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The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

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276 NITRIC ESTERS<br />

binder while the mixture was stirred in a rotary mixer. <strong>The</strong><br />

resulting granules were dried <strong>and</strong> screened, <strong>and</strong> yielded a freerunning<br />

explosive which could be loaded easily by machine<br />

Three United States patents 10T granted in 1916 to Bronstein<br />

<strong>and</strong> Waller describe several nitrostarch blasting explosives, <strong>of</strong><br />

which the following table reports typical examples. In actual use,<br />

IS itrostarch<br />

Ammonium nitrate TNT<br />

mixture<br />

Sodium nitrate<br />

Barium nitrate<br />

Carbonaceous material<br />

Paraffin oil<br />

Sulfur<br />

Calcium carbonate<br />

30 0%<br />

150<br />

46.8<br />

30<br />

07<br />

30<br />

15<br />

39 0% 30 0%' 40 0% 40 0%<br />

200<br />

3755<br />

0 75<br />

20<br />

10<br />

580<br />

50<br />

05<br />

50<br />

15<br />

37 7<br />

200<br />

08<br />

15<br />

34 7<br />

20 0<br />

08<br />

30<br />

15<br />

40 0<br />

200<br />

17 7<br />

20 0<br />

these explosives would also contain a small amount <strong>of</strong> some<br />

stabilizer, say 0.2% <strong>of</strong> diphenylamme or <strong>of</strong> urea.<br />

Utilization <strong>of</strong> Formaldehyde<br />

At the time <strong>of</strong> the first World War the methyl alcohol which<br />

was needed for the preparation <strong>of</strong> tetryl was procured from the<br />

distillation <strong>of</strong> wood. It was expensive <strong>and</strong> limited in amount.<br />

Formaldehyde was produced then, as it is now, by the oxidation<br />

<strong>of</strong> methyl alcohol, <strong>and</strong> a dem<strong>and</strong> for it was a dem<strong>and</strong> upon the<br />

wood-distillation industry. Formaldehyde was the raw material<br />

from which methylamine was produced commercially, <strong>and</strong> the<br />

resulting methylamine could be used for the preparation <strong>of</strong> tetryl<br />

by the alternative method from dinitrochlorobenzene. It was also<br />

the raw material from which certain useful explosives could be<br />

prepared, but its high price <strong>and</strong> its origin in the wood-distillation<br />

industry deprived the explosives in question <strong>of</strong> all but an academic<br />

interest. With the commercial production <strong>of</strong> synthetic<br />

methyl alcohol, the same explosives are now procurable from a<br />

raw material which is available in an amount limited only by the<br />

will <strong>of</strong> the manufacturers to produce it.<br />

Carbon monoxide <strong>and</strong> hydrogen, heated under pressure in the<br />

presence <strong>of</strong> a suitable catalyst, combine to form methyl alcohol<br />

A mixture <strong>of</strong> zinc oxide <strong>and</strong> chromium oxide has been used as a<br />

. S. Pats. 1,188,244, 1,188,245, 1,188,246 (1916).<br />

08<br />

15

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