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The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

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EARLY HISTORY OF NITRATED CARBOHYDRATES 253<br />

1852. <strong>The</strong> Austrian government acquired the use <strong>of</strong> Schonbein's<br />

process (as mentioned above) <strong>and</strong> the Emperor <strong>of</strong> Austria<br />

appointed a committee to investigate the use <strong>of</strong> guncotton for<br />

military purposes. This committee, <strong>of</strong> which von Lenk was the<br />

leading spirit, continued to function with some interruptions until<br />

1865. In 1853 a factory was erected at Hirtenberg for the manufacture<br />

<strong>of</strong> guncotton by the method <strong>of</strong> von Lenk which involved<br />

a more elaborate purification than Schonbein's original process.<br />

<strong>The</strong> product was washed for 3 weeks, then boiled with dilute<br />

potassium carbonate solution for 15 minutes, washed again for<br />

several days, impregnated with water glass, <strong>and</strong> finally dried.<br />

Von Lenk constructed 12-pounder guns which were shot with<br />

guncotton cartridges, but they were much damaged by the firing.<br />

About 1860 he tried bronze guns, which were less likely to burst<br />

than iron ones, <strong>and</strong> with propelling charges <strong>of</strong> guncotton fired<br />

from them shells which were filled with bursting charges <strong>of</strong> guncotton.<br />

<strong>The</strong> shells <strong>of</strong>ten burst within the barrel, for the acceleration<br />

produced by the propelling charge <strong>of</strong> guncotton was much<br />

too sudden <strong>and</strong> shocking. <strong>The</strong>y could be shot out without exploding<br />

when a propelling charge <strong>of</strong> black gunpowder was used. On<br />

July 20, 1863, the magazine at Hirtenberg exploded, <strong>and</strong> the<br />

Austrian government thereupon decided to ab<strong>and</strong>on the use <strong>of</strong><br />

guncotton as a propellent explosive. Von Lenk was pennitted to<br />

communicate his process to other nations. In 1862 <strong>and</strong> 1863, under<br />

the name <strong>of</strong> Revy, he took out English patents to protect his<br />

method <strong>of</strong> purification. 87 In 1863 he visited Engl<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> described<br />

his process to a committee <strong>of</strong> the British Association. In the same<br />

year Messrs. Prentice <strong>and</strong> Co. commenced the manufacture <strong>of</strong><br />

guncotton at Stowmarket by von Lenk's process, but an explosion<br />

soon occurred at their establislnnent. In 1865 a guncotton<br />

magazine at Steinfelder Heath, near Vienna, exploded, <strong>and</strong> on<br />

October 11 <strong>of</strong> that year the manufacture <strong>of</strong> guncotton in Austria<br />

was <strong>of</strong>ficially forbidden.<br />

1862. Tonkin's English patent 88 deserves our notice because<br />

it mentions the pulping <strong>of</strong> guncotton—<strong>and</strong> it was the pulping <strong>of</strong><br />

guncotton, introduced later by Abel, which remedied in large<br />

measure the difficulties <strong>of</strong> stability which had given guncotton<br />

a bad repute <strong>and</strong> brought it back again to the favorable cons'?<br />

Brit. Pats. 1090 (1862), 2720 (1863).<br />

88 Brit. Pat. 320 (1862); MacDonald, op. tit., p. 44.

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