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World War II

During World War II chemists contributed to the Allied effort by developing and producing antibacterials (sulfa drugs, penicillin), antimalarials, and synthetic buna-S (GR-S) rubber. They contributed to the purification of uranium 235 and plutonium 239 as well as the development of conventional explosives needed for the Manhattan Project. [Pg.168]

American prisoner of war (POW), was in Dresden and survived the firebombing of the city as he hid deep in the cellar of a slaughterhouse. In his 1963 novel Cat s Cradle, Vonnegut ruminates over the evil that may emerge firom the noble intentions of technology. His 1968 novel Slaughterhouse Five was, in a sense, a catharsis for his Dresden experience. [Pg.169]


Seitz F 1995 Research on silicon and germanium in World War II Phys. Today January, p 22... [Pg.2896]

Titanium is not a rare element it is the most abundant transition metal after iron, and is widely distributed in the earth s surface, mainly as the dioxide TiOj and ilmenite FeTi03. It has become of commercial importance since World War II mainly because of its high strength-weight ratio (use in aircraft, especially supersonic), its... [Pg.369]

Zemplen was a strong-minded individualist who opposed any totalitarian system, from Nazism to Communism. He was briefly jailed toward the end of World War II by the Hungarian Fascists for refusing to join in the evacuation of the Technical University to Germany when the Russian armies advanced on Budapest. He was also strongly opposed to the Communists. [Pg.53]

Synthetic oil is feasible and can be produced from coal or natural gas via synthesis gas (a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen obtained from incomplete combustion of coal or natural gas). However, these are themselves nonrenewable resources. Coal conversion was used in Germany during World War II by hydrogenation or. [Pg.209]

After World War II the International Union of Chemistry became the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (known in the chemical com munity as the lUPAC) Since 1949 the lUPAC has is sued reports on chemical nomenclature on a regular basis The most recent lUPAC rules for organic chem istry were published in 1993 The lUPAC rules often offer several different ways to name a single com pound Thus although it is true that no two com... [Pg.78]

Poly(vinyl pyrrolidone). Another commercial polymer with significant usage is PVP (7). It was developed ia World War II as a plasma substitute for blood... [Pg.317]

Ma.nufa.cture. AU. manufacturers of butynediol use formaldehyde ethynylation processes. The earliest entrant was BASF, which, as successor to I. G. Farben, continued operations at Ludwigshafen, FRG, after World War II. Later BASF also set up a U.S. plant at Geismar, La. The first company to manufacture in the United States was GAF in 1956 at Calvert City, Ky., and later at Texas City, Tex., and Seadrift, Tex. The most recent U.S. manufacturer is Du Pont, which went on stream at La Porte, Tex., about 1969. Joint ventures of GAF and Hbls in Mad, Germany, and of Du Pont and Idemitsu in Chiba, Japan, are the newest producers. [Pg.106]

Ma.nufa.cture. Butyrolactone is manufactured by dehydrogenation of butanediol. The butyrolactone plant and process in Germany, as described after World War II (179), approximates the processes presendy used. The dehydrogenation was carried out with preheated butanediol vapor in a hydrogen carrier over a supported copper catalyst at 230—250°C. The yield of butyrolactone after purification by distillation was about 90%. [Pg.111]

A Vinyl-2-pyrrolidinone. l-Ethenyl-2-pyrrohdinone [88-12-0] C H NO, A/-vinylpyrrohdinone, was developed by Reppe s laboratory in Germany at the beginning of World War II and patented in 1940 (215). [Pg.114]

German vinyl ether plants were described in detail at the end of World War II and variations of these processes are stiU in use. Vinylation of alcohols from methyl to butyl was carried out under pressure typically 2—2.3 MPa (20—22 atm) and 160—165°C for methyl, and 0.4—0.5 MPa (4—5 atm) and 150—155°C for isobutyl. An unpacked tower, operating continuously, produced about 300 t/month, with yields of 90—95% (247). [Pg.116]

Acrylonitrile (AN), C H N, first became an important polymeric building block in the 1940s. Although it had been discovered in 1893 (1), its unique properties were not realized until the development of nitrile mbbers during World War II (see Elastomers, synthetic, nitrile rubber) and the discovery of solvents for the homopolymer with resultant fiber appHcations (see Fibers, acrylic) for textiles and carbon fibers. As a comonomer, acrylonitrile (qv) contributes hardness, rigidity, solvent and light resistance, gas impermeabiUty, and the abiUty to orient. These properties have led to many copolymer apphcation developments since 1950. [Pg.191]

The first reported synthesis of acrylonitrile [107-13-1] (qv) and polyacrylonitrile [25014-41-9] (PAN) was in 1894. The polymer received Htde attention for a number of years, until shortly before World War II, because there were no known solvents and the polymer decomposes before reaching its melting point. The first breakthrough in developing solvents for PAN occurred at I. G. Farbenindustrie where fibers made from the polymer were dissolved in aqueous solutions of quaternary ammonium compounds, such as ben2ylpyridinium chloride, or of metal salts, such as lithium bromide, sodium thiocyanate, and aluminum perchlorate. Early interest in acrylonitrile polymers (qv), however, was based primarily on its use in synthetic mbber (see Elastomers, synthetic). [Pg.274]

Commencing in the late 1930s, new developments to make very strong yams allowed the viscose rayon to replace cotton as the fiber of choice for longer life pneumatic tires. The pace of this line of development increased during World War II, and by the 1960s a significant part of the production of viscose yam was for tires and industrial appHcations. [Pg.345]

From 1910 onward waste filament yam had been chopped into short lengths suitable for use on the machinery designed to process cotton and wool staples into spun yams. In the 1930s new plants were built specifically to supply the staple fiber markets. During World War II the production of staple matched that of filament, and by 1950, staple viscose was the most important product. The new spun-yam oudets spawned a series of viscose developments aimed at matching the characteristics of wool and cotton more closely. Viscose rayon was, after all, silk-like. Compared with wool it lacked bulk, residence, and abrasion resistance. Compared to cotton, it was weaker, tended to shrink and crease more easily, and had a rather lean, limp hand. [Pg.345]

A significant advance in flame retardancy was the introduction of binary systems based on the use of halogenated organics and metal salts (6,7). In particular, a 1942 patent (7) described a finish for utilizing chlorinated paraffins and antimony(III) oxide [1309-64-4]. This type of finish was invaluable in World War II, and saw considerable use on outdoor cotton fabrics in both uniforms and tents. [Pg.485]

U.S. chlorine trifluoride production is several metric tons per year. Most of the product is used in nuclear fuel processing. A large production plant for chlorine trifluoride was operated in Germany during World War II with a reported capacity of 5 t/d (106,107). As of 1993, Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. was the only U.S. producer. The 1992 price was ca 100/kg. [Pg.187]

The discovery of PTFE (1) in 1938 opened the commercial field of perfluoropolymers. Initial production of PTFE was directed toward the World War II effort, and commercial production was delayed by Du Pont until 1947. Commercial PTFE is manufactured by two different polymerization techniques that result in two different types of chemically identical polymer. Suspension polymerization produces a granular resin, and emulsion polymerization produces the coagulated dispersion that is often referred to as a fine powder or PTFE dispersion. [Pg.348]

Historically, formaldehyde has been and continues to be manufactured from methanol. EoUowing World War II, however, as much as 20% of the formaldehyde produced in the United States was made by the vapor-phase, noncatalytic oxidation of propane and butanes (72). This nonselective oxidation process produces a broad spectmm of coproducts (73) which requites a complex cosdy separation system (74). Hence, the methanol process is preferred. The methanol raw material is normally produced from synthesis gas that is produced from methane. [Pg.493]

A method for the fractionation of plasma, allowing albumin, y-globulin, and fibrinogen to become available for clinical use, was developed during World War II (see also Fractionation, blood-plasma fractionation). A stainless steel blood cell separation bowl, developed in the early 1950s, was the earhest blood cell separator. A disposable polycarbonate version of the separation device, now known as the Haemonetics Latham bowl for its inventor, was first used to collect platelets from a blood donor in 1971. Another cell separation rotor was developed to faciUtate white cell collections. This donut-shaped rotor has evolved to the advanced separation chamber of the COBE Spectra apheresis machine. [Pg.519]

The development of freeze-drying for the production of blood derivatives was pioneered during World War II (96,97). It is used for the stabilization of coagulation factor (98,99) and intravenous immunoglobulin (IgG iv) products, and also for the removal of ethanol from intramuscular immunoglobulin (IgG im) solutions prior to their final formulation (Fig. 2). [Pg.530]

During World War II, nine commercial plants were operated in Germany, five using the normal pressure synthesis, two the medium pressure process, and two having converters of both types. The largest plants had capacities of ca 400 mr / d (2500 bbl/d) of Hquid products. Cobalt catalysts were used exclusively. [Pg.80]

Natural Gas Upgrading via Fischer-Tropsch. In the United States, as in other countries, scarcities from World War II revived interest in the synthesis of fuel substances. A study of the economics of Fischer synthesis led to the conclusion that the large-scale production of gasoline from natural gas offered hope for commercial utiHty. In the Hydrocol process (Hydrocarbon Research, Inc.) natural gas was treated with high purity oxygen to produce the synthesis gas which was converted in fluidized beds of kon catalysts (42). [Pg.81]

Liquid Fuels via Methanol Synthesis and Conversion. Methanol is produced catalyticaHy from synthesis gas. By-products such as ethers, formates, and higher hydrocarbons are formed in side reactions and are found in the cmde methanol product. Whereas for many years methanol was produced from coal, after World War II low cost natural gas and light petroleum fractions replaced coal as the feedstock. [Pg.82]


See other pages where World War II is mentioned: [Pg.104]    [Pg.2741]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.341]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.416]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.463]    [Pg.541]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.89]   


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