the offer from Stuttgart back then. I had good working conditions, great colleagues and a secure income there, but after a while I needed new challenges. In 1987, I then moved to California with my husband Klaus for a good year to do research at Stanford. There I learned a lot about mechanical engineering and molecular spectroscopy, and both opened up new horizons for me in combustion research. During this time, I made many new friends who are still important parts of my professional network today. 

    Many young female scientists are not accompanied by their partners on a year abroad, but the opposite is often the case. How come your husband travelled with you?
    We had already had a long-distance relationship for a few years and didn’t want to repeat that. So my husband, who is a doctor, took unpaid leave from a clinic in Stuttgart and applied for and received a scholarship. We were both kept very busy and in 1988 we returned to our institutes in Stuttgart full of fresh ideas and energy. 

    Two years later, in the summer of 1990, your daughter was born. At that time, there was neither a parental allowance nor the right to a day care place. How did the dual-career couple Kohse-Höinghaus fare during this phase?
    It was a period of upheaval in every respect. I was aiming for a professorship at a university so that I could pursue my own research interests and work more with young people. My husband was looking for a leading position in a clinic, which he eventually found in Oldenburg. In 1992, parallel to my work as a group leader at the DLR, I was able to habilitate at the University of Stuttgart, as the first woman in the faculty. It was a turbulent time, which Klaus and I survived thanks to our solidarity, with moral support from relatives and friends, as well as private childcare and a housekeeper. Since then, Oldenburg has been the centre of our lives. From there, I regularly commuted to the University of Bielefeld, where I had been appointed to the Chair of Physical Chemistry in 1994. My husband and I shared the family work, and our daughter was well looked after. Nevertheless, some people couldn’t stop calling me a bad mother. 

    Do you see yourself as a role model for young women today who want to combine research and family? 
    Yes and no. Today, there is more state support for young families. The climate in terms of equal opportunities has also changed significantly in research funding and appointments. Many universities and research institutions make it easier to combine two careers and a family with dual-career strategies. However, it is still a balancing act that requires a great deal of commitment. In an experimental subject like chemistry, it can help to avoid laboratory-intensive periods when you are pregnant. And it is not only when the children are small that you need a lot of support and preparation for any eventuality – but that applies equally to other professions. However, especially in an international context, I realise that many young women today still face similar difficulties to those I faced more than 30 years ago.

    © from the book “Burning for Science”

    The measurement is running: Combustion research at the French synchrotron SOLEIL near Paris.

    Today you mentor young people. Did you have something like that in your career?
    No, and I missed that very much. That’s why I always tried to support younger generations with advice and practical help. As a senior professor, I still maintain contact with more than a hundred scientists who have worked with me. The teutolab is another example of mentoring in the broader sense. I founded the Bielefeld-based hands-on laboratory as one of the very first such extracurricular learning centres to inspire children and young people to take an interest in the natural sciences. The corresponding federal association, which we helped to establish in Bielefeld, is now 20 years old, and this year we are celebrating the 25th anniversary of the teutolab. 

    You are still active as a senior professor. How can we picture your activities?
    I sit at my desk a lot and I travel a lot. At my desk, I work on lectures, professional articles or scientific statements for academies and scientific organisations. In the last two years, I have been intensively involved in working on my autobiography. As a scientist with an extensive network and long-standing connections abroad, I am often on the road, for example in China. I think it is very important to maintain contacts there despite political tensions, especially with young scientists. Without China, there is no solution to some of the global problems of our time – we have to work together. 

    One of these problems is climate change, which is largely due to the combustion of fossil fuels. Has this not made you doubt your field of expertise?
    Absolutely not. We have to give up burning fossil fuels, but not combustion research. This is because it provides the scientific basis we need to develop climate-neutral fuels for industry and transport. Combustion research also provides us with the tools to better fight major fires, whether in the wild or in cities. With my research, I have been able to contribute to our understanding of the complex chemical reactions that take place in high-temperature processes and to identify ways to avoid pollutants. And that makes me feel good.

    Saarbrücken 2018 © Robertus Koppies

    © Universität Bielefeld / Norma Langohr

    Prof. Dr. Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus.

    The book

    Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus: Burning for Science – A Woman in a Technical Field, GNT Publishing GmbH, Berlin 2025

    The book series

    The autobiographical series “Lives in Chemistry – Lebenswerke in der Chemie” provides insights into the life and thought of outstanding researchers in the mirror of time. In it, successful chemists describe authentically and personally how new ideas are created in the natural sciences. The series is published by the advisory board of the Division of the History of Chemistry of the German Chemical Society.

    The autobiography of another scientific pioneer, chemist Sigrid Peyerimhoff, will be published in this series on 8 March 2025: “Ab initio – A Life for Quantum Chemistry”, GNT Publishing GmbH, Berlin 2025. In 2018, Professor Peyerimhoff received the Alexander von Humboldt Medal for her outstanding contribution to the further development of the GDNÄ.

    © from the book “Burning for Science”

    Habilitation in 1992, expected by husband and daughter.

    About the person

    Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus is a senior professor of physical chemistry at the University of Bielefeld. The 73-year-old scientist is internationally known for her diagnostics of combustion processes using laser spectroscopy and mass spectrometry.

    From 1994 to 2017, she held a chair of physical chemistry at the University of Bielefeld. Prior to that, Kohse-Höinghaus conducted research at various institutions in Germany and abroad. In 1992, she habilitated on a topic in energy technology at the University of Stuttgart.

    At the initiative of Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus, one of the first German hands-on laboratories, teutolab, was founded in 2000. There are now satellite laboratories in the Bielefeld region, in other European countries and in Asia.

    The internationally renowned scientist is a member of several academies, including the Leopoldina and acatech, as well as numerous committees and scientific institutions in Germany and abroad. She has received many awards, including the Federal Cross of Merit on Ribbon, as well as honorary and guest professorships in several countries. In 2007, she was the first woman to be elected president of the German Bunsen Society, and Katharina Kohse-Höinghaus was the first European woman to be president of the International Combustion Institute, serving from 2012 to 2016. She has been a member of the GDNÄ for many years and is one of the people who help shape the scientific conference programmes in the field of engineering sciences.

    Read more:

    © Andreas Brockhinke

    Professor Kohse-Höinghaus in her Bielefeld office in 2011.