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The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

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122 PYROTECHNICS<br />

the finished product up with a little stearine before forming into<br />

pellets." <strong>The</strong> present writer has found that the substitution <strong>of</strong><br />

/?-naphthol for naphthol pitch yields fairly good snakes which,<br />

however, are not so long <strong>and</strong> not so shiny, <strong>and</strong> are blacker <strong>and</strong><br />

covered with wartlike protuberances.<br />

Smokes<br />

Smoke shells <strong>and</strong> rockets are used to produce smoke clouds for<br />

military signaling <strong>and</strong>, in daylight fireworks, for ornamental<br />

effects. <strong>The</strong> shell ca>se or rocket head is filled with a fine powder<br />

<strong>of</strong> the desired color, which powdered material need not necessarily<br />

be one which will tolerate heat, <strong>and</strong> this is dispersed in<br />

the form <strong>of</strong> a colored cloud by the explosion <strong>of</strong> a small bag <strong>of</strong><br />

gunpowder placed as near to its center as may be. Artificial<br />

vermilion (red), ultramarine (blue), Paris green, chrome yellow,<br />

chalk, <strong>and</strong> ivory black are among the materials which<br />

have been used, but almost any material which has a bright<br />

color when powdered <strong>and</strong> which does not cake together may be<br />

employed.<br />

Colored smokes strictly so called are produced by the burning,<br />

in smoke pots or smoke cases, <strong>of</strong> pyrotechnic compositions which<br />

contain colored substances capable <strong>of</strong> being sublimed without an<br />

undue amount <strong>of</strong> decomposition. <strong>The</strong> substances are volatilized<br />

by the heat <strong>of</strong> the burning compositions to form colored vapors<br />

which quickly condense to form clouds <strong>of</strong> finely divided colored<br />

dust. Colored smokes are used for military signaling, <strong>and</strong> recently<br />

have found use in colored moving pictures. Red smokes, for example,<br />

were used in the "Wizard <strong>of</strong> Oz." Colored smoke compositions<br />

are commonly rammed lightly, not packed firmly, in cases,<br />

say 1 inch in internal diameter <strong>and</strong> 4 inches long, both ends <strong>of</strong><br />

which are closed with plugs <strong>of</strong> clay or wood. Holes, y± inch in<br />

diameter, are bored through the case at intervals on a spiral line<br />

around it; the topmost hole penetrates well into the composition<br />

<strong>and</strong> is filled with starting fire material into which a piece <strong>of</strong><br />

black match, held in place by meal powder paste, is inserted.<br />

According to Faber, 57 the following-listed compositions were used<br />

in American airplane smoke-signal grenades during the first<br />

World War.<br />

57 Op. tit., Vol. 1, p. 219.

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