Creative Chemistry
Creative Chemistry
Slosson
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Author of "Great American Universities," "Major Prophets of Today," "Six Major Prophets," "On
Acylhalogenamine Derivatives and the Beckmann Rearrangement," "Composition of Wyoming
Petroleum," etc.
NEW YORK
THE CENTURY CO.
Copyright, 1919, by
THE CENTURY CO.
FACING
PAGE
The hand grenades contain potential chemical energy capable of
causing a vast amount of destruction when released 16
Women in a munition plant engaged in the manufacture of tri-
nitro-toluol 17
A chemical reaction on a large scale 32
Burning air in a Birkeland-Eyde furnace at the DuPont plant 33
A battery of Birkeland-Eyde furnaces for the fixation of nitrogen
33
at the DuPont plant
Fixing nitrogen by calcium carbide 40
A barrow full of potash salts extracted from six tons of green kelp
41
by the government chemists
Nature's silent method of nitrogen fixation 41
In order to secure a new supply of potash salts the United States
Government set up an experimental plant at Sutherland, 52
California, for utilization of kelp
Overhead suction at the San Diego wharf pumping kelp from the
53
barge to the digestion tanks
The kelp harvester gathering the seaweed from the Pacific Ocean 53
A battery of Koppers by-product coke-ovens at the plant of the
60
Bethlehem Steel Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland
In these mixing vats at the Buffalo Works, aniline dyes are
61
prepared
A paper mill in action 120
Cellulose from wood pulp is now made into a large variety of
useful articles of which a few examples are here pictured 121
Plantation rubber 160
Forest rubber 160
In making garden hose the rubber is formed into a tube by the
machine on the right and coiled on the table to the left 161
The rival sugars 176
Interior of a sugar mill showing the machinery for crushing cane
to extract the juice 177
Vacuum pans of the American Sugar Refinery Company 177
Cotton seed oil as it is squeezed from the seed by the presses 200
Cotton seed oil as it comes from the compressors flowing out of
the faucets 201
Splitting coconuts on the island of Tahiti 216
The electric current passing through salt water in these cells
decomposes the salt into caustic soda and chlorine gas 217
Germans starting a gas attack on the Russian lines 224
Filling the cannisters of gas masks with charcoal made from fruit
pits—Long Island City 225
The chlorpicrin plant at the Bdgewood Arsenal 234
Repairing the broken stern post of the U.S.S. Northern Pacific, the
biggest marine weld in the world 235
Making aloxite in the electric furnaces by fusing coke and bauxite 240
A block of carborundum crystals 241
Making carborundum in the electric furnace 241
Types of gas mask used by America, the Allies and Germany
during the war 256
Pumping melted white phosphorus into hand grenades filled with
water—Edgewood Arsenal 257
Filling shell with "mustard gas" 257
Photomicrographs showing the structure of steel made by
Professor E.G. Mahin of Purdue University 272
The microscopic structure of metals 273
INTRODUCTION
BY JULIUS STIEGLITZ
The recent war as never before in the history of the world brought to the nations
of the earth a realization of the vital place which the science of chemistry holds
in the development of the resources of a nation. Some of the most picturesque
features of this awakening reached the great public through the press. Thus, the
adventurous trips of the Deutschland with its cargoes of concentrated aniline
dyes, valued at millions of dollars, emphasized as no other incident our former
dependence upon Germany for these products of her chemical industries.
The public read, too, that her chemists saved Germany from an early disastrous
defeat, both in the field of military operations and in the matter of economic
supplies: unquestionably, without the tremendous expansion of her plants for the
production of nitrates and ammonia from the air by the processes of Haber,
Ostwald and others of her great chemists, the war would have ended in 1915, or
early in 1916, from exhaustion of Germany's supplies of nitrate explosives, if not
indeed from exhaustion of her food supplies as a consequence of the lack of
nitrate and ammonia fertilizer for her fields. Inventions of substitutes for cotton,
copper, rubber, wool and many other basic needs have been reported.
These feats of chemistry, performed under the stress of dire necessity, have, no
doubt, excited the wonder and interest of our public. It is far more important at
this time, however, when both for war and for peace needs, the resources of our
country are strained to the utmost, that the public should awaken to a clear
realization of what this science of chemistry really means for mankind, to the
realization that its wizardry permeates the whole life of the nation as a vitalizing,
protective and constructive agent very much in the same way as our blood,
coursing through our veins and arteries, carries the constructive, defensive and
life-bringing materials to every organ in the body.
If the layman will but understand that chemistry is the fundamental science of
the transformation of matter, he will readily accept the validity of this sweeping
assertion: he will realize, for instance, why exactly the same fundamental laws of
the science apply to, and make possible scientific control of, such widely
divergent national industries as agriculture and steel manufacturing. It governs
the transformation of the salts, minerals and humus of our fields and the
components of the air into corn, wheat, cotton and the innumerable other
products of the soil; it governs no less the transformation of crude ores into steel
and alloys, which, with the cunning born of chemical knowledge, may be given
practically any conceivable quality of hardness, elasticity, toughness or strength.
And exactly the same thing may be said of the hundreds of national activities
that lie between the two extremes of agriculture and steel manufacture!
Moreover, the domain of the science of the transformation of matter includes
even life itself as its loftiest phase: from our birth to our return to dust the laws
of chemistry are the controlling laws of life, health, disease and death, and the
ever clearer recognition of this relation is the strongest force that is raising
medicine from the uncertain realm of an art to the safer sphere of an exact
science. To many scientific minds it has even become evident that those most
wonderful facts of life, heredity and character, must find their final explanation
in the chemical composition of the components of life producing, germinal
protoplasm: mere form and shape are no longer supreme but are relegated to
their proper place as the housing only of the living matter which functions
chemically.
It must be quite obvious now why thoughtful men are insisting that the public
should be awakened to a broad realization of the significance of the science of
chemistry for its national life.
It is a difficult science in its details, because it has found that it can best interpret
the visible phenomena of the material world on the basis of the conception of
invisible minute material atoms and molecules, each a world in itself, whose
properties may be nevertheless accurately deduced by a rigorous logic
controlling the highest type of scientific imagination. But a layman is interested
in the wonders of great bridges and of monumental buildings without feeling the
need of inquiring into the painfully minute and extended calculations of the
engineer and architect of the strains and stresses to which every pin and every
bar of the great bridge and every bit of stone, every foot of arch in a monumental
edifice, will be exposed. So the public may understand and appreciate with the
keenest interest the results of chemical effort without the need of instruction in
the intricacies of our logic, of our dealings with our minute, invisible particles.
The whole nation's welfare demands, indeed, that our public be enlightened in
the matter of the relation of chemistry to our national life. Thus, if our commerce
and our industries are to survive the terrific competition that must follow the
reëstablishment of peace, our public must insist that its representatives in
Congress preserve that independence in chemical manufacturing which the war
has forced upon us in the matter of dyes, of numberless invaluable remedies to
cure and relieve suffering; in the matter, too, of hundreds of chemicals, which
our industries need for their successful existence.
Unless we are independent in these fields, how easily might an unscrupulous
competing nation do us untold harm by the mere device, for instance, of
delaying supplies, or by sending inferior materials to this country or by
underselling our chemical manufacturers and, after the destruction of our
chemical independence, handicapping our industries as they were in the first
year or two of the great war! This is not a mere possibility created by the
imagination, for our economic history contains instance after instance of the
purposeful undermining and destruction of our industries in finer chemicals,
dyes and drugs by foreign interests bent on preserving their monopoly. If one
recalls that through control, for instance, of dyes by a competing nation, control
is in fact also established over products, valued in the hundreds of millions of
dollars, in which dyes enter as an essential factor, one may realize indeed the
tremendous industrial and commercial power which is controlled by the single
lever—chemical dyes. Of even more vital moment is chemistry in the domain of
health: the pitiful calls of our hospitals for local anesthetics to alleviate suffering
on the operating table, the frantic appeals for the hypnotic that soothes the
epileptic and staves off his seizure, the almost furious demands for remedy after
remedy, that came in the early years of the war, are still ringing in the hearts of
many of us. No wonder that our small army of chemists is grimly determined not
to give up the independence in chemistry which war has achieved for us! Only a
widely enlightened public, however, can insure the permanence of what
farseeing men have started to accomplish in developing the power of chemistry
through research in every domain which chemistry touches.
The general public should realize that in the support of great chemical research
laboratories of universities and technical schools it will be sustaining important
centers from which the science which improves products, abolishes waste,
establishes new industries and preserves life, may reach out helpfully into all the
activities of our great nation, that are dependent on the transformation of matter.
The public is to be congratulated upon the fact that the writer of the present
volume is better qualified than any other man in the country to bring home to his
readers some of the great results of modern chemical activity as well as some of
the big problems which must continue to engage the attention of our chemists.
Dr. Slosson has indeed the unique quality of combining an exact and intimate
knowledge of chemistry with the exquisite clarity and pointedness of expression
of a born writer.
We have here an exposition by a master mind, an exposition shorn of the
terrifying and obscuring technicalities of the lecture room, that will be as
absorbing reading as any thrilling romance. For the story of scientific
achievement is the greatest epic the world has ever known, and like the great
national epics of bygone ages, should quicken the life of the nation by a
realization of its powers and a picture of its possibilities.
CREATIVE CHEMISTRY
La Chimie posséde cette faculté créatrice à un degré plus éminent que les autres
sciences, parce qu'elle pénètre plus profondément et atteint jusqu'aux éléments
naturels des êtres.
—Berthelot.
I
THREE PERIODS OF PROGRESS
In the eyes of the chemist the Great War was essentially a series of explosive
reactions resulting in the liberation of nitrogen. Nothing like it has been seen in
any previous wars. The first battles were fought with cellulose, mostly in the
form of clubs. The next were fought with silica, mostly in the form of flint
arrowheads and spear-points. Then came the metals, bronze to begin with and
later iron. The nitrogenous era in warfare began when Friar Roger Bacon or Friar
Schwartz—whichever it was—ground together in his mortar saltpeter, charcoal
and sulfur. The Chinese, to be sure, had invented gunpowder long before, but they
—poor innocents—did not know of anything worse to do with it than to make
it into fire-crackers. With the introduction of "villainous saltpeter" war ceased to be
the vocation of the nobleman and since the nobleman had no other vocation he
began to become extinct. A bullet fired from a mile away is no respecter of
persons. It is just as likely to kill a knight as a peasant, and a brave man as a
coward. You cannot fence with a cannon ball nor overawe it with a plumed hat.
The only thing you can do is to hide and shoot back. Now you cannot hide if
you send up a column of smoke by day and a pillar of fire by night
—the most conspicuous of signals—every time you shoot. So the next step was
the invention of a smokeless powder. In this the oxygen necessary for the
combustion is already in such close combination with its fuel, the carbon and
hydrogen, that no black particles of carbon can get away unburnt. In the old-
fashioned gunpowder the oxygen necessary for the combustion of the carbon and
sulfur was in a separate package, in the molecule of potassium nitrate, and
however finely the mixture was ground, some of the atoms, in the excitement of
the explosion, failed to find their proper partners at the moment of dispersal. The
new gunpowder besides being smokeless is ashless. There is no black sticky
mass of potassium salts left to foul the gun barrel.
The gunpowder period of warfare was actively initiated at the battle of Cressy, in
which, as a contemporary historian says, "The English guns made noise like
thunder and caused much loss in men and horses." Smokeless powder as
invented by Paul Vieille was adopted by the French Government in 1887. This,
then, might be called the beginning of the guncotton or nitrocellulose period—
or, perhaps in deference to the caveman's club, the second cellulose period of
human warfare. Better, doubtless, to call it the "high explosive period," for
various other nitro-compounds besides guncotton are being used.
The important thing to note is that all the explosives from gunpowder down
contain nitrogen as the essential element. It is customary to call nitrogen "an
inert element" because it was hard to get it into combination with other elements.
It might, on the other hand, be looked upon as an active element because it acts
so energetically in getting out of its compounds. We can dodge the question by
saying that nitrogen is a most unreliable and unsociable element. Like Kipling's
cat it walks by its wild lone.
It is not so bad as Argon the Lazy and the other celibate gases of that family,
where each individual atom goes off by itself and absolutely refuses to unite
even temporarily with any other atom. The nitrogen atoms will pair off with each
other and stick together, but they are reluctant to associate with other elements
and when they do the combination is likely to break up any moment. You all
know people like that, good enough when by themselves but sure to break up
any club, church or society they get into. Now, the value of nitrogen in warfare is
due to the fact that all the atoms desert in a body on the field of battle. Millions
of them may be lying packed in a gun cartridge, as quiet as you please, but let a
little disturbance start in the neighborhood—say a grain of mercury fulminate
flares up—and all the nitrogen atoms get to trembling so violently that they
cannot be restrained. The shock spreads rapidly through the whole mass. The
hydrogen and carbon atoms catch up the oxygen and in an instant they are off on
a stampede, crowding in every direction to find an exit, and getting more heated
up all the time. The only movable side is the cannon ball in front, so they all
pound against that and give it such a shove that it goes ten miles before it stops.
The external bombardment by the cannon ball is, therefore, preceded by an
internal bombardment on the cannon ball by the molecules of the hot gases,
whose speed is about as great as the speed of the projectile that they propel.
© Underwood & Underwood
© Underwood & Underwood
THE HAND GRENADES WHICH THESE WOMEN ARE BORING
will contain potential chemical energy capable of causing a vast amount of
destruction when released. During the war the American Government
placed orders for 68,000,000 such grenades as are here shown.
© International Film Service, Inc.
© International Film Service, Inc.
WOMEN IN A MUNITION PLANT ENGAGED IN THE
MANUFACTURE OF TRI-NITRO-TOLUOL, THE MOST IMPORTANT
OF MODERN HIGH EXPLOSIVES
The active agent in all these explosives is the nitrogen atom in combination with
two oxygen atoms, which the chemist calls the "nitro group" and which he
represents by NO2. This group was, as I have said, originally used in the form of
saltpeter or potassium nitrate, but since the chemist did not want the potassium
part of it—for it fouled his guns—he took the nitro group out of the nitrate by
means of sulfuric acid and by the same means hooked it on to some compound
of carbon and hydrogen that would burn without leaving any residue, and give
nothing but gases. One of the simplest of these hydrocarbon derivatives is
glycerin, the same as you use for sunburn. This mixed with nitric and sulfuric
acids gives nitroglycerin, an easy thing to make, though I should not advise
anybody to try making it unless he has his life insured. But nitroglycerin is
uncertain stuff to keep and being a liquid is awkward to handle. So it was mixed
with sawdust or porous earth or something else that would soak it up. This
molded into sticks is our ordinary dynamite.
If instead of glycerin we take cellulose in the form of wood pulp or cotton and
treat this with nitric acid in the presence of sulfuric we get nitrocellulose or
guncotton, which is the chief ingredient of smokeless powder.
Now guncotton looks like common cotton. It is too light and loose to pack well
into a gun. So it is dissolved with ether and alcohol or acetone to make a plastic
mass that can be molded into rods and cut into grains of suitable shape and size
to burn at the proper speed.
Here, then, we have a liquid explosive, nitroglycerin, that has to be soaked up in
some porous solid, and a porous solid, guncotton, that has to soak up some
liquid. Why not solve both difficulties together by dissolving the guncotton in
the nitroglycerin and so get a double explosive? This is a simple idea. Any of us
can see the sense of it—once it is suggested to us. But Alfred Nobel, the
Swedish chemist, who thought it out first in 1878, made millions out of it. Then,
apparently alarmed at the possible consequences of his invention, he bequeathed
the fortune he had made by it to found international prizes for medical, chemical
and physical discoveries, idealistic literature and the promotion of peace. But his
posthumous efforts for the advancement of civilization and the abolition of war
did not amount to much and his high explosives were later employed to blow
into pieces the doctors, chemists, authors and pacifists he wished to reward.
Nobel's invention, "cordite," is composed of nitroglycerin and nitrocellulose
with a little mineral jelly or vaseline. Besides cordite and similar mixtures of
nitroglycerin and nitrocellulose there are two other classes of high explosives in
common use.
One is made from carbolic acid, which is familiar to us all by its use as a
disinfectant. If this is treated with nitric and sulfuric acids we get from it picric
acid, a yellow crystalline solid. Every government has its own secret formula for
this type of explosive. The British call theirs "lyddite," the French "melinite" and
the Japanese "shimose."
The third kind of high explosives uses as its base toluol. This is not so familiar to
us as glycerin, cotton or carbolic acid. It is one of the coal tar products, an
inflammable liquid, resembling benzene. When treated with nitric acid in the
usual way it takes up like the others three nitro groups and so becomes tri-nitro-
toluol. Realizing that people could not be expected to use such a mouthful of a
word, the chemists have suggested various pretty nicknames, trotyl, tritol, trinol,
tolite and trilit, but the public, with the wilfulness it always shows in the matter
of names, persists in calling it TNT, as though it were an author like G.B.S., or
G.K.C, or F.P.A. TNT is the latest of these high explosives and in some ways the
best of them. Picric acid has the bad habit of attacking the metals with which it
rests in contact forming sensitive picrates that are easily set off, but TNT is inert
toward metals and keeps well. TNT melts far below the boiling point of water so
can be readily liquefied and poured into shells. It is insensitive to ordinary
shocks. A rifle bullet can be fired through a case of it without setting it off, and if
lighted with a match it burns quietly. The amazing thing about these modern
explosives, the organic nitrates, is the way they will stand banging about and
burning, yet the terrific violence with which they blow up when shaken by an
explosive wave of a particular velocity like that of a fulminating cap. Like picric
acid, TNT stains the skin yellow and causes soreness and sometimes serious
cases of poisoning among the employees, mostly girls, in the munition factories.
On the other hand, the girls working with cordite get to using it as chewing gum;
a harmful habit, not because of any danger of being blown up by it, but because
nitroglycerin is a heart stimulant and they do not need that.
The Genealogical Tree of Nitric Acid From W.Q. Whitman's "The Story of
Nitrates in the War," General Science Quarterly
The Genealogical Tree of Nitric Acid From W.Q. Whitman's "The Story of
Nitrates in the War," General Science Quarterly
TNT is by no means smokeless. The German shells that exploded with a cloud of
black smoke and which British soldiers called "Black Marias," "coal-boxes" or
"Jack Johnsons" were loaded with it. But it is an advantage to have a shell show
where it strikes, although a disadvantage to have it show where it starts.
It is these high explosives that have revolutionized warfare. As soon as the first
German shell packed with these new nitrates burst inside the Gruson cupola at
Liège and tore out its steel and concrete by the roots the world knew that the day
of the fixed fortress was gone. The armies deserted their expensively prepared
fortifications and took to the trenches. The British troops in France found their
weapons futile and sent across the Channel the cry of "Send us high explosives
or we perish!" The home Government was slow to heed the appeal, but no
progress was made against the Germans until the Allies had the means to blast
them out of their entrenchments by shells loaded with five hundred pounds of
TNT.
All these explosives are made from nitric acid and this used to be made from
nitrates such as potassium nitrate or saltpeter. But nitrates are rarely found in
large quantities. Napoleon and Lee had a hard time to scrape up enough saltpeter
from the compost heaps, cellars and caves for their gunpowder, and they did not
use as much nitrogen in a whole campaign as was freed in a few days'
cannonading on the Somme. Now there is one place in the world—and so far as
we know one only—where nitrates are to be found abundantly. This is in a desert
on the western slope of the Andes where ancient guano deposits have
decomposed and there was not enough rain to wash away their salts. Here is a
bed two miles wide, two hundred miles long and five feet deep yielding some
twenty to fifty per cent. of sodium nitrate. The deposit originally belonged to
Peru, but Chile fought her for it and got it in 1881. Here all countries came to get
their nitrates for agriculture and powder making. Germany was the largest
customer and imported 750,000 tons of Chilean nitrate in 1913, besides using
100,000 tons of other nitrogen salts. By this means her old, wornout fields were
made to yield greater harvests than our fresh land. Germany and England were
like two duelists buying powder at the same shop. The Chilean Government,
pocketing an export duty that aggregated half a billion dollars, permitted the
saltpeter to be shoveled impartially into British and German ships, and so two
nitrogen atoms, torn from their Pacific home and parted, like Evangeline and
Gabriel, by transportation oversea, may have found themselves flung into each
other's arms from the mouths of opposing howitzers in the air of Flanders.
Goethe could write a romance on such a theme.
Now the moment war broke out this source of supply was shut off to both
parties, for they blockaded each other. The British fleet closed up the German
ports while the German cruisers in the Pacific took up a position off the coast of
Chile in order to intercept the ships carrying nitrates to England and France. The
Panama Canal, designed to afford relief in such an emergency, caved in most
inopportunely. The British sent a fleet to the Pacific to clear the nitrate route, but
it was outranged and defeated on November 1, 1914. Then a stronger British
fleet was sent out and smashed the Germans off the Falkland Islands on
December 8. But for seven weeks the nitrate route had been closed while the
chemical reactions on the Marne and Yser were decomposing nitrogen-
compounds at an unheard of rate.
England was now free to get nitrates for her munition factories, but Germany
was still bottled up. She had stored up Chilean nitrates in anticipation of the war
and as soon as it was seen to be coming she bought all she could get in Europe.
But this supply was altogether inadequate and the war would have come to an
end in the first winter if German chemists had not provided for such a
contingency in advance by working out methods of getting nitrogen from the air.
Long ago it was said that the British ruled the sea and the French the land so that
left nothing to the German but the air. The Germans seem to have taken this jibe
seriously and to have set themselves to make the most of the aerial realm in
order to challenge the British and French in the fields they had appropriated.
They had succeeded so far that the Kaiser when he declared war might well have
considered himself the Prince of the Power of the Air. He had a fleet of
Zeppelins and he had means for the fixation of nitrogen such as no other nation
possessed. The Zeppelins burst like wind bags, but the nitrogen plants worked
and made Germany independent of Chile not only during the war, but in the time
of peace.
Germany during the war used 200,000 tons of nitric acid a year in explosives,
yet her supply of nitrogen is exhaustless.
World production and consumption of fixed inorganic nitrogen expressed in tons
nitrogen From The Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, March,
1919.
World production and consumption of fixed inorganic nitrogen expressed in
tons nitrogen From The Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry,
March, 1919.
Nitrogen is free as air. That is the trouble; it is too free. It is fixed nitrogen that
we want and that we are willing to pay for; nitrogen in combination with some
other elements in the form of food or fertilizer so we can make use of it as we set
it free. Fixed nitrogen in its cheapest form, Chile saltpeter, rose to $250 during
the war. Free nitrogen costs nothing and is good for nothing. If a land-owner has
a right to an expanding pyramid of air above him to the limits of the atmosphere
—as, I believe, the courts have decided in the eaves-dropping cases—then for
every square foot of his ground he owns as much nitrogen as he could buy for
$2500. The air is four-fifths free nitrogen and if we could absorb it in our lungs
as we do the oxygen of the other fifth a few minutes breathing would give us a
full meal. But we let this free nitrogen all out again through our noses and then
go and pay 35 cents a pound for steak or 60 cents a dozen for eggs in order to get
enough combined nitrogen to live on. Though man is immersed in an ocean of
nitrogen, yet he cannot make use of it. He is like Coleridge's "Ancient Mariner"
with "water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink."
Nitrogen is, as Hood said not so truly about gold, "hard to get and hard to hold."
The bacteria that form the nodules on the roots of peas and beans have the power
that man has not of utilizing free nitrogen. Instead of this quiet inconspicuous
process man has to call upon the lightning when he wants to fix nitrogen. The air
contains the oxygen and nitrogen which it is desired to combine to form nitrates
but the atoms are paired, like to like. Passing an electric spark through the air
breaks up some of these pairs and in the confusion of the shock the lonely atoms
seize on their nearest neighbor and so may get partners of the other sort. I have
seen this same thing happen in a square dance where somebody made a blunder.
It is easy to understand the reaction if we represent the atoms of oxygen and
nitrogen by the initials of their names in this fashion:
NN + OO → NO + NO
nitrogen oxygen nitric oxide
The → represents Jove's thunderbolt, a stroke of artificial lightning. We see on
the left the molecules of oxygen and nitrogen, before taking the electric
treatment, as separate elemental pairs, and then to the right of the arrow we find
them as compound molecules of nitric oxide. This takes up another atom of
oxygen from the air and becomes NOO, or using a subscript figure to indicate
the number of atoms and so avoid repeating the letter, NO2 which is the familiar
nitro group of nitric acid (HO—NO2) and of its salts, the nitrates, and of its
organic compounds, the high explosives. The NO2 is a brown and evil-smelling
gas which when dissolved in water (HOH) and further oxidized is completely
converted into nitric acid.
The apparatus which effects this transformation is essentially a gigantic arc light
in a chimney through which a current of hot air is blown. The more thoroughly
the air comes under the action of the electric arc the more molecules of nitrogen
and oxygen will be broken up and rearranged, but on the other hand if the
mixture of gases remains in the path of the discharge the NO molecules are also
broken up and go back into their original form of NN and OO. So the object is to
spread out the electric arc as widely as possible and then run the air through it
rapidly. In the Schönherr process the electric arc is a spiral flame twenty-three
feet long through which the air streams with a vortex motion. In the Birkeland-
Eyde furnace there is a series of semi-circular arcs spread out by the repellent
force of a powerful electric magnet in a flaming disc seven feet in diameter with
a temperature of 6300° F. In the Pauling furnace the electrodes between which
the current strikes are two cast iron tubes curving upward and outward like the
horns of a Texas steer and cooled by a stream of water passing through them.
These electric furnaces produce two or three ounces of nitric acid for each
kilowatt-hour of current consumed. Whether they can compete with the natural
nitrates and the products of other processes depends upon how cheaply they can
get their electricity. Before the war there were several large installations in
Norway and elsewhere where abundant water power was available and now the
Norwegians are using half a million horse power continuously in the fixation of
nitrogen and the rest of the world as much again. The Germans had invested
largely in these foreign oxidation plants, but shortly before the war they had sold
out and turned their attention to other processes not requiring so much electrical
energy, for their country is poorly provided with water power. The Haber
process, that they made most of, is based upon as simple a reaction as that we
have been considering, for it consists in uniting two elemental gases to make a
compound, but the elements in this case are not nitrogen and oxygen, but
nitrogen and hydrogen. This gives ammonia instead of nitric acid, but ammonia
is useful for its own purposes and it can be converted into nitric acid if this is
desired. The reaction is:
NN + HH + HH + HH → NHHH + NHHH
Nitrogen hydrogen ammonia
The animals go in two by two, but they come out four by four. Four molecules of
the mixed elements are turned into two molecules and so the gas shrinks to half
its volume. At the same time it acquires an odor—familiar to us when we are
curing a cold—that neither of the original gases had. The agent that effects the
transformation in this case is not the electric spark—for this would tend to work
the reaction backwards—but uranium, a rare metal, which has the peculiar
property of helping along a reaction while seeming to take no part in it. Such a
substance is called a catalyst. The action of a catalyst is rather mysterious and
whenever we have a mystery we need an analogy. We may, then, compare the
catalyst to what is known as "a good mixer" in society. You know the sort of man
I mean. He may not be brilliant or especially talkative, but somehow there is
always "something doing" at a picnic or house-party when he is along. The
tactful hostess, the salon leader, is a social catalyst. The trouble with catalysts,
either human or metallic, is that they are rare and that sometimes they get sulky
and won't work if the ingredients they are supposed to mix are unsuitable.
But the uranium, osmium, platinum or whatever metal is used as a catalyzing
agent is expensive and although it is not used up it is easily "poisoned," as the
chemists say, by impurities in the gases. The nitrogen and the hydrogen for the
Haber process must then be prepared and purified before trying to combine them
into ammonia. The nitrogen is obtained by liquefying air by cold and pressure
and then boiling off the nitrogen at 194° C. The oxygen left is useful for other
purposes. The hydrogen needed is extracted by a similar process of fractional
distillation from "water-gas," the blue-flame burning gas used for heating. Then
the nitrogen and hydrogen, mixed in the proportion of one to three, as shown in
the reaction given above, are compressed to two hundred atmospheres, heated to
1300° F. and passed over the finely divided uranium. The stream of gas that
comes out contains about four per cent. of ammonia, which is condensed to a
liquid by cooling and the uncombined hydrogen and nitrogen passed again
through the apparatus.
The ammonia can be employed in refrigeration and other ways but if it is desired
to get the nitrogen into the form of nitric acid it has to be oxidized by the so-
called Ostwald process. This is the reaction:
NH3 + 4O → HNO3 + H2O
ammonia oxygen nitric acid water
The catalyst used to effect this combination is the metal platinum in the form of
fine wire gauze, since the action takes place only on the surface. The ammonia
gas is mixed with air which supplies the oxygen and the heated mixture run
through the platinum gauze at the rate of several yards a second. Although the
gases come in contact with the platinum only a five-hundredth part of a second
yet eighty-five per cent. is converted into nitric acid.
The Haber process for the making of ammonia by direct synthesis from its
constituent elements and the supplemental Ostwald process for the conversion of
the ammonia into nitric acid were the salvation of Germany. As soon as the
Germans saw that their dash toward Paris had been stopped at the Marne they
knew that they were in for a long war and at once made plans for a supply of
fixed nitrogen. The chief German dye factories, the Badische Anilin and Soda-
Fabrik, promptly put $100,000,000 into enlarging its plant and raised its
production of ammonium sulfate from 30,000 to 300,000 tons. One German
electrical firm with aid from the city of Berlin contracted to provide 66,000,000
pounds of fixed nitrogen a year at a cost of three cents a pound for the next
twenty-five years. The 750,000 tons of Chilean nitrate imported annually by
Germany contained about 116,000 tons of the essential element nitrogen. The
fourteen large plants erected during the war can fix in the form of nitrates
500,000 tons of nitrogen a year, which is more than twice the amount needed for
internal consumption. So Germany is now not only independent of the outside
world but will have a surplus of nitrogen products which could be sold even in
America at about half what the farmer has been paying for South American
saltpeter.
Besides the Haber or direct process there are other methods of making ammonia
which are, at least outside of Germany, of more importance. Most prominent of
these is the cyanamid process. This requires electrical power since it starts with a
product of the electrical furnace, calcium carbide, familiar to us all as a source of
acetylene gas.
If a stream of nitrogen is passed over hot calcium carbide it is taken up by the
carbide according to the following equation:
CaC2 + N2 → CaCN2 + C
calcium carbide nitrogen calcium cyanamid carbon
Calcium cyanamid was discovered in 1895 by Caro and Franke when they were
trying to work out a new process for making cyanide to use in extracting gold. It
looks like stone and, under the name of lime-nitrogen, or Kalkstickstoff, or
nitrolim, is sold as a fertilizer. If it is desired to get ammonia, it is treated with
superheated steam. The reaction produces heat and pressure, so it is necessary to
carry it on in stout autoclaves or enclosed kettles. The cyanamid is completely
and quickly converted into pure ammonia and calcium carbonate, which is the
same as the limestone from which carbide was made. The reaction is:
CaCN2 + 3H2O → CaCO3 + 2NH3
calcium cyanamid water calcium carbonate ammonia
Another electrical furnace method, the Serpek process, uses aluminum instead of
calcium for the fixation of nitrogen. Bauxite, or impure aluminum oxide, the
ordinary mineral used in the manufacture of metallic aluminum, is mixed with
coal and heated in a revolving electrical furnace through which nitrogen is
passing. The equation is:
Al2O3 + 3C + N2 → 2AlN + 3CO
aluminum carbon nitrogen aluminum carbon
oxide nitride monoxide
Then the aluminum nitride is treated with steam under pressure, which produces
ammonia and gives back the original aluminum oxide, but in a purer form than
the mineral from which was made
2AlN + 3H2O → 2NH3 + Al2O3
Aluminum water ammonia aluminum oxide
nitride
The Serpek process is employed to some extent in France in connection with the
aluminum industry. These are the principal processes for the fixation of nitrogen
now in use, but they by no means exhaust the possibilities. For instance,
Professor John C. Bucher, of Brown University, created a sensation in 1917 by
announcing a new process which he had worked out with admirable
completeness and which has some very attractive features. It needs no electric
power or high pressure retorts or liquid air apparatus. He simply fills a twenty-
foot tube with briquets made out of soda ash, iron and coke and passes producer
gas through the heated tube. Producer gas contains nitrogen since it is made by
passing air over hot coal. The reaction is:
2Na2CO3 + 4C + N2 = 2NaCN + 3CO
sodium carbon nitrogen sodium carbon
carbonate cyanide monoxide
The iron here acts as the catalyst and converts two harmless substances, sodium
carbonate, which is common washing soda, and carbon, into two of the most
deadly compounds known to man, cyanide and carbon monoxide, which is what
kills you when you blow out the gas. Sodium cyanide is a salt of hydrocyanic
acid, which for, some curious reason is called "Prussic acid." It is so violent a
poison that, as the freshman said in a chemistry recitation, "a single drop of it
placed on the tongue of a dog will kill a man."
But sodium cyanide is not only useful in itself, for the extraction of gold and
cleaning of silver, but can be converted into ammonia, and a variety of other
compounds such as urea and oxamid, which are good fertilizers; sodium
ferrocyanide, that makes Prussian blue; and oxalic acid used in dyeing. Professor
Bucher claimed that his furnace could be set up in a day at a cost of less than
$100 and could turn out 150 pounds of sodium cyanide in twenty-four hours.
This process was placed freely at the disposal of the United States Government
for the war and a 10-ton plant was built at Saltville, Va., by the Ordnance
Department. But the armistice put a stop to its operations and left the future of
the process undetermined.
A CHEMICAL REACTION ON A LARGE SCALE
A CHEMICAL REACTION ON A LARGE SCALE
From the chemist's standpoint modern warfare consists in the rapid
liberation of nitrogen from its compounds
Courtesy of E.I. du Pont de Nemours Co.
Courtesy of E.I. du Pont de Nemours Co.
BURNING AIR IN A BIRKELAND-EYDE FURNACE AT THE DU PONT
PLANT
An electric arc consuming about 4000 horse-power of energy is passing
between the U-shaped electrodes which are made of copper tube cooled by
an internal current of water. On the sides of the chamber are seen the
openings through which the air passes impinging directly on both sides of
the surface of the disk of flame. This flame is approximately seven feet in
diameter and appears to be continuous although an alternating current of
fifty cycles a second is used. The electric arc is spread into this disk flame by
the repellent power of an electro-magnet the pointed pole of which is seen at
bottom of the picture. Under this intense heat a part of the nitrogen and
oxygen of the air combine to form oxides of nitrogen which when dissolved
in water form the nitric acid used in explosives.
Courtesy of E.I. du Pont de Nemours Co.
Courtesy of E.I. du Pont de Nemours Co.
A BATTERY OF BIRKELAND-EYDE FURNACES FOR THE FIXATION
OF NITROGEN AT THE DU PONT PLANT
We might have expected that the fixation of nitrogen by passing an electrical
spark through hot air would have been an American invention, since it was
Franklin who snatched the lightning from the heavens as well as the scepter from
the tyrant and since our output of hot air is unequaled by any other nation. But
little attention was paid to the nitrogen problem until 1916 when it became
evident that we should soon be drawn into a war "with a first class power." On
June 3, 1916, Congress placed $20,000,000 at the disposal of the president for
investigation of "the best, cheapest and most available means for the production
of nitrate and other products for munitions of war and useful in the manufacture
of fertilizers and other useful products by water power or any other power." But
by the time war was declared on April 6, 1917, no definite program had been
approved and by the time the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918, no
plants were in active operation. But five plants had been started and two of them
were nearly ready to begin work when they were closed by the ending of the
war. United States Nitrate Plant No. 1 was located at Sheffield, Alabama, and
was designed for the production of ammonia by "direct action" from nitrogen
and hydrogen according to the plans of the American Chemical Company. Its
capacity was calculated at 60,000 pounds of anhydrous ammonia a day, half of
which was to be oxidized to nitric acid. Plant No. 2 was erected at Muscle
Shoals, Alabama, to use the process of the American Cyanamid Company. This
was contracted to produce 110,000 tons of ammonium nitrate a year and later
two other cyanamid plants of half that capacity were started at Toledo and
Ancor, Ohio.
At Muscle Shoals a mushroom city of 20,000 sprang up on an Alabama cotton
field in six months. The raw material, air, was as abundant there as anywhere
and the power, water, could be obtained from the Government hydro-electric
plant on the Tennessee River, but this was not available during the war, so steam
was employed instead. The heat of the coal was used to cool the air down to the
liquefying point. The principle of this process is simple. Everybody knows that
heat expands and cold contracts, but not everybody has realized the converse of
this rule, that expansion cools and compression heats. If air is forced into smaller
space, as in a tire pump, it heats up and if allowed to expand to ordinary pressure
it cools off again. But if the air while compressed is cooled and then allowed to
expand it must get still colder and the process can go on till it becomes cold
enough to congeal. That is, by expanding a great deal of air, a little of it can be
reduced to the liquefying point. At Muscle Shoals the plant for liquefying air, in
order to get the nitrogen out of it, consisted of two dozen towers each capable of
producing 1765 cubic feet of pure nitrogen per hour. The air was drawn in
through two pipes, a yard across, and passed through scrubbing towers to
remove impurities. The air was then compressed to 600 pounds per square inch.
Nine tenths of the air was permitted to expand to 50 pounds and this expansion
cooled down the other tenth, still under high pressure, to the liquefying point.
Rectifying towers 24 feet high were stacked with trays of liquid air from which
the nitrogen was continually bubbling off since its boiling point is twelve
degrees centigrade lower than that of oxygen. Pure nitrogen gas collected at the
top of the tower and the residual liquid air, now about half oxygen, was allowed
to escape at the bottom.
The nitrogen was then run through pipes into the lime-nitrogen ovens. There
were 1536 of these about four feet square and each holding 1600 pounds of
pulverized calcium carbide. This is at first heated by an electrical current to start
the reaction which afterwards produces enough heat to keep it going. As the
stream of nitrogen gas passes over the finely divided carbide it is absorbed to
form calcium cyanamid as described on a previous page. This product is cooled,
powdered and wet to destroy any quicklime or carbide left unchanged. Then it is
charged into autoclaves and steam at high temperature and pressure is admitted.
The steam acting on the cyanamid sets free ammonia gas which is carried to
towers down which cold water is sprayed, giving the ammonia water, familiar to
the kitchen and the bathroom.
But since nitric acid rather than ammonia was needed for munitions, the oxygen
of the air had to be called into play. This process, as already explained, is carried
on by aid of a catalyzer, in this case platinum wire. At Muscle Shoals there were
696 of these catalyzer boxes. The ammonia gas, mixed with air to provide the
necessary oxygen, was admitted at the top and passed down through a sheet of
platinum gauze of 80 mesh to the inch, heated to incandescence by electricity. In
contact with this the ammonia is converted into gaseous oxides of nitrogen (the
familiar red fumes of the laboratory) which, carried off in pipes, cooled and
dissolved in water, form nitric acid.
But since none of the national plants could be got into action during the war, the
United States was compelled to draw upon South America for its supply. The
imports of Chilean saltpeter rose from half a million tons in 1914 to a million
and a half in 1917. After peace was made the Department of War turned over to
the Department of Agriculture its surplus of saltpeter, 150,000 tons, and it was
sold to American farmers at cost, $81 a ton.
For nitrogen plays a double rôle in human economy. It appears like Brahma in
two aspects, Vishnu the Preserver and Siva the Destroyer. Here I have been
considering nitrogen in its maleficent aspect, its use in war. We now turn to its
beneficent aspect, its use in peace.
III
FEEDING THE SOIL
The Great War not only starved people: it starved the land. Enough nitrogen was
thrown away in some indecisive battle on the Aisne to save India from a famine.
The population of Europe as a whole has not been lessened by the war, but the
soil has been robbed of its power to support the population. A plant requires
certain chemical elements for its growth and all of these must be within reach of
its rootlets, for it will accept no substitutes. A wheat stalk in France before the
war had placed at its feet nitrates from Chile, phosphates from Florida and
potash from Germany. All these were shut off by the firing line and the shortage
of shipping.
Out of the eighty elements only thirteen are necessary for crops. Four of these
are gases: hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and chlorine. Five are metals: potassium,
magnesium, calcium, iron and sodium. Four are non-metallic solids: carbon,
sulfur, phosphorus and silicon. Three of these, hydrogen, oxygen and carbon,
making up the bulk of the plant, are obtainable ad libitum from the air and water.
The other ten in the form of salts are dissolved in the water that is sucked up
from the soil. The quantity needed by the plant is so small and the quantity
contained in the soil is so great that ordinarily we need not bother about the
supply except in case of three of them. They are nitrogen, potassium and
phosphorus. These would be useless or fatal to plant life in the elemental form,
but fixed in neutral salt they are essential plant foods. A ton of wheat takes away
from the soil about 47 pounds of nitrogen, 18 pounds of phosphoric acid and 12
pounds of potash. If then the farmer does not restore this much to his field every
year he is drawing upon his capital and this must lead to bankruptcy in the long
run.
So much is easy to see, but actually the question is extremely complicated.
When the German chemist, Justus von Liebig, pointed out in 1840 the possibility
of maintaining soil fertility by the application of chemicals it seemed at first as
though the question were practically solved. Chemists assumed that all they had
to do was to analyze the soil and analyze the crop and from this figure out, as
easily as balancing a bank book, just how much of each ingredient would have to
be restored to the soil every year. But somehow it did not work out that way and
the practical agriculturist, finding that the formulas did not fit his farm, sneered
at the professors and whenever they cited Liebig to him he irreverently
transposed the syllables of the name. The chemist when he went deeper into the
subject saw that he had to deal with the colloids, damp, unpleasant, gummy
bodies that he had hitherto fought shy of because they would not crystallize or
filter. So the chemist called to his aid the physicist on the one hand and the
biologist on the other and then they both had their hands full. The physicist
found that he had to deal with a polyvariant system of solids, liquids and gases
mutually miscible in phases too numerous to be handled by Gibbs's Rule. The
biologist found that he had to deal with the invisible flora and fauna of a new
world.
Plants obey the injunction of Tennyson and rise on the stepping stones of their
dead selves to higher things. Each successive generation lives on what is left of
the last in the soil plus what it adds from the air and sunshine. As soon as a leaf
or tree trunk falls to the ground it is taken in charge by a wrecking crew
composed of a myriad of microscopic organisms who proceed to break it up into
its component parts so these can be used for building a new edifice. The process
is called "rotting" and the product, the black, gummy stuff of a fertile soil, is
called "humus." The plants, that is, the higher plants, are not able to live on their
own proteids as the animals are. But there are lower plants, certain kinds of
bacteria, that can break up the big complicated proteid molecules into their
component parts and reduce the nitrogen in them to ammonia or ammonia-like
compounds. Having done this they stop and turn over the job to another set of
bacteria to be carried through the next step. For you must know that soil society
is as complex and specialized as that above ground and the tiniest bacterium
would die rather than violate the union rules. The second set of bacteria change
the ammonia over to nitrites and then a third set, the Amalgamated Union of
Nitrate Workers, steps in and completes the process of oxidation with an
efficiency that Ostwald might envy, for ninety-six per cent. of the ammonia of
the soil is converted into nitrates. But if the conditions are not just right, if the
food is insufficient or unwholesome or if the air that circulates through the soil is
contaminated with poison gases, the bacteria go on a strike. The farmer, not
seeing the thing from the standpoint of the bacteria, says the soil is "sick" and he
proceeds to doctor it according to his own notion of what ails it. First perhaps he
tries running in strike breakers. He goes to one of the firms that makes a business
of supplying nitrogen-fixing bacteria from the scabs or nodules of the clover
roots and scatters these colonies over the field. But if the living conditions
remain bad the newcomers will soon quit work too and the farmer loses his
money. If he is wise, then, he will remedy the conditions, putting a better
ventilation system in his soil perhaps or neutralizing the sourness by means of
lime or killing off the ameboid banditti that prey upon the peaceful bacteria
engaged in the nitrogen industry. It is not an easy job that the farmer has in
keeping billions of billions of subterranean servants contented and working
together, but if he does not succeed at this he wastes his seed and labor.
The layman regards the soil as a platform or anchoring place on which to set
plants. He measures its value by its superficial area without considering its
contents, which is as absurd as to estimate a man's wealth by the size of his safe.
The difference in point of view is well illustrated by the old story of the city
chap who was showing his farmer uncle the sights of New York. When he took
him to Central Park he tried to astonish him by saying "This land is worth
$500,000 an acre." The old farmer dug his toe into the ground, kicked out a clod,
broke it open, looked at it, spit on it and squeezed it in his hand and then said,
"Don't you believe it; 'tain't worth ten dollars an acre. Mighty poor soil I call it."
Both were right.
Courtesy of American Cyanamid Co.
Courtesy of American Cyanamid Co.
FIXING NITROGEN BY CALCIUM CARBIDE
A view of the oven room in the plant of the American Cyanamid Company.
The steel cylinders standing in the background are packed with the carbide
and then put into the ovens sunk in the floor. When these are heated
internally by electricity to 2000 degrees Fahrenheit pure nitrogen is let in
and absorbed by the carbide, making cyanamid, which may be used as a
fertilizer or for ammonia.
Photo by International Film Service
Photo by International Film Service
A BARROW FULL OF POTASH SALTS EXTRACTED FROM SIX TONS
OF GREEN KELP BY THE GOVERNMENT CHEMISTS
NATURE'S SILENT METHOD OF NITROGEN FIXATION
NATURE'S SILENT METHOD OF NITROGEN FIXATION
The nodules on the vetch roots contain colonies of bacteria which have the
power of taking the free nitrogen out of the air and putting it in compounds
suitable for plant food.
The modern agriculturist realizes that the soil is a laboratory for the production
of plant food and he ordinarily takes more pains to provide a balanced ration for
it than he does for his family. Of course the necessity of feeding the soil has been
known ever since man began to settle down and the ancient methods of
maintaining its fertility, though discovered accidentally and followed blindly,
were sound and efficacious. Virgil, who like Liberty Hyde Bailey was fond of
publishing agricultural bulletins in poetry, wrote two thousand years ago:
But sweet vicissitudes of rest and toil
Make easy labor and renew the soil
Yet sprinkle sordid ashes all around
And load with fatt'ning dung thy fallow soil.
The ashes supplied the potash and the dung the nitrate and phosphate. Long
before the discovery of the nitrogen-fixing bacteria, the custom prevailed of
sowing pea-like plants every third year and then plowing them under to enrich
the soil. But such local supplies were always inadequate and as soon as deposits
of fertilizers were discovered anywhere in the world they were drawn upon. The
richest of these was the Chincha Islands off the coast of Peru, where millions of
penguins and pelicans had lived in a most untidy manner for untold centuries.
The guano composed of the excrement of the birds mixed with the remains of
dead birds and the fishes they fed upon was piled up to a depth of 120 feet. From
this Isle of Penguins—which is not that described by Anatole France—a billion
dollars' worth of guano was taken and the deposit was soon exhausted.
Then the attention of the world was directed to the mainland of Peru and Chile,
where similar guano deposits had been accumulated and, not being washed away
on account of the lack of rain, had been deposited as sodium nitrate, or
"saltpeter." These beds were discovered by a German, Taddeo Haenke, in 1809,
but it was not until the last quarter of the century that the nitrates came into
common use as a fertilizer. Since then more than 53,000,000 tons have been
taken out of these beds and the exportation has risen to a rate of 2,500,000 to
3,000,000 tons a year. How much longer they will last is a matter of opinion and
opinion is largely influenced by whether you have your money invested in
Chilean nitrate stock or in one of the new synthetic processes for making
nitrates. The United States Department of Agriculture says the nitrate beds will
be exhausted in a few years. On the other hand the Chilean Inspector General of
Nitrate Deposits in his latest official report says that they will last for two
hundred years at the present rate and that then there are incalculable areas of low
grade deposits, containing less than eleven per cent., to be drawn upon.
Anyhow, the South American beds cannot long supply the world's need of
nitrates and we shall some time be starving unless creative chemistry comes to
the rescue. In 1898 Sir William Crookes—the discoverer of the "Crookes tubes,"
the radiometer and radiant matter—startled the British Association for the
Advancement of Science by declaring that the world was nearing the limit of
wheat production and that by 1931 the bread-eaters, the Caucasians, would have
to turn to other grains or restrict their population while the rice and millet eaters
of Asia would continue to increase. Sir William was laughed at then as a
sensationalist. He was, but his sensations were apt to prove true and it is already
evident that he was too near right for comfort. Before we were half way to the
date he set we had two wheatless days a week, though that was because we
persisted in shooting nitrates into the air. The area producing wheat was by
decades:[1]
THE WHEAT FIELDS OF THE WORLD
Acres
1881-90 192,000,000
1890-1900 211,000,000
1900-10 242,000,000
Probable limit 300,000,000
If 300,000,000 acres can be brought under cultivation for wheat and the average
yield raised to twenty bushels to the acre, that will give enough to feed a billion
people if they eat six bushels a year as do the English. Whether this maximum is
correct or not there is evidently some limit to the area which has suitable soil and
climate for growing wheat, so we are ultimately thrown back upon Crookes's
solution of the problem; that is, we must increase the yield per acre and this can
only be done by the use of fertilizers and especially by the fixation of
atmospheric nitrogen. Crookes estimated the average yield of wheat at 12.7
bushels to the acre, which is more than it is in the new lands of the United States,
Australia and Russia, but less than in Europe, where the soil is well fed. What
can be done to increase the yield may be seen from these figures:
The greatest gain was made in Germany and we see a reason for it in the fact
that the German importation of Chilean saltpeter was 55,000 tons in 1880 and
747,000 tons in 1913. In potatoes, too, Germany gets twice as big a crop from
the same ground as we do, 223 bushels per acre instead of our 113 bushels. But
the United States uses on the average only 28 pounds of fertilizer per acre, while
Europe uses 200.
It is clear that we cannot rely upon Chile, but make nitrates for ourselves as
Germany had to in war time. In the first chapter we considered the new methods
of fixing the free nitrogen from the air. But the fixation of nitrogen is a new
business in this country and our chief reliance so far has been the coke ovens.
When coal is heated in retorts or ovens for making coke or gas a lot of ammonia
comes off with the other products of decomposition and is caught in the sulfuric
acid used to wash the gas as ammonium sulfate. Our American coke-makers
have been in the habit of letting this escape into the air and consequently we
have been losing some 700,000 tons of ammonium salts every year, enough to
keep our land rich and give us all the explosives we should need. But now they
are reforming and putting in ovens that save the by-products such as ammonia
and coal tar, so in 1916 we got from this source 325,000 tons a year.
Courtesy of Scientific American.
Courtesy of Scientific American.
Consumption of potash for agricultural purposes in different countries
Germany had a natural monopoly of potash as Chile had a natural monopoly of
nitrates. The agriculture of Europe and America has been virtually dependent
upon these two sources of plant foods. Now when the world was cleft in twain
by the shock of August, 1914, the Allied Powers had the nitrates and the Central
Powers had the potash. If Germany had not had up her sleeve a new process for
making nitrates she could not long have carried on a war and doubtless would
not have ventured upon it. But the outside world had no such substitute for the
German potash salts and has not yet discovered one. Consequently the price of
potash in the United States jumped from $40 to $400 and the cost of food went
up with it. Even under the stimulus of prices ten times the normal and with
chemists searching furnace crannies and bad lands the United States was able to
scrape up less than 10,000 tons of potash in 1916, and this was barely enough to
satisfy our needs for two weeks!
What happened to potash when the war broke out. This diagram from the Journal
of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry of July, 1917, shows how the supply of
potassium muriate from Germany was shut off in 1914 and how its price rose.
What happened to potash when the war broke out. This diagram from the
Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry of July, 1917, shows how
the supply of potassium muriate from Germany was shut off in 1914 and
how its price rose.
Yet potash compounds are as cheap as dirt. Pick up a handful of gravel and you
will be able to find much of it feldspar or other mineral containing some ten per
cent. of potash. Unfortunately it is in combination with silica, which is harder to
break up than a trust.
But "constant washing wears away stones" and the potash that the metallurgist
finds too hard to extract in his hottest furnace is washed out in the course of time
through the dropping of the gentle rain from heaven. "All rivers run to the sea"
and so the sea gets salt, all sorts of salts, principally sodium chloride (our table
salt) and next magnesium, calcium and potassium chlorides or sulfates in this
order of abundance. But if we evaporate sea-water down to dryness all these are
left in a mix together and it is hard to sort them out. Only patient Nature has time
for it and she only did on a large scale in one place, that is at Stassfurt, Germany.
It seems that in the days when northwestern Prussia was undetermined whether it
should be sea or land it was flooded annually by sea-water. As this slowly
evaporated the dissolved salts crystallized out at the critical points, leaving beds
of various combinations. Each year there would be deposited three to five inches
of salts with a thin layer of calcium sulfate or gypsum on top. Counting these
annual layers, like the rings on a stump, we find that the Stassfurt beds were ten
thousand years in the making. They were first worked for their salt, common
salt, alone, but in 1837 the Prussian Government began prospecting for new and
deeper deposits and found, not the clean rock salt that they wanted, but bittern,
largely magnesium sulfate or Epsom salt, which is not at all nice for table use.
This stuff was first thrown away until it was realized that it was much more
valuable for the potash it contains than was the rock salt they were after. Then
the Germans began to purify the Stassfurt salts and market them throughout the
world. They contain from fifteen to twenty-five per cent. of magnesium chloride
mixed with magnesium chloride in "carnallite," with magnesium sulfate in
"kainite" and sodium chloride in "sylvinite." More than thirty thousand miners
and workmen are employed in the Stassfurt works. There are some seventy
distinct establishments engaged in the business, but they are in combination. In
fact they are compelled to be, for the German Government is as anxious to
promote trusts as the American Government is to prevent them. Once the
Stassfurt firms had a falling out and began a cutthroat competition. But the
German Government objects to its people cutting each other's throats. American
dealers were getting unheard of bargains when the German Government stepped
in and compelled the competing corporations to recombine under threat of
putting on an export duty that would eat up their profits.
The advantages of such business coöperation are specially shown in opening up
a new market for an unknown product as in the case of the introduction of the
Stassfurt salts into American agriculture. The farmer in any country is apt to be
set in his ways and when it comes to inducing him to spend his hard-earned
money for chemicals that he never heard of and could not pronounce he—quite
rightly—has to be shown. Well, he was shown. It was, if I remember right, early
in the nineties that the German Kali Syndikat began operations in America and
the United States Government became its chief advertising agent. In every state
there was an agricultural experiment station and these were provided liberally
with illustrated literature on Stassfurt salts with colored wall charts and sets of
samples and free sacks of salts for field experiments. The station men, finding
that they could rely upon the scientific accuracy of the information supplied by
Kali and that the experiments worked out well, became enthusiastic advocates of
potash fertilizers. The station bulletins—which Uncle Sam was kind enough to
carry free to all the farmers of the state—sometimes were worded so like the
Kali Company advertising that the company might have raised a complaint of
plagiarizing, but they never did. The Chilean nitrates, which are under British
control, were later introduced by similar methods through the agency of the state
agricultural experiment stations.
As a result of all this missionary work, which cost the Kali Company $50,000 a
year, the attention of a large proportion of American farmers was turned toward
intensive farming and they began to realize the necessity of feeding the soil that
was feeding them. They grew dependent upon these two foreign and widely
separated sources of supply. In the year before the war the United States
imported a million tons of Stassfurt salts, for which the farmers paid more than
$20,000,000. Then a declaration of American independence—the German
embargo of 1915—cut us off from Stassfurt and for five years we had to rely
upon our own resources. We have seen how Germany—shut off from Chile—
solved the nitrogen problem for her fields and munition plants. It was not so easy
for us—shut off from Germany—to solve the potash problem.
There is no more lack of potash in the rocks than there is of nitrogen in the air,
but the nitrogen is free and has only to be caught and combined, while the potash
is shut up in a granite prison from which it is hard to get it free. It is not the
percentage in the soil but the percentage in the soil water that counts. A farmer
with his potash locked up in silicates is like the merchant who has left the key of
his safe at home in his other trousers. He may be solvent, but he cannot meet a
sight draft. It is only solvent potash that passes current.
In the days of our grandfathers we had not only national independence but
household independence. Every homestead had its own potash plant and soap
factory. The frugal housewife dumped the maple wood ashes of the fireplace into
a hollow log set up on end in the backyard. Water poured over the ashes leached
out the lye, which drained into a bucket beneath. This gave her a solution of
pearl ash or potassium carbonate whose concentration she tested with an egg as a
hydrometer. In the meantime she had been saving up all the waste grease from
the frying pan and pork rinds from the plate and by trying out these she got her
soap fat. Then on a day set apart for this disagreeable process in chemical
technology she boiled the fat and the lye together and got "soft soap," or as the
chemist would call it, potassium stearate. If she wanted hard soap she "salted it
out" with brine. The sodium stearate being less soluble was precipitated to the
top and cooled into a solid cake that could be cut into bars by pack thread. But
the frugal housewife threw away in the waste water what we now consider the
most valuable ingredients, the potash and the glycerin.
But the old lye-leach is only to be found in ruins on an abandoned farm and we
no longer burn wood at the rate of a log a night. In 1916 even under the stimulus
of tenfold prices the amount of potash produced as pearl ash was only 412 tons
—and we need 300,000 tons in some form. It would, of course, be very desirable
as a conservation measure if all the sawdust and waste wood were utilized by
charring it in retorts. The gas makes a handy fuel. The tar washed from the gas
contains a lot of valuable products. And potash can be leached out of the
charcoal or from its ashes whenever it is burned. But this at best would not go
far toward solving the problem of our national supply.
There are other potash-bearing wastes that might be utilized. The cement mills
which use feldspar in combination with limestone give off a potash dust, very
much to the annoyance of their neighbors. This can be collected by running the
furnace clouds into large settling chambers or long flues, where the dust may be
caught in bags, or washed out by water sprays or thrown down by electricity.
The blast furnaces for iron also throw off potash-bearing fumes.
Our six-million-ton crop of sugar beets contains some 12,000 tons of nitrogen,
4000 tons of phosphoric acid and 18,000 tons of potash, all of which is lost
except where the waste liquors from the sugar factory are used in irrigating the
beet land. The beet molasses, after extracting all the sugar possible by means of
lime, leaves a waste liquor from which the potash can be recovered by
evaporation and charring and leaching the residue. The Germans get 5000 tons
of potassium cyanide and as much ammonium sulfate annually from the waste
liquor of their beet sugar factories and if it pays them to save this it ought to pay
us where potash is dearer. Various other industries can put in a bit when Uncle
Sam passes around the contribution basket marked "Potash for the Poor." Wool
wastes and fish refuse make valuable fertilizers, although they will not go far
toward solving the problem. If we saved all our potash by-products they would
not supply more than fifteen per cent. of our needs.
Though no potash beds comparable to those of Stassfurt have yet been
discovered in the United States, yet in Nebraska, Utah, California and other
western states there are a number of alkali lakes, wet or dry, containing a
considerable amount of potash mixed with soda salts. Of these deposits the
largest is Searles Lake, California. Here there are some twelve square miles of
salt crust some seventy feet deep and the brine as pumped out contains about
four per cent. of potassium chloride. The quantity is sufficient to supply the
country for over twenty years, but it is not an easy or cheap job to separate the
potassium from the sodium salts which are five times more abundant. These
being less soluble than the potassium salts crystallize out first when the brine is
evaporated. The final crystallization is done in vacuum pans as in getting sugar
from the cane juice. In this way the American Trona Corporation is producing
some 4500 tons of potash salts a month besides a thousand tons of borax. The
borax which is contained in the brine to the extent of 1-1/2 per cent. is removed
from the fertilizer for a double reason. It is salable by itself and it is detrimental
to plant life.
Another mineral source of potash is alunite, which is a sort of natural alum, or
double sulfate of potassium and aluminum, with about ten per cent. of potash. It
contains a lot of extra alumina, but after roasting in a kiln the potassium sulfate
can be leached out. The alunite beds near Marysville, Utah, were worked for all
they were worth during the war, but the process does not give potash cheap
enough for our needs in ordinary times.
Photo by International Film Service
Photo by International Film Service
IN ORDER TO SECURE A NEW SUPPLY OF POTASH SALTS
The United States Government set up an experimental plant at Sutherland,
California, for the utilization of kelp. The harvester cuts 40 tons of kelp at a
load.
THE KELP HARVESTER GATHERING THE SEAWEED FROM THE
PACIFIC OCEAN
THE KELP HARVESTER GATHERING THE SEAWEED FROM THE
PACIFIC OCEAN
Courtesy of Hercules Powder Co.
Courtesy of Hercules Powder Co.
OVERHEAD SUCTION AT THE SAN DIEGO WHARF PUMPING KELP
FROM THE BARGE TO THE DIGESTION TANKS
The tourist going through Wyoming on the Union Pacific will have to the north
of him what is marked on the map as the "Leucite Hills." If he looks up the word
in the Unabridged that he carries in his satchel he will find that leucite is a kind
of lava and that it contains potash. But he will also observe that the potash is
combined with alumina and silica, which are hard to get out and useless when
you get them out. One of the lavas of the Leucite Hills, that named from its
native state "Wyomingite," gives fifty-seven per cent. of its potash in a soluble
form on roasting with alunite—but this costs too much. The same may be said of
all the potash feldspars and mica. They are abundant enough, but until we find a
way of utilizing the by-products, say the silica in cement and the aluminum as a
metal, they cannot solve our problem.
Since it is so hard to get potash from the land it has been suggested that we
harvest the sea. The experts of the United States Department of Agriculture have
placed high hopes in the kelp or giant seaweed which floats in great masses in
the Pacific Ocean not far off from the California coast. This is harvested with
ocean reapers run by gasoline engines and brought in barges to the shore, where
it may be dried and used locally as a fertilizer or burned and the potassium
chloride leached out of the charcoal ashes. But it is hard to handle the bulky,
slimy seaweed cheaply enough to get out of it the small amount of potash it
contains. So efforts are now being made to get more out of the kelp than the
potash. Instead of burning the seaweed it is fermented in vats producing acetic
acid (vinegar). From the resulting liquid can be obtained lime acetate, potassium
chloride, potassium iodide, acetone, ethyl acetate (used as a solvent for
guncotton) and algin, a gelatin-like gum.
1916 1917
Tons Per cent. of total Tons Per cent. of total
Source
K2O production K2O production
Mineral sources:
Natural brines 3,994 41.1 20,652 63.4
Altmite 1,850 19.0 2,402 7.3
Dust from cement mills 1,621 5.0
Dust from blast furnaces 185 0.6
Organic Sources:
Kelp 1,556 16.0 3,752 10.9
Molasses residue from
1,845 19.0 2,846 8.8
distillers
Wood ashes 412 4.2 621 1.9
Waste liquors from beet-
369 1.1
sugar refineries
Miscellaneous industrial
63 .7 305 1.0
wastes
Total 9,720 100.0 32,573 100.0
If you put a bit of soft coal into a test tube (or, if you haven't a test tube, into a
clay tobacco pipe and lute it over with clay) and heat it you will find a gas
coming out of the end of the tube that will burn with a yellow smoky flame.
After all the gas comes off you will find in the bottom of the test tube a chunk of
dry, porous coke. These, then, are the two main products of the destructive
distillation of coal. But if you are an unusually observant person, that is, if you
are a born chemist with an eye to by-products, you will notice along in the
middle of the tube where it is neither too hot nor too cold some dirty drops of
water and some black sticky stuff. If you are just an ordinary person, you won't
pay any attention to this because there is only a little of it and because what you
are after is the coke and gas. You regard the nasty, smelly mess that comes in
between as merely a nuisance because it clogs up and spoils your nice, clean
tube.
Now that is the way the gas-makers and coke-makers—being for the most part
ordinary persons and not born chemists—used to regard the water and tar that
got into their pipes. They washed it out so as to have the gas clean and then ran it
into the creek. But the neighbors—especially those who fished in the stream
below the gas-works—made a fuss about spoiling the water, so the gas-men gave
away the tar to the boys for use in celebrating the Fourth of July and election
night or sold it for roofing.
THE PRODUCTION OF COAL TAR
THE PRODUCTION OF COAL TAR
A battery of Koppers by-product coke-ovens at the plant of the Bethlehem
Steel Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland. The coke is being pushed out of
one of the ovens into the waiting car. The vapors given off from the coal
contain ammonia and the benzene compound used to make dyes and
explosives.
IN THESE MIXING VATS AT THE BUFFALO WORKS, ANILINE DYES
ARE PREPARED
IN THESE MIXING VATS AT THE BUFFALO WORKS, ANILINE DYES
ARE PREPARED
But this same tar, which for a hundred years was thrown away and nearly half of
which is thrown away yet in the United States, turns out to be one of the most
useful things in the world. It is one of the strategic points in war and commerce.
It wounds and heals. It supplies munitions and medicines. It is like the magic
purse of Fortunatus from which anything wished for could be drawn. The
chemist puts his hand into the black mass and draws out all the colors of the
rainbow. This evil-smelling substance beats the rose in the production of
perfume and surpasses the honey-comb in sweetness.
Bishop Berkeley, after having proved that all matter was in your mind, wrote a
book to prove that wood tar would cure all diseases. Nobody reads it now. The
name is enough to frighten them off: "Siris: A Chain of Philosophical
Reflections and Inquiries Concerning the Virtues of Tar Water." He had a sort of
mystical idea that tar contained the quintessence of the forest, the purified spirit
of the trees, which could somehow revive the spirit of man. People said he was
crazy on the subject, and doubtless he was, but the interesting thing about it is
that not even his active and ingenious imagination could begin to suggest all of
the strange things that can be got out of tar, whether wood or coal.
The reason why tar supplies all sorts of useful material is because it is indeed the
quintessence of the forest, of the forests of untold millenniums if it is coal tar. If
you are acquainted with a village tinker, one of those all-round mechanics who
still survive in this age of specialization and can mend anything from a baby-
carriage to an automobile, you will know that he has on the floor of his back
shop a heap of broken machinery from which he can get almost anything he
wants, a copper wire, a zinc plate, a brass screw or a steel rod. Now coal tar is
the scrap-heap of the vegetable kingdom. It contains a little of almost everything
that makes up trees. But you must not imagine that all that comes out of coal tar
is contained in it. There are only about a dozen primary products extracted from
coal tar, but from these the chemist is able to build up hundreds of thousands of
new substances. This is true creative chemistry, for most of these compounds are
not to be found in plants and never existed before they were made in the
laboratory. It used to be thought that organic compounds, the products of
vegetable and animal life, could only be produced by organized beings, that they
were created out of inorganic matter by the magic touch of some "vital
principle." But since the chemist has learned how, he finds it easier to make
organic than inorganic substances and he is confident that he can reproduce any
compound that he can analyze. He cannot only imitate the manufacturing
processes of the plants and animals, but he can often beat them at their own
game.
When coal is heated in the open air it is burned up and nothing but the ashes is
left. But heat the coal in an enclosed vessel, say a big fireclay retort, and it
cannot burn up because the oxygen of the air cannot get to it. So it breaks up. All
parts of it that can be volatized at a high heat pass off through the outlet pipe and
nothing is left in the retort but coke, that is carbon with the ash it contains. When
the escaping vapors reach a cool part of the outlet pipe the oily and tarry matter
condenses out. Then the gas is passed up through a tower down which water
spray is falling and thus is washed free from ammonia and everything else that is
soluble in water.
This process is called "destructive distillation." What products come off depends
not only upon the composition of the particular variety of coal used, but upon the
heat, pressure and rapidity of distillation. The way you run it depends upon what
you are most anxious to have. If you want illuminating gas you will leave in it
the benzene. If you are after the greatest yield of tar products, you impoverish
the gas by taking out the benzene and get a blue instead of a bright yellow flame.
If all you are after is cheap coke, you do not bother about the by-products, but let
them escape and burn as they please. The tourist passing across the coal region
at night could see through his car window the flames of hundreds of old-
fashioned bee-hive coke-ovens and if he were of economical mind he might
reflect that this display of fireworks was costing the country $75,000,000 a year
besides consuming the irreplaceable fuel supply of the future. But since the gas
was not needed outside of the cities and since the coal tar, if it could be sold at
all, brought only a cent or two a gallon, how could the coke-makers be expected
to throw out their old bee-hive ovens and put in the expensive retorts and towers
necessary to the recovery of the by-products? But within the last ten years the
by-product ovens have come into use and now nearly half our coke is made in
them.
Although the products of destructive distillation vary within wide limits, yet the
following table may serve to give an approximate idea of what may be got from
a ton of soft coal:
1 ton of coal may give
Gas, 12,000 cubic feet
Liquor (Washings) ammonium sulfate (7-25 pounds)
Tar (120 pounds) benzene (10-20 pounds)
toluene (3 pounds)
xylene (1-1/2 pounds)
phenol (1/2 pound)
naphthalene (3/8 pound)
anthracene (1/4 pound)
pitch (80 pounds)
Coke (1200-1500 pounds)
When the tar is redistilled we get, among other things, the ten "crudes" which are
fundamental material for making dyes. Their names are: benzene, toluene,
xylene, phenol, cresol, naphthalene, anthracene, methyl anthracene,
phenanthrene and carbazol.
There! I had to introduce you to the whole receiving line, but now that that
ceremony is over we are at liberty to do as we do at a reception, meet our old
friends, get acquainted with one or two more and turn our backs on the rest. Two
of them, I am sure, you've met before, phenol, which is common carbolic acid,
and naphthalene, which we use for mothballs. But notice one thing in passing,
that not one of them is a dye. They are all colorless liquids or white solids. Also
they all have an indescribable odor—all odors that you don't know are
indescribable—which gives them and their progeny, even when odorless, the
name of "aromatic compounds."
Fig. 8. Diagram of the products obtained from coal and some of their uses.
Fig. 8. Diagram of the products obtained from coal and some of their uses.
The most important of the ten because he is the father of the family is benzene,
otherwise called benzol, but must not be confused with "benzine" spelled with an
i which we used to burn and clean our clothes with. "Benzine" is a kind of
gasoline, but benzene alias benzol has quite another constitution, although it
looks and burns the same. Now the search for the constitution of benzene is one
of the most exciting chapters in chemistry; also one of the most intricate
chapters, but, in spite of that, I believe I can make the main point of it clear even
to those who have never studied chemistry—provided they retain their childish
liking for puzzles. It is really much like putting together the old six-block
Chinese puzzle. The chemist can work better if he has a picture of what he is
working with. Now his unit is the molecule, which is too small even to analyze
with the microscope, no matter how high powered. So he makes up a sort of
diagram of the molecule, and since he knows the number of atoms and that they
are somehow attached to one another, he represents each atom by the first letter
of its name and the points of attachment or bonds by straight lines connecting the
atoms of the different elements. Now it is one of the rules of the game that all the
bonds must be connected or hooked up with atoms at both ends, that there shall
be no free hands reaching out into empty space. Carbon, for instance, has four
bonds and hydrogen only one. They unite, therefore, in the proportion of one
atom of carbon to four of hydrogen, or CH4, which is methane or marsh gas and
obviously the simplest of the hydrocarbons. But we have more complex
hydrocarbons such as C6H14, known as hexane. Now if you try to draw the
diagrams or structural formulas of these two compounds you will easily get
H HHH H H H
| | | | | | |
H-C-H H-C-C-C-C-C-C-H
| | | | | | |
H HHH H H H
methane hexane
Each carbon atom, you see, has its four hands outstretched and duly grasped by
one-handed hydrogen atoms or by neighboring carbon atoms in the chain. We
can have such chains as long as you please, thirty or more in a chain; they are all
contained in kerosene and paraffin.
So far the chemist found it east to construct diagrams that would satisfy his sense
of the fitness of things, but when he found that benzene had the compostion
C6H6 he was puzzled. If you try to draw the picture of C 6H6 you will get
something like this:
| | | | | |
-C-C-C-C-C-C-
| | | | | |
HHH H H H
which is an absurdity because more than half of the carbon hands are waving
wildly around asking to be held by something. Benzene, C 6H6, evidently is like
hexane, C6H14, in having a chain of six carbon atoms, but it has dropped its H's
like an Englishman. Eight of the H's are missing.
Now one of the men who was worried over this benzene puzzle was the German
chemist, Kekulé. One evening after working over the problem all day he was
sitting by the fire trying to rest, but he could not throw it off his mind. The
carbon and the hydrogen atoms danced like imps on the carpet and as he
watched them through his half-closed eyes he suddenly saw that the chain of six
carbon atoms had joined at the ends and formed a ring while the six hydrogen
atoms were holding on to the outside hands, in this fashion:
H
|
C
/ \\
H-C C-H
|| |
H-C C-H
\ //
C
|
H
Professor Kekulé saw at once that the demons of his subconscious self had
furnished him with a clue to the labyrinth, and so it proved. We need not suppose
that the benzene molecule if we could see it would look anything like this
diagram of it, but the theory works and that is all the scientist asks of any theory.
By its use thousands of new compounds have been constructed which have
proved of inestimable value to man. The modern chemist is not a discoverer, he
is an inventor. He sits down at his desk and draws a "Kekulé ring" or rather
hexagon. Then he rubs out an H and hooks a nitro group (NO2) on to the carbon
in place of it; next he rubs out the O2 of the nitro group and puts in H2; then he
hitches on such other elements, or carbon chains and rings as he likes. He works
like an architect designing a house and when he gets a picture of the proposed
compounds to suit him he goes into the laboratory to make it. First he takes
down the bottle of benzene and boils up some of this with nitric acid and sulfuric
acid. This he puts in the nitro group and makes nitro-benzene, C6H5NO2. He
treats this with hydrogen, which displaces the oxygen and gives C6H5NH2 or
aniline, which is the basis of so many of these compounds that they are all
commonly called "the aniline dyes." But aniline itself is not a dye. It is a
colorless or brownish oil.
It is not necessary to follow our chemist any farther now that we have seen how
he works, but before we pass on we will just look at one of his products, not one
of the most complicated but still complicated enough.
The primitive man got his living out of such wild plants and animals as he could
find. Next he, or more likely his wife, began to cultivate the plants and tame the
animals so as to insure a constant supply. This was the first step toward
civilization, for when men had to settle down in a community (civitas) they had
to ameliorate their manners and make laws protecting land and property. In this
settled and orderly life the plants and animals improved as well as man and
returned a hundredfold for the pains that their master had taken in their training.
But still man was dependent upon the chance bounties of nature. He could select,
but he could not invent. He could cultivate, but he could not create. If he wanted
sugar he had to send to the West Indies. If he wanted spices he had to send to the
East Indies. If he wanted indigo he had to send to India. If he wanted a febrifuge
he had to send to Peru. If he wanted a fertilizer he had to send to Chile. If he
wanted rubber he had to send to the Congo. If he wanted rubies he had to send to
Mandalay. If he wanted otto of roses he had to send to Turkey. Man was not yet
master of his environment.
This period of cultivation, the second stage of civilization, began before the
dawn of history and lasted until recent times. We might almost say up to the
twentieth century, for it was not until the fundamental laws of heredity were
discovered that man could originate new species of plants and animals according
to a predetermined plan by combining such characteristics as he desired to
perpetuate. And it was not until the fundamental laws of chemistry were
discovered that man could originate new compounds more suitable to his
purpose than any to be found in nature. Since the progress of mankind is
continuous it is impossible to draw a date line, unless a very jagged one, along
the frontier of human culture, but it is evident that we are just entering upon the
third era of evolution in which man will make what he needs instead of trying to
find it somewhere. The new epoch has hardly dawned, yet already a man may
stay at home in New York or London and make his own rubber and rubies, his
own indigo and otto of roses. More than this, he can make gems and colors and
perfumes that never existed since time began. The man of science has signed a
declaration of independence of the lower world and we are now in the midst of
the revolution.
Our eyes are dazzled by the dawn of the new era. We know what the hunter and
the horticulturist have already done for man, but we cannot imagine what the
chemist can do. If we look ahead through the eyes of one of the greatest of
French chemists, Berthelot, this is what we shall see:
The problem of food is a chemical problem. Whenever energy can be obtained
economically we can begin to make all kinds of aliment, with carbon borrowed
from carbonic acid, hydrogen taken from the water and oxygen and nitrogen
drawn from the air.... The day will come when each person will carry for his
nourishment his little nitrogenous tablet, his pat of fatty matter, his package of
starch or sugar, his vial of aromatic spices suited to his personal taste; all
manufactured economically and in unlimited quantities; all independent of
irregular seasons, drought and rain, of the heat that withers the plant and of the
frost that blights the fruit; all free from pathogenic microbes, the origin of
epidemics and the enemies of human life. On that day chemistry will have
accomplished a world-wide revolution that cannot be estimated. There will no
longer be hills covered with vineyards and fields filled with cattle. Man will gain
in gentleness and morality because he will cease to live by the carnage and
destruction of living creatures.... The earth will be covered with grass, flowers
and woods and in it the human race will dwell in the abundance and joy of the
legendary age of gold—provided that a spiritual chemistry has been discovered
that changes the nature of man as profoundly as our chemistry transforms
material nature.
But this is looking so far into the future that we can trust no man's eyesight, not
even Berthelot's. There is apparently no impossibility about the manufacture of
synthetic food, but at present there is no apparent probability of it. There is no
likelihood that the laboratory will ever rival the wheat field. The cornstalk will
always be able to work cheaper than the chemist in the manufacture of starch.
But in rarer and choicer products of nature the chemist has proved his ability to
compete and even to excel.
What have been from the dawn of history to the rise of synthetic chemistry the
most costly products of nature? What could tempt a merchant to brave the perils
of a caravan journey over the deserts of Asia beset with Arab robbers? What
induced the Portuguese and Spanish mariners to risk their frail barks on perilous
waters of the Cape of Good Hope or the Horn? The chief prizes were perfumes,
spices, drugs and gems. And why these rather than what now constitutes the bulk
of oversea and overland commerce? Because they were precious, portable and
imperishable. If the merchant got back safe after a year or two with a little flask
of otto of roses, a package of camphor and a few pearls concealed in his
garments his fortune was made. If a single ship of the argosy sent out from
Lisbon came back with a load of sandalwood, indigo or nutmeg it was regarded
as a successful venture. You know from reading the Bible, or if not that, from
your reading of Arabian Nights, that a few grains of frankincense or a few drops
of perfumed oil were regarded as gifts worthy the acceptance of a king or a god.
These products of the Orient were equally in demand by the toilet and the
temple. The unctorium was an adjunct of the Roman bathroom. Kings had to be
greased and fumigated before they were thought fit to sit upon a throne. There
was a theory, not yet altogether extinct, that medicines brought from a distance
were most efficacious, especially if, besides being expensive, they tasted bad
like myrrh or smelled bad like asafetida. And if these failed to save the princely
patient he was embalmed in aromatics or, as we now call them, antiseptics of the
benzene series.
Today, as always, men are willing to pay high for the titillation of the senses of
smell and taste. The African savage will trade off an ivory tusk for a piece of
soap reeking with synthetic musk. The clubman will pay $10 for a bottle of wine
which consists mostly of water with about ten per cent. of alcohol, worth a cent
or two, but contains an unweighable amount of the "bouquet" that can only be
produced on the sunny slopes of Champagne or in the valley of the Rhine. But
very likely the reader is quite as extravagant, for when one buys the natural
violet perfumery he is paying at the rate of more than $10,000 a pound for the
odoriferous oil it contains; the rest is mere water and alcohol. But you would not
want the pure undiluted oil if you could get it, for it is unendurable. A single
whiff of it paralyzes your sense of smell for a time just as a loud noise deafens
you.
Of the five senses, three are physical and two chemical. By touch we discern
pressures and surface textures. By hearing we receive impressions of certain air
waves and by sight of certain ether waves. But smell and taste lead us to the
heart of the molecule and enable us to tell how the atoms are put together. These
twin senses stand like sentries at the portals of the body, where they closely
scrutinize everything that enters. Sounds and sights may be disagreeable, but
they are never fatal. A man can live in a boiler factory or in a cubist art gallery,
but he cannot live in a room containing hydrogen sulfide. Since it is more
important to be warned of danger than guided to delights our senses are made
more sensitive to pain than pleasure. We can detect by the smell one two-
millionth of a milligram of oil of roses or musk, but we can detect one two-
billionth of a milligram of mercaptan, which is the vilest smelling compound
that man has so far invented. If you do not know how much a milligram is
consider a drop picked up by the point of a needle and imagine that divided into
two billion parts. Also try to estimate the weight of the odorous particles that
guide a dog to the fox or warn a deer of the presence of man. The unaided nostril
can rival the spectroscope in the detection and analysis of unweighable amounts
of matter.
What we call flavor or savor is a joint effect of taste and odor in which the latter
predominates. There are only four tastes of importance, acid, alkaline, bitter and
sweet. The acid, or sour taste, is the perception of hydrogen atoms charged with
positive electricity. The alkaline, or soapy taste, is the perception of hydroxyl
radicles charged with negative electricity. The bitter and sweet tastes and all the
odors depend upon the chemical constitution of the compound, but the laws of
the relation have not yet been worked out. Since these sense organs, the taste and
smell buds, are sunk in the moist mucous membrane they can only be touched by
substances soluble in water, and to reach the sense of smell they must also be
volatile so as to be diffused in the air inhaled by the nose. The "taste" of food is
mostly due to the volatile odors of it that creep up the back-stairs into the
olfactory chamber.
A chemist given an unknown substance would have to make an elementary
analysis and some tedious tests to determine whether it contained methyl or ethyl
groups, whether it was an aldehyde or an ester, whether the carbon atoms were
singly or doubly linked and whether it was an open chain or closed. But let him
get a whiff of it and he can give instantly a pretty shrewd guess as to these
points. His nose knows.
Although the chemist does not yet know enough to tell for certain from looking
at the structural formula what sort of odor the compound would have or whether
it would have any, yet we can divide odoriferous substances into classes
according to their constitution. What are commonly known as "fruity" odors
belong mostly to what the chemist calls the fatty or aliphatic series. For instance,
we may have in a ripe fruit an alcohol (say ethyl or common alcohol) and an acid
(say acetic or vinegar) and a combination of these, the ester or organic salt (in
this case ethyl acetate), which is more odorous than either of its components.
These esters of the fatty acids give the characteristic savor to many of our
favorite fruits, candies and beverages. The pear flavor, amyl acetate, is made
from acetic acid and amyl alcohol—though amyl alcohol (fusel oil) has a
detestable smell. Pineapple is ethyl butyrate—but the acid part of it (butyric
acid) is what gives Limburger cheese its aroma. These essential oils are easily
made in the laboratory, but cannot be extracted from the fruit for separate use.
If the carbon chain contains one or more double linkages we get the "flowery"
perfumes. For instance, here is the symbol of geraniol, the chief ingredient of
otto of roses:
(CH3)2C = CHCH2CH2C(CH3)2 = CHCH2OH
The rose would smell as sweet under another name, but it may be questioned
whether it would stand being called by the name of dimethyl-2-6-octadiene-2-6-
ol-8. Geraniol by oxidation goes into the aldehyde, citral, which occurs in
lemons, oranges and verbena flowers. Another compound of this group, linalool,
is found in lavender, bergamot and many flowers.
Geraniol, as you would see if you drew up its structural formula in the way I
described in the last chapter, contains a chain of six carbon atoms, that is, the
same number as make a benzene ring. Now if we shake up geraniol and other
compounds of this group (the diolefines) with diluted sulfuric acid the carbon
chain hooks up to form a benzene ring, but with the other carbon atoms stretched
across it; rather too complicated to depict here. These "bridged rings" of the
formula C5H8, or some multiple of that, constitute the important group of the
terpenes which occur in turpentine and such wild and woodsy things as sage,
lavender, caraway, pine needles and eucalyptus. Going further in this direction
we are led into the realm of the heavy oriental odors, patchouli, sandalwood,
cedar, cubebs, ginger and camphor. Camphor can now be made directly from
turpentine so we may be independent of Formosa and Borneo.
When we have a six carbon ring without double linkings (cyclo-aliphatic) or
with one or two such, we get soft and delicate perfumes like the violet (ionone
and irone). But when these pass into the benzene ring with its three double
linkages the odor becomes more powerful and so characteristic that the name
"aromatic compound" has been extended to the entire class of benzene
derivatives, although many of them are odorless. The essential oils of jasmine,
orange blossoms, musk, heliotrope, tuberose, ylang ylang, etc., consist mostly of
this class and can be made from the common source of aromatic compounds,
coal tar.
The synthetic flavors and perfumes are made in the same way as the dyes by
starting with some coal-tar product or other crude material and building up the
molecule to the desired complexity. For instance, let us start with phenol, the ill-
smelling and poisonous carbolic acid of disagreeable associations and evil fame.
Treat this to soda-water and it is transformed into salicylic acid, a white odorless
powder, used as a preservative and as a rheumatism remedy. Add to this methyl
alcohol which is obtained by the destructive distillation of wood and is much
more poisonous than ordinary ethyl alcohol. The alcohol and the acid heated
together will unite with the aid of a little sulfuric acid and we get what the
chemist calls methyl salicylate and other people call oil of wintergreen, the same
as is found in wintergreen berries and birch bark. We have inherited a taste for
this from our pioneer ancestors and we use it extensively to flavor our soft
drinks, gum, tooth paste and candy, but the Europeans have not yet found out
how nice it is.
But, starting with phenol again, let us heat it with caustic alkali and chloroform.
This gives us two new compounds of the same composition, but differing a little
in the order of the atoms. If you refer back to the diagram of the benzene ring
which I gave in the last chapter, you will see that there are six hydrogen atoms
attached to it. Now any or all these hydrogen atoms may be replaced by other
elements or groups and what the product is depends not only on what the new
elements are, but where they are put. It is like spelling words. The three letters t,
r and a mean very different things according to whether they are put together as
art, tar or rat. Or, to take a more apposite illustration, every hostess knows that
the success of her dinner depends upon how she seats her guests around the
table. So in the case of aromatic compounds, a little difference in the seating
arrangement around the benzene ring changes the character. The two derivatives
of phenol, which we are now considering, have two substituting groups. One is
—O-H (called the hydroxyl group). The other is—CHO (called the aldehyde
group). If these are opposite (called the para position) we have an odorless white
solid. If they are side by side (called the ortho position) we have an oil with the
odor of meadowsweet. Treating the odorless solid with methyl alcohol we get
audepine (or anisic aldehyde) which is the perfume of hawthorn blossoms. But
treating the other of the twin products, the fragrant oil, with dry acetic acid
("Perkin's reaction") we get cumarin, which is the perfume part of the tonka or
tonquin beans that our forefathers used to carry in their snuff boxes. One ounce
of cumarin is equal to four pounds of tonka beans. It smells sufficiently like
vanilla to be used as a substitute for it in cheap extracts. In perfumery it is
known as "new mown hay."
You may remember what I said on a former page about the career of William
Henry Perkin, the boy who loved chemistry better than eating, and how he
discovered the coal-tar dyes. Well, it is also to his ingenious mind that we owe
the starting of the coal-tar perfume business which has had almost as important a
development. Perkin made cumarin in 1868, but this, like the dye industry,
escaped from English hands and flew over the North Sea. Before the war
Germany was exporting $1,500,000 worth of synthetic perfumes a year. Part of
these went to France, where they were mixed and put up in fancy bottles with
French names and sold to Americans at fancy prices.
The real vanilla flavor, vanillin, was made by Tiemann in 1874. At first it sold
for nearly $800 a pound, but now it may be had for $10. How extensively it is
now used in chocolate, ice cream, soda water, cakes and the like we all know. It
should be noted that cumarin and vanillin, however they may be made, are not
imitations, but identical with the chief constituent of the tonka and vanilla beans
and, of course, are equally wholesome or harmless. But the nice palate can
distinguish a richer flavor in the natural extracts, for they contain small
quantities of other savory ingredients.
A true perfume consists of a large number of odoriferous chemical compounds
mixed in such proportions as to produce a single harmonious effect upon the
sense of smell in a fine brand of perfume may be compounded a dozen or twenty
different ingredients and these, if they are natural essences, are complex
mixtures of a dozen or so distinct substances. Perfumery is one of the fine arts.
The perfumer, like the orchestra leader, must know how to combine and
coördinate his instruments to produce a desired sensation. A Wagnerian opera
requires 103 musicians. A Strauss opera requires 112. Now if the concert
manager wants to economize he will insist upon cutting down on the most
expensive musicians and dropping out some of the others, say, the
supernumerary violinists and the man who blows a single blast or tinkles a
triangle once in the course of the evening. Only the trained ear will detect the
difference and the manager can make more money.
Suppose our mercenary impresario were unable to get into the concert hall of his
famous rival. He would then listen outside the window and analyze the sound in
this fashion: "Fifty per cent. of the sound is made by the tuba, 20 per cent. by the
bass drum, 15 per cent. by the 'cello and 10 per cent. by the clarinet. There are
some other instruments, but they are not loud and I guess if we can leave them
out nobody will know the difference." So he makes up his orchestra out of these
four alone and many people do not know the difference.
The cheap perfumer goes about it in the same way. He analyzes, for instance, the
otto or oil of roses which cost during the war $400 a pound—if you could get it
at any price—and he finds that the chief ingredient is geraniol, costing only $5,
and next is citronelol, costing $20; then comes nerol and others. So he makes up
a cheap brand of perfumery out of three or four such compounds. But the
genuine oil of roses, like other natural essences, contains a dozen or more
constituents and to leave many of them out is like reducing an orchestra to a few
loud-sounding instruments or a painting to a three-color print. A few years ago
an attempt was made to make music electrically by producing separately each
kind of sound vibration contained in the instruments imitated. Theoretically that
seems easy, but practically the tone was not satisfactory because the tones and
overtones of a full orchestra or even of a single violin are too numerous and
complex to be reproduced individually. So the synthetic perfumes have not
driven out the natural perfumes, but, on the contrary, have aided and stimulated
the growth of flowers for essences. The otto or attar of roses, favorite of the
Persian monarchs and romances, has in recent years come chiefly from Bulgaria.
But wars are not made with rosewater and the Bulgars for the last five years
have been engaged in other business than cultivating their own gardens. The
alembic or still was invented by the Arabian alchemists for the purpose of
obtaining the essential oil or attar of roses. But distillation, even with the aid of
steam, is not altogether satisfactory. For instance, the distilled rose oil contains
anywhere from 10 to 74 per cent. of a paraffin wax (stearopten) that is odorless
and, on the other hand, phenyl-ethyl alcohol, which is an important constituent
of the scent of roses, is broken up in the process of distillation. So the perfumer
can improve on the natural or rather the distilled oil by leaving out part of the
paraffin and adding the missing alcohol. Even the imported article taken direct
from the still is not always genuine, for the wily Bulgar sometimes "increases the
yield" by sprinkling his roses in the vat with synthetic geraniol just as the wily
Italian pours a barrel of American cottonseed oil over his olives in the press.
Another method of extracting the scent of flowers is by enfleurage, which takes
advantage of the tendency of fats to absorb odors. You know how butter set
beside fish in the ice box will get a fishy flavor. In enfleurage moist air is carried
up a tower passing alternately over trays of fresh flowers, say violets, and over
glass plates covered with a thin layer of lard. The perfumed lard may then be
used as a pomade or the perfume may be extracted by alcohol.
But many sweet flowers do not readily yield an essential oil, so in such oases we
have to rely altogether upon more or less successful substitutes. For instance, the
perfumes sold under the names of "heliotrope," "lily of the valley," "lilac,"
"cyclamen," "honeysuckle," "sweet pea," "arbutus," "mayflower" and
"magnolia" are not produced from these flowers but are simply imitations made
from other essences, synthetic or natural. Among the "thousand flowers" that
contribute to the "Eau de Mille Fleurs" are the civet cat, the musk deer and the
sperm whale. Some of the published formulas for "Jockey Club" call for civet or
ambergris and those of "Lavender Water" for musk and civet. The less said about
the origin of these three animal perfumes the better. Fortunately they are
becoming too expensive to use and are being displaced by synthetic products
more agreeable to a refined imagination. The musk deer may now be saved from
extinction since we can make tri-nitro-butyl-xylene from coal tar. This synthetic
musk passes muster to human nostrils, but a cat will turn up her nose at it. The
synthetic musk is not only much cheaper than the natural, but a dozen times as
strong, or let us say, goes a dozen times as far, for nobody wants it any stronger.
Such powerful scents as these are only pleasant when highly diluted, yet they
are, as we have seen, essential ingredients of the finest perfumes. For instance,
the natural oil of jasmine and other flowers contain traces of indols and skatols
which have most disgusting odors. Though our olfactory organs cannot detect
their presence yet we perceive their absence so they have to be put into the
artificial perfume. Just so a brief but violent discord in a piece of music or a
glaring color contrast in a painting may be necessary to the harmony of the
whole.
It is absurd to object to "artificial" perfumes, for practically all perfumes now
sold are artificial in the sense of being compounded by the art of the perfumer
and whether the materials he uses are derived from the flowers of yesteryear or
of Carboniferous Era is nobody's business but his. And he does not tell. The
materials can be purchased in the open market. Various recipes can be found in
the books. But every famous perfumer guards well the secret of his formulas and
hands it as a legacy to his posterity. The ancient Roman family of Frangipani has
been made immortal by one such hereditary recipe. The Farina family still
claims to have the exclusive knowledge of how to make Eau de Cologne. This
famous perfume was first compounded by an Italian, Giovanni Maria Farina,
who came to Cologne in 1709. It soon became fashionable and was for a time
the only scent allowed at some of the German courts. The various published
recipes contain from six to a dozen ingredients, chiefly the oils of neroli,
rosemary, bergamot, lemon and lavender dissolved in very pure alcohol and
allowed to age like wine. The invention, in 1895, of artificial neroli (orange
flowers) has improved the product.
French perfumery, like the German, had its origin in Italy, when Catherine de'
Medici came to Paris as the bride of Henri II. She brought with her, among other
artists, her perfumer, Sieur Toubarelli, who established himself in the flowery
land of Grasse. Here for four hundred years the industry has remained rooted and
the family formulas have been handed down from generation to generation. In
the city of Grasse there were at the outbreak of the war fifty establishments
making perfumes. The French perfumer does not confine himself to a single
sense. He appeals as well to sight and sound and association. He adds to the
attractiveness of his creation by a quaintly shaped bottle, an artistic box and an
enticing name such as "Dans les Nues," "Le Coeur de Jeannette," "Nuit de
Chine," "Un Air Embaumé," "Le Vertige," "Bon Vieux Temps," "L'Heure
Bleue," "Nuit d'Amour," "Quelques Fleurs," "Djer-Kiss."
The requirements of a successful scent are very strict. A perfume must be
lasting, but not strong. All its ingredients must continue to evaporate in the same
proportion, otherwise it will change odor and deteriorate. Scents kill one another
as colors do. The minutest trace of some impurity or foreign odor may spoil the
whole effect. To mix the ingredients in a vessel of any metal but aluminum or
even to filter through a tin funnel is likely to impair the perfume. The
odoriferous compounds are very sensitive and unstable bodies, otherwise they
would have no effect upon the olfactory organ. The combination that would be
suitable for a toilet water would not be good for a talcum powder and might
spoil in a soap. Perfumery is used even in the "scentless" powders and soaps. In
fact it is now used more extensively, if less intensively, than ever before in the
history of the world. During the Unwashed Ages, commonly called the Dark
Ages, between the destruction of the Roman baths and the construction of the
modern bathroom, the art of the perfumer, like all the fine arts, suffered an
eclipse. "The odor of sanctity" was in highest esteem and what that odor was
may be imagined from reading the lives of the saints. But in the course of
centuries the refinements of life began to seep back into Europe from the East by
means of the Arabs and Crusaders, and chemistry, then chiefly the art of
cosmetics, began to revive. When science, the greatest democratizing agent on
earth, got into action it elevated the poor to the ranks of kings and priests in the
delights of the palate and the nose. We should not despise these delights, for the
pleasure they confer is greater, in amount at least, than that of the so-called
higher senses. We eat three times a day; some of us drink oftener; few of us visit
the concert hall or the art gallery as often as we do the dining room. Then, too,
these primitive senses have a stronger influence upon our emotional nature than
those acquired later in the course of evolution. As Kipling puts it:
Smells are surer than sounds or sights
To make your heart-strings crack.
VI
CELLULOSE
Organic compounds, on which our life and living depend, consist chiefly of four
elements: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. These compounds are
sometimes hard to analyze, but when once the chemist has ascertained their
constitution he can usually make them out of their elements—if he wants to. He
will not want to do it as a business unless it pays and it will not pay unless the
manufacturing process is cheaper than the natural process. This depends
primarily upon the cost of the crude materials. What, then, is the market price of
these four elements? Oxygen and nitrogen are free as air, and as we have seen in
the second chapter, their direct combination by the electric spark is possible.
Hydrogen is free in the form of water but expensive to extricate by means of the
electric current. But we need more carbon than anything else and where shall we
get that? Bits of crystallized carbon can be picked up in South Africa and
elsewhere, but those who can afford to buy them prefer to wear them rather than
use them in making synthetic food. Graphite is rare and hard to melt. We must
then have recourse to the compounds of carbon. The simplest of these, carbon
dioxide, exists in the air but only four parts in ten thousand by volume. To
extract the carbon and get it into combination with the other elements would be a
difficult and expensive process. Here, then, we must call in cheap labor, the
cheapest of all laborers, the plants. Pine trees on the highlands and cotton plants
on the lowlands keep their green traps set all the day long and with the captured
carbon dioxide build up cellulose. If, then, man wants free carbon he can best get
it by charring wood in a kiln or digging up that which has been charred in
nature's kiln during the Carboniferous Era. But there is no reason why he should
want to go back to elemental carbon when he can have it already combined with
hydrogen in the remains of modern or fossil vegetation. The synthetic products
on which modern chemistry prides itself, such as vanillin, camphor and rubber,
are not built up out of their elements, C, H and O, although they might be as a
laboratory stunt. Instead of that the raw material of the organic chemist is chiefly
cellulose, or the products of its recent or remote destructive distillation, tar and
oil.
It is unnecessary to tell the reader what cellulose is since he now holds a
specimen of it in his hand, pretty pure cellulose except for the sizing and the
specks of carbon that mar the whiteness of its surface. This utilization of
cellulose is the chief cause of the difference between the modern world and the
ancient, for what is called the invention of printing is essentially the inventing of
paper. The Romans made type to stamp their coins and lead pipes with and if
they had had paper to print upon the world might have escaped the Dark Ages.
But the clay tablets of the Babylonians were cumbersome; the wax tablets of the
Greeks were perishable; the papyrus of the Egyptians was fragile; parchment
was expensive and penning was slow, so it was not until literature was put on a
paper basis that democratic education became possible. At the present time
sheepskin is only used for diplomas, treaties and other antiquated documents.
And even if your diploma is written in Latin it is likely to be made of sulfated
cellulose.
The textile industry has followed the same law of development that I have
indicated in the other industries. Here again we find the three stages of progress,
(1) utilization of natural products, (2) cultivation of natural products, (3)
manufacture of artificial products. The ancients were dependent upon plants,
animals and insects for their fibers. China used silk, Greece and Rome used
wool, Egypt used flax and India used cotton. In the course of cultivation for
three thousand years the animal and vegetable fibers were lengthened and
strengthened and cheapened. But at last man has risen to the level of the worm
and can spin threads to suit himself. He can now rival the wasp in the making of
paper. He is no longer dependent upon the flax and the cotton plant, but grinds
up trees to get his cellulose. A New York newspaper uses up nearly 2000 acres of
forest a year. The United States grinds up about five million cords of wood a
year in the manufacture of pulp for paper and other purposes.
In making "mechanical pulp" the blocks of wood, mostly spruce and hemlock,
are simply pressed sidewise of the grain against wet grindstones. But in wood
fiber the cellulose is in part combined with lignin, which is worse than useless.
To break up the ligno-cellulose combine chemicals are used. The logs for this are
not ground fine, but cut up by disk chippers. The chips are digested for several
hours under heat and pressure with acid or alkali. There are three processes in
vogue. In the most common process the reagent is calcium sulfite, made by
passing sulfur fumes (SO2) into lime water. In another process a solution of
caustic of soda is used to disintegrate the wood. The third, known as the
"sulfate" process, should rather be called the sulfide process since the active
agent is an alkaline solution of sodium sulfide made by roasting sodium sulfate
with the carbonaceous matter extracted from the wood. This sulfate process,
though the most recent of the three, is being increasingly employed in this
country, for by means of it the resinous pine wood of the South can be worked
up and the final product, known as kraft paper because it is strong, is used for
wrapping.
But whatever the process we get nearly pure cellulose which, as you can see by
examining this page under a microscope, consists of a tangled web of thin white
fibers, the remains of the original cell walls. Owing to the severe treatment it has
undergone wood pulp paper does not last so long as the linen rag paper used by
our ancestors. The pages of the newspapers, magazines and books printed
nowadays are likely to become brown and brittle in a few years, no great loss for
the most part since they have served their purpose, though it is a pity that a few
copies of the worst of them could not be printed on permanent paper for
preservation in libraries so that future generations could congratulate themselves
on their progress in civilization.
But in our absorption in the printed page we must not forget the other uses of
paper. The paper clothing, so often prophesied, has not yet arrived. Even paper
collars have gone out of fashion—if they ever were in. In Germany during the
war paper was used for socks, shirts and shoes as well as handkerchiefs and
napkins but it could not stand wear and washing. Our sanitary engineers have set
us to drinking out of sharp-edged paper cups and we blot our faces instead of
wiping them. Twine is spun of paper and furniture made of the twine, a rival of
rattan. Cloth and matting woven of paper yarn are being used for burlap and
grass in the making of bags and suitcases.
Here, however, we are not so much interested in manufactures of cellulose itself,
that is, wood, paper and cotton, as we are in its chemical derivatives. Cellulose,
as we can see from the symbol, C 6H10O5, is composed of the three elements of
carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. These are present in the same proportion as in
starch (C6H10O5), while glucose or grape sugar (C 6H12O6) has one molecule of
water more. But glucose is soluble in cold water and starch is soluble in hot,
while cellulose is soluble in neither. Consequently cellulose cannot serve us for
food, although some of the vegetarian animals, notably the goat, have a digestive
apparatus that can handle it. In Finland and Germany birch wood pulp and straw
were used not only as an ingredient of cattle food but also put into war bread. It
is not likely, however, that the human stomach even under the pressure of famine
is able to get much nutriment out of sawdust. But by digesting with dilute acid
sawdust can be transformed into sugars and these by fermentation into alcohol,
so it would be possible for a man after he has read his morning paper to get
drunk on it.
If the cellulose, instead of being digested a long time in dilute acid, is dipped
into a solution of sulfuric acid (50 to 80 per cent.) and then washed and dried it
acquires a hard, tough and translucent coating that makes it water-proof and
grease-proof. This is the "parchment paper" that has largely replaced sheepskin.
Strong alkali has a similar effect to strong acid. In 1844 John Mercer, a
Lancashire calico printer, discovered that by passing cotton cloth or yarn through
a cold 30 per cent. solution of caustic soda the fiber is shortened and
strengthened. For over forty years little attention was paid to this discovery, but
when it was found that if the material was stretched so that it could not shrink on
drying the twisted ribbons of the cotton fiber were changed into smooth-walled
cylinders like silk, the process came into general use and nowadays much that
passes for silk is "mercerized" cotton.
Another step was taken when Cross of London discovered that when the
mercerized cotton was treated with carbon disulfide it was dissolved to a yellow
liquid. This liquid contains the cellulose in solution as a cellulose xanthate and
on acidifying or heating the cellulose is recovered in a hydrated form. If this
yellow solution of cellulose is squirted out of tubes through extremely minute
holes into acidulated water, each tiny stream becomes instantly solidified into a
silky thread which may be spun and woven like that ejected from the spinneret
of the silkworm. The origin of natural silk, if we think about it, rather detracts
from the pleasure of wearing it, and if "he who needlessly sets foot upon a
worm" is to be avoided as a friend we must hope that the advance of the artificial
silk industry will be rapid enough to relieve us of the necessity of boiling
thousands of baby worms in their cradles whenever we want silk stockings.
On a plain rush hurdle a silkworm lay
When a proud young princess came that way.
The haughty daughter of a lordly king
Threw a sidelong glance at the humble thing,
Little thinking she walked in pride
In the winding sheet where the silkworm died.
But so far we have not reached a stage where we can altogether dispense with
the services of the silkworm. The viscose threads made by the process look as
well as silk, but they are not so strong, especially when wet.
Besides the viscose method there are several other methods of getting cellulose
into solution so that artificial fibers may be made from it. A strong solution of
zinc chloride will serve and this process used to be employed for making the
threads to be charred into carbon filaments for incandescent bulbs. Cellulose is
also soluble in an ammoniacal solution of copper hydroxide. The liquid thus
formed is squirted through a fine nozzle into a precipitating solution of caustic
soda and glucose, which brings back the cellulose to its original form.
In the chapter on explosives I explained how cellulose treated with nitric acid in
the presence of sulfuric acid was nitrated. The cellulose molecule having three
hydroxyl (—OH) groups, can take up one, two or three nitrate groups (—ONO2).
The higher nitrates are known as guncotton and form the basis of modern
dynamite and smokeless powder. The lower nitrates, known as pyroxylin, are
less explosive, although still very inflammable. All these nitrates are, like the
original cellulose, insoluble in water, but unlike the original cellulose, soluble in
a mixture of ether and alcohol. The solution is called collodion and is now in
common use to spread a new skin over a wound. The great war might be traced
back to Nobel's cut finger. Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemist—and a pacifist.
One day while working in the laboratory he cut his finger, as chemists are apt to
do, and, again as chemists are apt to do, he dissolved some guncotton in ether-
alcohol and swabbed it on the wound. At this point, however, his conduct
diverges from the ordinary, for instead of standing idle, impatiently waving his
hand in the air to dry the film as most people, including chemists, are apt to do,
he put his mind on it and it occurred to him that this sticky stuff, slowly
hardening to an elastic mass, might be just the thing he was hunting as an
absorbent and solidifier of nitroglycerin. So instead of throwing away the extra
collodion that he had made he mixed it with nitroglycerin and found that it set to
a jelly. The "blasting gelatin" thus discovered proved to be so insensitive to
shock that it could be safely transported or fired from a cannon. This was the
first of the high explosives that have been the chief factor in modern warfare.
But on the whole, collodion has healed more wounds than it has caused besides
being of infinite service to mankind otherwise. It has made modern photography
possible, for the film we use in the camera and moving picture projector consists
of a gelatin coating on a pyroxylin backing. If collodion is forced through fine
glass tubes instead of through a slit, it comes out a thread instead of a film. If the
collodion jet is run into a vat of cold water the ether and alcohol dissolve; if it is
run into a chamber of warm air they evaporate. The thread of nitrated cellulose
may be rendered less inflammable by taking out the nitrate groups by treatment
with ammonium or calcium sulfide. This restores the original cellulose, but now
it is an endless thread of any desired thickness, whereas the native fiber was in
size and length adapted to the needs of the cottonseed instead of the needs of
man. The old motto, "If you want a thing done the way you want it you must do
it yourself," explains why the chemist has been called in to supplement the work
of nature in catering to human wants.
Instead of nitric acid we may use strong acetic acid to dissolve the cotton. The
resulting cellulose acetates are less inflammable than the nitrates, but they are
more brittle and more expensive. Motion picture films made from them can be
used in any hall without the necessity of imprisoning the operator in a fire-proof
box where if anything happens he can burn up all by himself without disturbing
the audience. The cellulose acetates are being used for auto goggles and gas
masks as well as for windows in leather curtains and transparent coverings for
index cards. A new use that has lately become important is the varnishing of
aeroplane wings, as it does not readily absorb water or catch fire and makes the
cloth taut and air-tight. Aeroplane wings can be made of cellulose acetate sheets
as transparent as those of a dragon-fly and not easy to see against the sky.
The nitrates, sulfates and acetates are the salts or esters of the respective acids,
but recently true ethers or oxides of cellulose have been prepared that may prove
still better since they contain no acid radicle and are neutral and stable.
These are in brief the chief processes for making what is commonly but quite
improperly called "artificial silk." They are not the same substance as silkworm
silk and ought not to be—though they sometimes are—sold as such. They are
none of them as strong as the silk fiber when wet, although if I should venture to
say which of the various makes weakens the most on wetting I should get myself
into trouble. I will only say that if you have a grudge against some fisherman
give him a fly line of artificial silk, 'most any kind.
The nitrate process was discovered by Count Hilaire de Chardonnet while he
was at the Polytechnic School of Paris, and he devoted his life and his fortune
trying to perfect it. Samples of the artificial silk were exhibited at the Paris
Exposition in 1889 and two years later he started a factory at Basançon. In 1892,
Cross and Bevan, English chemists, discovered the viscose or xanthate process,
and later the acetate process. But although all four of these processes were
invented in France and England, Germany reaped most benefit from the new
industry, which was bringing into that country $6,000,000 a year before the war.
The largest producer in the world was the Vereinigte Glanzstoff-Fabriken of
Elberfeld, which was paying annual dividends of 34 per cent. in 1914.
The raw materials, as may be seen, are cheap and abundant, merely cellulose,
salt, sulfur, carbon, air and water. Any kind of cellulose can be used, cotton
waste, rags, paper, or even wood pulp. The processes are various, the names of
the products are numerous and the uses are innumerable. Even the most
inattentive must have noticed the widespread employment of these new forms of
cellulose. We can buy from a street barrow for fifteen cents near-silk neckties
that look as well as those sold for seventy-five. As for wear—well, they all of
them wear till after we get tired of wearing them. Paper "vulcanized" by being
run through a 30 per cent. solution of zinc chloride and subjected to hydraulic
pressure comes out hard and horny and may be used for trunks and suit cases.
Viscose tubes for sausage containers are more sanitary and appetizing than the
customary casings. Viscose replaces ramie or cotton in the Welsbach gas
mantles. Viscose film, transparent and a thousandth of an inch thick
(cellophane), serves for candy wrappers. Cellulose acetate cylinders spun out of
larger orifices than silk are trying—not very successfully as yet—to compete
with hog's bristles and horsehair. Stir powdered metals into the cellulose solution
and you have the Bayko yarn. Bayko (from the manufacturers, Farbenfabriken
vorm. Friedr. Bayer and Company) is one of those telescoped names like
Socony, Nylic, Fominco, Alco, Ropeco, Ripans, Penn-Yan, Anzac, Dagor, Dora
and Cadets, which will be the despair of future philologers.
A PAPER MILL IN ACTION
A PAPER MILL IN ACTION
This photograph was taken in the barking room of the big pulp mill of the
Great Northern Paper Company at Millinocket, Maine
CELLULOSE FROM WOOD PULP
CELLULOSE FROM WOOD PULP
This is now made into a large variety of useful articles of which a few
examples are here pictured
Soluble cellulose may enable us in time to dispense with the weaver as well as
the silkworm. It may by one operation give us fabrics instead of threads. A
machine has been invented for manufacturing net and lace, the liquid material
being poured on one side of a roller and the fabric being reeled off on the other
side. The process seems capable of indefinite extension and application to
various sorts of woven, knit and reticulated goods. The raw material is cotton
waste and the finished fabric is a good substitute for silk. As in the process of
making artificial silk the cellulose is dissolved in a cupro-ammoniacal solution,
but instead of being forced out through minute openings to form threads, as in
that process, the paste is allowed to flow upon a revolving cylinder which is
engraved with the pattern of the desired textile. A scraper removes the excess
and the turning of the cylinder brings the paste in the engraved lines down into a
bath which solidifies it.
Tulle or net is now what is chiefly being turned out, but the engraved design may
be as elaborate and artistic as desired, and various materials can be used. Since
the threads wherever they cross are united, the fabric is naturally stronger than
the ordinary. It is all of a piece and not composed of parts. In short, we seem to
be on the eve of a revolution in textiles that is the same as that taking place in
building materials. Our concrete structures, however great, are all one stone.
They are not built up out of blocks, but cast as a whole.
Lace has always been the aristocrat among textiles. It has maintained its
exclusiveness hitherto by being based upon hand labor. In no other way could
one get so much painful, patient toil put into such a light and portable form. A
filmy thing twined about a neck or dropping from a wrist represented years of
work by poor peasant girls or pallid, unpaid nuns. A visit to a lace factory, even
to the public rooms where the wornout women were not to be seen, is enough to
make one resolve never to purchase any such thing made by hand again. But our
good resolutions do not last long and in time we forget the strained eyes and
bowed backs, or, what is worse, value our bit of lace all the more because it
means that some poor woman has put her life and health into it, netting and
weaving, purling and knotting, twining and twisting, throwing and drawing,
thread by thread, day after day, until her eyes can no longer see and her fingers
have become stiffened.
But man is not naturally cruel. He does not really enjoy being a slave driver,
either of human or animal slaves, although he can be hardened to it with
shocking ease if there seems no other way of getting what he wants. So he
usually welcomes that Great Liberator, the Machine. He prefers to drive the
tireless engine than to whip the straining horses. He had rather see the farmer
riding at ease in a mowing machine than bending his back over a scythe.
The Machine is not only the Great Liberator, it is the Great Leveler also. It is the
most powerful of the forces for democracy. An aristocracy can hardly be
maintained except by distinction in dress, and distinction in dress can only be
maintained by sumptuary laws or costliness. Sumptuary laws are
unconstitutional in this country, hence the stress laid upon costliness. But
machinery tends to bring styles and fabrics within the reach of all. The shopgirl
is almost as well dressed on the street as her rich customer. The man who buys
ready-made clothing is only a few weeks behind the vanguard of the fashion.
There is often no difference perceptible to the ordinary eye between cheap and
high-priced clothing once the price tag is off. Jewels as a portable form of
concentrated costliness have been in favor from the earliest ages, but now they
are losing their factitious value through the advance of invention. Rubies of
unprecedented size, not imitation, but genuine rubies, can now be manufactured
at reasonable rates. And now we may hope that lace may soon be within the
reach of all, not merely lace of the established forms, but new and more varied
and intricate and beautiful designs, such as the imagination has been able to
conceive, but the hand cannot execute.
Dissolving nitrocellulose in ether and alcohol we get the collodion varnish that
we are all familiar with since we have used it on our cut fingers. Spread it on
cloth instead of your skin and it makes a very good leather substitute. As we all
know to our cost the number of animals to be skinned has not increased so
rapidly in recent years as the number of feet to be shod. After having gone
barefoot for a million years or so the majority of mankind have decided to wear
shoes and this change in fashion comes at a time, roughly speaking, when
pasture land is getting scarce. Also there are books to be bound and other new
things to be done for which leather is needed. The war has intensified the
stringency; so has feminine fashion. The conventions require that the shoe-tops
extend nearly to skirt-bottom and this means that an inch or so must be added to
the shoe-top every year. Consequent to this rise in leather we have to pay as
much for one shoe as we used to pay for a pair.
Here, then, is a chance for Necessity to exercise her maternal function. And she
has responded nobly. A progeny of new substances have been brought forth and,
what is most encouraging to see, they are no longer trying to worm their way
into favor as surreptitious surrogates under the names of "leatheret," "leatherine,"
"leatheroid" and "leather-this-or-that" but come out boldly under names of their
own coinage and declare themselves not an imitation, not even a substitute, but
"better than leather." This policy has had the curious result of compelling the
cowhide men to take full pages in the magazines to call attention to the forgotten
virtues of good old-fashioned sole-leather! There are now upon the market
synthetic shoes that a vegetarian could wear with a clear conscience. The soles
are made of some rubber composition; the uppers of cellulose fabric (canvas)
coated with a cellulose solution such as I have described.
Each firm keeps its own process for such substance a dead secret, but without
prying into these we can learn enough to satisfy our legitimate curiosity. The
first of the artificial fabrics was the old-fashioned and still indispensable oil-
cloth, that is canvas painted or printed with linseed oil carrying the desired
pigments. Linseed oil belongs to the class of compounds that the chemist calls
"unsaturated" and the psychologist would call "unsatisfied." They take up
oxygen from the air and become solid, hence are called the "drying oils,"
although this does not mean that they lose water, for they have not any to lose.
Later, ground cork was mixed with the linseed oil and then it went by its Latin
name, "linoleum."
The next step was to cut loose altogether from the natural oils and use for the
varnish a solution of some of the cellulose esters, usually the nitrate (pyroxylin
or guncotton), more rarely the acetate. As a solvent the ether-alcohol mixture
forming collodion was, as we have seen, the first to be employed, but now
various other solvents are in use, among them castor oil, methyl alcohol,
acetone, and the acetates of amyl or ethyl. Some of these will be recognized as
belonging to the fruit essences that we considered in Chapter V, and doubtless
most of us have perceived an odor as of over-ripe pears, bananas or apples
mysteriously emanating from a newly lacquered radiator. With powdered bronze,
imitation gold, aluminum or something of the kind a metallic finish can be put
on any surface.
Canvas coated or impregnated with such soluble cellulose gives us new flexible
and durable fabrics that have other advantages over leather besides being
cheaper and more abundant. Without such material for curtains and cushions the
automobile business would have been sorely hampered. It promises to provide us
with a book binding that will not crumble to powder in the course of twenty
years. Linen collars may be water-proofed and possibly Dame Fashion—being a
fickle lady—may some day relent and let us wear such sanitary and economical
neckwear. For shoes, purses, belts and the like the cellulose varnish or veneer is
usually colored and stamped to resemble the grain of any kind of leather desired,
even snake or alligator.
If instead of dissolving the cellulose nitrate and spreading it on fabric we
combine it with camphor we get celluloid, a plastic solid capable of innumerable
applications. But that is another story and must be reserved for the next chapter.
But before leaving the subject of cellulose proper I must refer back again to its
chief source, wood. We inherited from the Indians a well-wooded continent. But
the pioneer carried an ax on his shoulder and began using it immediately. For
three hundred years the trees have been cut down faster than they could grow,
first to clear the land, next for fuel, then for lumber and lastly for paper.
Consequently we are within sight of a shortage of wood as we are of coal and
oil. But the coal and oil are irrecoverable while the wood may be regrown,
though it would require another three hundred years and more to grow some of
the trees we have cut down. For fuel a pound of coal is about equal to two
pounds of wood, and a pound of gasoline to three pounds of wood in heating
value, so there would be a great loss in efficiency and economy if the world had
to go back to a wood basis. But when that time shall come, as, of course, it must
come some time, the wood will doubtless not be burned in its natural state but
will be converted into hydrogen and carbon monoxide in a gas producer or will
be distilled in closed ovens giving charcoal and gas and saving the by-products,
the tar and acid liquors. As it is now the lumberman wastes two-thirds of every
tree he cuts down. The rest is left in the forest as stump and tops or thrown out at
the mill as sawdust and slabs. The slabs and other scraps may be used as fuel or
worked up into small wood articles like laths and clothes-pins. The sawdust is
burned or left to rot. But it is possible, although it may not be profitable, to save
all this waste.
In a former chapter I showed the advantages of the introduction of by-product
coke-ovens. The same principle applies to wood as to coal. If a cord of wood
(128 cubic feet) is subjected to a process of destructive distillation it yields about
50 bushels of charcoal, 11,500 cubic feet of gas, 25 gallons of tar, 10 gallons of
crude wood alcohol and 200 pounds of crude acetate of lime. Resinous woods
such as pine and fir distilled with steam give turpentine and rosin. The acetate of
lime gives acetic acid and acetone. The wood (methyl) alcohol is almost as
useful as grain (ethyl) alcohol in arts and industry and has the advantage of
killing off those who drink it promptly instead of slowly.
The chemist is an economical soul. He is never content until he has converted
every kind of waste product into some kind of profitable by-product. He now has
his glittering eye fixed upon the mountains of sawdust that pile up about the
lumber mills. He also has a notion that he can beat lumber for some purposes.
VII
SYNTHETIC PLASTICS
In the last chapter I told how Alfred Nobel cut his finger and, daubing it over
with collodion, was led to the discovery of high explosive, dynamite. I remarked
that the first part of this process—the hurting and the healing of the finger—
might happen to anybody but not everybody would be led to discovery thereby.
That is true enough, but we must not think that the Swedish chemist was the only
observant man in the world. About this same time a young man in Albany,
named John Wesley Hyatt, got a sore finger and resorted to the same remedy and
was led to as great a discovery. His father was a blacksmith and his education
was confined to what he could get at the seminary of Eddytown, New York,
before he was sixteen. At that age he set out for the West to make his fortune. He
made it, but after a long, hard struggle. His trade of typesetter gave him a living
in Illinois, New York or wherever he wanted to go, but he was not content with
his wages or his hours. However, he did not strike to reduce his hours or increase
his wages. On the contrary, he increased his working time and used it to increase
his income. He spent his nights and Sundays in making billiard balls, not at all
the sort of thing you would expect of a young man of his Christian name. But
working with billiard balls is more profitable than playing with them—though
that is not the sort of thing you would expect a man of my surname to say. Hyatt
had seen in the papers an offer of a prize of $10,000 for the discovery of a
satisfactory substitute for ivory in the making of billiard balls and he set out to
get that prize. I don't know whether he ever got it or not, but I have in my hand a
newly published circular announcing that Mr. Hyatt has now perfected a process
for making billiard balls "better than ivory." Meantime he has turned out several
hundred other inventions, many of them much more useful and profitable, but I
imagine that he takes less satisfaction in any of them than he does in having
solved the problem that he undertook fifty years ago.
The reason for the prize was that the game on the billiard table was getting more
popular and the game in the African jungle was getting scarcer, especially
elephants having tusks more than 2-7/16 inches in diameter. The raising of
elephants is not an industry that promises as quick returns as raising chickens or
Belgian hares. To make a ball having exactly the weight, color and resiliency to
which billiard players have become accustomed seemed an impossibility. Hyatt
tried compressed wood, but while he did not succeed in making billiard balls he
did build up a profitable business in stamped checkers and dominoes.
Setting type in the way they did it in the sixties was hard on the hands. And if
the skin got worn thin or broken the dirty lead type were liable to infect the
fingers. One day in 1863 Hyatt, finding his fingers were getting raw, went to the
cupboard where was kept the "liquid cuticle" used by the printers. But when he
got there he found it was bare, for the vial had tipped over—you know how
easily they tip over—and the collodion had run out and solidified on the shelf.
Possibly Hyatt was annoyed, but if so he did not waste time raging around the
office to find out who tipped over that bottle. Instead he pulled off from the
wood a bit of the dried film as big as his thumb nail and examined it with that
"'satiable curtiosity," as Kipling calls it, which is characteristic of the born
inventor. He found it tough and elastic and it occurred to him that it might be
worth $10,000. It turned out to be worth many times that.
Collodion, as I have explained in previous chapters, is a solution in ether and
alcohol of guncotton (otherwise known as pyroxylin or nitrocellulose), which is
made by the action of nitric acid on cotton. Hyatt tried mixing the collodion with
ivory powder, also using it to cover balls of the necessary weight and solidity,
but they did not work very well and besides were explosive. A Colorado saloon
keeper wrote in to complain that one of the billiard players had touched a ball
with a lighted cigar, which set it off and every man in the room had drawn his
gun.
The trouble with the dissolved guncotton was that it could not be molded. It did
not swell up and set; it merely dried up and shrunk. When the solvent evaporated
it left a wrinkled, shriveled, horny film, satisfactory to the surgeon but not to the
man who wanted to make balls and hairpins and knife handles out of it. In
England Alexander Parkes began working on the problem in 1855 and stuck to it
for ten years before he, or rather his backers, gave up. He tried mixing in various
things to stiffen up the pyroxylin. Of these, camphor, which he tried in 1865,
worked the best, but since he used castor oil to soften the mass articles made of
"parkesine" did not hold up in all weathers.
Another Englishman, Daniel Spill, an associate of Parkes, took up the problem
where he had dropped it and turned out a better product, "xylonite," though still
sticking to the idea that castor oil was necessary to get the two solids, the
guncotton and the camphor, together.
But Hyatt, hearing that camphor could be used and not knowing enough about
what others had done to follow their false trails, simply mixed his camphor and
guncotton together without any solvent and put the mixture in a hot press. The
two solids dissolved one another and when the press was opened there was a
clear, solid, homogeneous block of—what he named—"celluloid." The problem
was solved and in the simplest imaginable way. Tissue paper, that is, cellulose, is
treated with nitric acid in the presence of sulfuric acid. The nitration is not
carried so far as to produce the guncotton used in explosives but only far enough
to make a soluble nitrocellulose or pyroxylin. This is pulped and mixed with half
the quantity of camphor, pressed into cakes and dried. If this mixture is put into
steam-heated molds and subjected to hydraulic pressure it takes any desired
form. The process remains essentially the same as was worked out by the Hyatt
brothers in the factory they set up in Newark in 1872 and some of their original
machines are still in use. But this protean plastic takes innumerable forms and
almost as many names. Each factory has its own secrets and lays claim to
peculiar merits. The fundamental product itself is not patented, so trade names
are copyrighted to protect the product. I have already mentioned three,
"parkesine," "xylonite" and "celluloid," and I may add, without exhausting the
list of species belonging to this genus, "viscoloid," "lithoxyl," "fiberloid,"
"coraline," "eburite," "pulveroid," "ivorine," "pergamoid," "duroid," "ivortus,"
"crystalloid," "transparene," "litnoid," "petroid," "pasbosene," "cellonite" and
"pyralin."
Celluloid can be given any color or colors by mixing in aniline dyes or metallic
pigments. The color may be confined to the surface or to the interior or pervade
the whole. If the nitrated tissue paper is bleached the celluloid is transparent or
colorless. In that case it is necessary to add an antacid such as urea to prevent its
getting yellow or opaque. To make it opaque and less inflammable oxides or
chlorides of zinc, aluminum, magnesium, etc., are mixed in.
Without going into the question of their variations and relative merits we may
consider the advantages of the pyroxylin plastics in general. Here we have a new
substance, the product of the creative genius of man, and therefore adaptable to
his needs. It is hard but light, tough but elastic, easily made and tolerably cheap.
Heated to the boiling point of water it becomes soft and flexible. It can be
turned, carved, ground, polished, bent, pressed, stamped, molded or blown. To
make a block of any desired size simply pile up the sheets and put them in a hot
press. To get sheets of any desired thickness, simply shave them off the block.
To make a tube of any desired size, shape or thickness squirt out the mixture
through a ring-shaped hole or roll the sheets around a hot bar. Cut the tube into
sections and you have rings to be shaped and stamped into box bodies or napkin
rings. Print words or pictures on a celluloid sheet, put a thin transparent sheet
over it and weld them together, then you have something like the horn book of
our ancestors, but better.
Nowadays such things as celluloid and pyralin can be sold under their own
name, but in the early days the artificial plastics, like every new thing, had to
resort to camouflage, a very humiliating expedient since in some cases they were
better than the material they were forced to imitate. Tortoise shell, for instance,
cracks, splits and twists, but a "tortoise shell" comb of celluloid looks as well
and lasts better. Horn articles are limited to size of the ceratinous appendages
that can be borne on the animal's head, but an imitation of horn can be made of
any thickness by wrapping celluloid sheets about a cone. Ivory, which also has a
laminated structure, may be imitated by rolling together alternate white opaque
and colorless translucent sheets. Some of the sheets are wrinkled in order to
produce the knots and irregularities of the grain of natural ivory. Man's chief
difficulty in all such work is to imitate the imperfections of nature. His whites
are too white, his surfaces are too smooth, his shapes are too regular, his
products are too pure.
The precious red coral of the Mediterranean can be perfectly imitated by taking a
cast of a coral branch and filling in the mold with celluloid of the same color and
hardness. The clear luster of amber, the dead black of ebony, the cloudiness of
onyx, the opalescence of alabaster, the glow of carnelian—once confined to the
selfish enjoyment of the rich—are now within the reach of every one, thanks to
this chameleon material. Mosaics may be multiplied indefinitely by laying
together sheets and sticks of celluloid, suitably cut and colored to make up the
picture, fusing the mass, and then shaving off thin layers from the end. That chef
d'œuvre of the Venetian glass makers, the Battle of Isus, from the House of the
Faun in Pompeii, can be reproduced as fast as the machine can shave them off
the block. And the tesserae do not fall out like those you bought on the Rialto.
The process thus does for mosaics, ivory and coral what printing does for
pictures. It is a mechanical multiplier and only by such means can we ever attain
to a state of democratic luxury. The product, in cases where the imitation is
accurate, is equally valuable except to those who delight in thinking that coral
insects, Italian craftsmen and elephants have been laboring for years to put a
trinket into their hands. The Lord may be trusted to deal with such selfish souls
according to their deserts.
But it is very low praise for a synthetic product that it can pass itself off, more or
less acceptably, as a natural product. If that is all we could do without it. It must
be an improvement in some respects on anything to be found in nature or it does
not represent a real advance. So celluloid and its congeners are not confined to
the shapes of shell and coral and crystal, or to the grain of ivory and wood and
horn, the colors of amber and amethyst and lapis lazuli, but can be given forms
and textures and tints that were never known before 1869.
Let me see now, have I mentioned all the uses of celluloid? Oh, no, there are
handles for canes, umbrellas, mirrors and brushes, knives, whistles, toys, blown
animals, card cases, chains, charms, brooches, badges, bracelets, rings, book
bindings, hairpins, campaign buttons, cuff and collar buttons, cuffs, collars and
dickies, tags, cups, knobs, paper cutters, picture frames, chessmen, pool balls,
ping pong balls, piano keys, dental plates, masks for disfigured faces,
penholders, eyeglass frames, goggles, playing cards—and you can carry on the
list as far as you like.
Celluloid has its disadvantages. You may mold, you may color the stuff as you
will, the scent of the camphor will cling around it still. This is not usually
objectionable except where the celluloid is trying to pass itself off for something
else, in which case it deserves no sympathy. It is attacked and dissolved by hot
acids and alkalies. It softens up when heated, which is handy in shaping it
though not so desirable afterward. But the worst of its failings is its
combustibility. It is not explosive, but it takes fire from a flame and burns
furiously with clouds of black smoke.
But celluloid is only one of many plastic substances that have been introduced to
the present generation. A new and important group of them is now being opened
up, the so-called "condensation products." If you will take down any old volume
of chemical research you will find occasionally words to this effect: "The
reaction resulted in nothing but an insoluble resin which was not further
investigated." Such a passage would be marked with a tear if chemists were
given to crying over their failures. For it is the epitaph of a buried hope. It likely
meant the loss of months of labor. The reason the chemist did not do anything
further with the gummy stuff that stuck up his test tube was because he did not
know what to do with it. It could not be dissolved, it could not be crystallized, it
could not be distilled, therefore it could not be purified, analyzed and identified.
What had happened was in most cases this. The molecule of the compound that
the chemist was trying to make had combined with others of its kind to form a
molecule too big to be managed by such means. Financiers call the process a
"merger." Chemists call it "polymerization." The resin was a molecular trust,
indissoluble, uncontrollable and contaminating everything it touched.
But chemists—like governments—have learned wisdom in recent years. They
have not yet discovered in all cases how to undo the process of polymerization,
or, if you prefer the financial phrase, how to unscramble the eggs. But they have
found that these molecular mergers are very useful things in their way. For
instance there is a liquid known as isoprene (C5H8). This on heating or standing
turns into a gum, that is nothing less than rubber, which is some multiple of
C5H8.
But formaldehyde is so insatiate that it not only combines with itself but seizes
upon other substances, particularly those having an acquisitive nature like its
own. Such a substance is carbolic acid (phenol) which, as we all know, is used as
a disinfectant like formaldehyde because it, too, has the power of attacking
decomposable organic matter. Now Prof. Adolf von Baeyer discovered in 1872
that when phenol and formaldehyde were brought into contact they seized upon
one another and formed a combine of unusual tenacity, that is, a resin. But as I
have said, chemists in those days were shy of resins. Kleeberg in 1891 tried to
make something out of it and W.H. Story in 1895 went so far as to name the
product "resinite," but nothing came of it until 1909 when L.H. Baekeland
undertook a serious and systematic study of this reaction in New York.
Baekeland was a Belgian chemist, born at Ghent in 1863 and professor at
Bruges. While a student at Ghent he took up photography as a hobby and began
to work on the problem of doing away with the dark-room by producing a
printing paper that could be developed under ordinary light. When he came over
to America in 1889 he brought his idea with him and four years later turned out
"Velox," with which doubtless the reader is familiar. Velox was never patented
because, as Dr. Baekeland explained in his speech of acceptance of the Perkin
medal from the chemists of America, lawsuits are too expensive. Manufacturers
seem to be coming generally to the opinion that a synthetic name copyrighted as
a trademark affords better protection than a patent.
Later Dr. Baekeland turned his attention to the phenol condensation products,
working gradually up from test tubes to ton vats according to his motto: "Make
your mistakes on a small scale and your profits on a large scale." He found that
when equal weights of phenol and formaldehyde were mixed and warmed in the
presence of an alkaline catalytic agent the solution separated into two layers, the
upper aqueous and the lower a resinous precipitate. This resin was soft, viscous
and soluble in alcohol or acetone. But if it was heated under pressure it changed
into another and a new kind of resin that was hard, inelastic, unplastic, infusible
and insoluble. The chemical name of this product is "polymerized oxybenzyl
methylene glycol anhydride," but nobody calls it that, not even chemists. It is
called "Bakelite" after its inventor.
The two stages in its preparation are convenient in many ways. For instance,
porous wood may be soaked in the soft resin and then by heat and pressure it is
changed to the bakelite form and the wood comes out with a hard finish that may
be given the brilliant polish of Japanese lacquer. Paper, cardboard, cloth, wood
pulp, sawdust, asbestos and the like may be impregnated with the resin,
producing tough and hard material suitable for various purposes. Brass work
painted with it and then baked at 300° F. acquires a lacquered surface that is
unaffected by soap. Forced in powder or sheet form into molds under a pressure
of 1200 to 2000 pounds to the square inch it takes the most delicate impressions.
Billiard balls of bakelite are claimed to be better than ivory because, having no
grain, they do not swell unequally with heat and humidity and so lose their
sphericity. Pipestems and beads of bakelite have the clear brilliancy of amber
and greater strength. Fountain pens made of it are transparent so you can see
how much ink you have left. A new and enlarging field for bakelite and allied
products is the making of noiseless gears for automobiles and other machinery,
also of air-plane propellers.
Celluloid is more plastic and elastic than bakelite. It is therefore more easily
worked in sheets and small objects. Celluloid can be made perfectly transparent
and colorless while bakelite is confined to the range between a clear amber and
an opaque brown or black. On the other hand bakelite has the advantage in being
tasteless, odorless, inert, insoluble and non-inflammable. This last quality and its
high electrical resistance give bakelite its chief field of usefulness. Electricity
was discovered by the Greeks, who found that amber (electron) when rubbed
would pick up straws. This means simply that amber, like all such resinous
substances, natural or artificial, is a non-conductor or di-electric and does not
carry off and scatter the electricity collected on the surface by the friction.
Bakelite is used in its liquid form for impregnating coils to keep the wires from
shortcircuiting and in its solid form for commutators, magnetos, switch blocks,
distributors, and all sorts of electrical apparatus for automobiles, telephones,
wireless telegraphy, electric lighting, etc.
Bakelite, however, is only one of an indefinite number of such condensation
products. As Baeyer said long ago: "It seems that all the aldehydes will, under
suitable circumstances, unite with the aromatic hydrocarbons to form resins." So
instead of phenol, other coal tar products such as cresol, naphthol or benzene
itself may be used. The carbon links (-CH2-, methylene) necessary to hook these
carbon rings together may be obtained from other substances than the aldehydes,
for instance from the amines, or ammonia derivatives. Three chemists, L.V.
Kedman, A.J. Weith and F.P. Broek, working in 1910 on the Industrial
Fellowships of the late Robert Kennedy Duncan at the University of Kansas,
developed a process using formin instead of formaldehyde. Formin—or, if you
insist upon its full name, hexa-methylene-tetramine—is a sugar-like substance
with a fish-like smell. This mixed with crystallized carbolic acid and slightly
warmed melts to a golden liquid that sets on pouring into molds. It is still plastic
and can be bent into any desired shape, but on further heating it becomes hard
without the need of pressure. Ammonia is given off in this process instead of
water which is the by-product in the case of formaldehyde. The product is
similar to bakelite, exactly how similar is a question that the courts will have to
decide. The inventors threatened to call it Phenyl-endeka-saligeno-saligenin, but,
rightly fearing that this would interfere with its salability, they have named it
"redmanol."
A phenolic condensation product closely related to bakelite and redmanol is
condensite, the invention of Jonas Walter Aylesworth. Aylesworth was trained in
what he referred to as "the greatest university of the world, the Edison
laboratory." He entered this university at the age of nineteen at a salary of $3 a
week, but Edison soon found that he had in his new boy an assistant who could
stand being shut up in the laboratory working day and night as long as he could.
After nine years of close association with Edison he set up a little laboratory in
his own back yard to work out new plastics. He found that by acting on
naphthalene—the moth-ball stuff—with chlorine he got a series of useful
products called "halowaxes." The lower chlorinated products are oils, which may
be used for impregnating paper or soft wood, making it non-inflammable and
impregnable to water. If four atoms of chlorine enter the naphthalene molecule
the product is a hard wax that rings like a metal.
Condensite is anhydrous and infusible, and like its rivals finds its chief
employment in the insulation parts of electrical apparatus. The records of the
Edison phonograph are made of it. So are the buttons of our blue-jackets. The
Government at the outbreak of the war ordered 40,000 goggles in condensite
frames to protect the eyes of our gunners from the glare and acid fumes.
The various synthetics played an important part in the war. According to an
ancient military pun the endurance of soldiers depends upon the strength of their
soles. The new compound rubber soles were found useful in our army and the
Germans attribute their success in making a little leather go a long way during
the late war to the use of a new synthetic tanning material known as "neradol."
There are various forms of this. Some are phenolic condensation products of
formaldehyde like those we have been considering, but some use coal-tar
compounds having no phenol groups, such as naphthalene sulfonic acid. These
are now being made in England under such names as "paradol," "cresyntan" and
"syntan." They have the advantage of the natural tannins such as bark in that
they are of known strength and can be varied to suit.
This very grasping compound, formaldehyde, will attack almost anything, even
molecules many times its size. Gelatinous and albuminous substances of all sorts
are solidified by it. Glue, skimmed milk, blood, eggs, yeast, brewer's slops, may
by this magic agent be rescued from waste and reappear in our buttons, hairpins,
roofing, phonographs, shoes or shoe-polish. The French have made great use of
casein hardened by formaldehyde into what is known as "galalith" (i.e.,
milkstone). This is harder than celluloid and non-inflammable, but has the
disadvantages of being more brittle and of absorbing moisture. A mixture of
casein and celluloid has something of the merits of both.
The Japanese, as we should expect, are using the juice of the soy bean, familiar
as a condiment to all who patronize chop-sueys or use Worcestershire sauce. The
soy glucine coagulated by formalin gives a plastic said to be better and cheaper
than celluloid. Its inventor, S. Sato, of Sendai University, has named it,
according to American precedent, "Satolite," and has organized a million-dollar
Satolite Company at Mukojima.
The algin extracted from the Pacific kelp can be used as a rubber surrogate for
water-proofing cloth. When combined with heavier alkaline bases it forms a
tough and elastic substance that can be rolled into transparent sheets like
celluloid or turned into buttons and knife handles.
In Australia when the war shut off the supply of tin the Government commission
appointed to devise means of preserving fruits recommended the use of
cardboard containers varnished with "magramite." This is a name the Australians
coined for synthetic resin made from phenol and formaldehyde like bakelite.
Magramite dissolved in alcohol is painted on the cardboard cans and when these
are stoved the coating becomes insoluble.
Tarasoff has made a series of condensation products from phenol and
formaldehyde with the addition of sulfonated oils. These are formed by the
action of sulfuric acid on coconut, castor, cottonseed or mineral oils. The
products of this combination are white plastics, opaque, insoluble and infusible.
Since I am here chiefly concerned with "Creative Chemistry," that is, with the art
of making substances not found in nature, I have not spoken of shellac,
asphaltum, rosin, ozocerite and the innumerable gums, resins and waxes, animal,
mineral and vegetable, that are used either by themselves or in combination with
the synthetics. What particular "dope" or "mud" is used to coat a canvas or form
a telephone receiver is often hard to find out. The manufacturer finds secrecy
safer than the patent office and the chemist of a rival establishment is apt to be
baffled in his attempt to analyze and imitate. But we of the outside world are not
concerned with this, though we are interested in the manifold applications of
these new materials.
There seems to be no limit to these compounds and every week the journals
report new processes and patents. But we must not allow the new ones to crowd
out the remembrance of the oldest and most famous of the synthetic plasters,
hard rubber, to which a separate chapter must be devoted.
VIII
THE RACE FOR RUBBER
There is one law that regulates all animate and inanimate things. It is formulated
in various ways, for instance:
Running down a hill is easy. In Latin it reads, facilis descensus Averni. Herbert
Spencer calls it the dissolution of definite coherent heterogeneity into indefinite
incoherent homogeneity. Mother Goose expresses it in the fable of Humpty
Dumpty, and the business man extracts the moral as, "You can't unscramble an
egg." The theologian calls it the dogma of natural depravity. The physicist calls
it the second law of thermodynamics. Clausius formulates it as "The entropy of
the world tends toward a maximum." It is easier to smash up than to build up.
Children find that this is true of their toys; the Bolsheviki have found that it is
true of a civilization. So, too, the chemist knows analysis is easier than synthesis
and that creative chemistry is the highest branch of his art.
This explains why chemists discovered how to take rubber apart over sixty years
before they could find out how to put it together. The first is easy. Just put some
raw rubber into a retort and heat it. If you can stand the odor you will observe
the caoutchouc decomposing and a benzine-like liquid distilling over. This is
called "isoprene." Any Freshman chemist could write the reaction for this
operation. It is simply
C10H16 → 2C5H8
caoutchouc isoprene
That is, one molecule of the gum splits up into two molecules of the liquid. It is
just as easy to write the reaction in the reverse directions, as 2 isoprene→ 1
caoutchouc, but nobody could make it go in that direction. Yet it could be done.
It had been done. But the man who did it did not know how he did it and could
not do it again. Professor Tilden in May, 1892, read a paper before the
Birmingham Philosophical Society in which he said:
I was surprised a few weeks ago at finding the contents of the bottles containing
isoprene from turpentine entirely changed in appearance. In place of a limpid,
colorless liquid the bottles contained a dense syrup in which were floating
several large masses of a yellowish color. Upon examination this turned out to be
India rubber.
But neither Professor Tilden nor any one else could repeat this accidental
metamorphosis. It was tantalizing, for the world was willing to pay
$2,000,000,000 a year for rubber and the forests of the Amazon and Congo were
failing to meet the demand. A large share of these millions would have gone to
any chemist who could find out how to make synthetic rubber and make it
cheaply enough. With such a reward of fame and fortune the competition among
chemists was intense. It took the form of an international contest in which
England and Germany were neck and neck.
Courtesy of the "India Rubber World." What goes into rubber and what is made
out of it
Courtesy of the "India Rubber World." What goes into rubber and what is
made out of it
The English, who had been beaten by the Germans in the dye business where
they had the start, were determined not to lose in this. Prof. W.H. Perkin, of
Manchester University, was one of the most eager, for he was inspired by a
personal grudge against the Germans as well as by patriotism and scientific zeal.
It was his father who had, fifty years before, discovered mauve, the first of the
anilin dyes, but England could not hold the business and its rich rewards went
over to Germany. So in 1909 a corps of chemists set to work under Professor
Perkin in the Manchester laboratories to solve the problem of synthetic rubber.
What reagent could be found that would reverse the reaction and convert the
liquid isoprene into the solid rubber? It was discovered, by accident, we may say,
but it should be understood that such advantageous accidents happen only to
those who are working for them and know how to utilize them. In July, 1910, Dr.
Matthews, who had charge of the research, set some isoprene to drying over
metallic sodium, a common laboratory method of freeing a liquid from the last
traces of water. In September he found that the flask was filled with a solid mass
of real rubber instead of the volatile colorless liquid he had put into it.
Twenty years before the discovery would have been useless, for sodium was then
a rare and costly metal, a little of it in a sealed glass tube being passed around
the chemistry class once a year as a curiosity, or a tiny bit cut off and dropped in
water to see what a fuss it made. But nowadays metallic sodium is cheaply
produced by the aid of electricity. The difficulty lay rather in the cost of the raw
material, isoprene. In industrial chemistry it is not sufficient that a thing can be
made; it must be made to pay. Isoprene could be obtained from turpentine, but
this was too expensive and limited in supply. It would merely mean the
destruction of pine forests instead of rubber forests. Starch was finally decided
upon as the best material, since this can be obtained for about a cent a pound
from potatoes, corn and many other sources. Here, however, the chemist came to
the end of his rope and had to call the bacteriologist to his aid. The splitting of
the starch molecule is too big a job for man; only the lower organisms, the yeast
plant, for example, know enough to do that. Owing perhaps to the entente
cordiale a French biologist was called into the combination, Professor Fernbach,
of the Pasteur Institute, and after eighteen months' hard work he discovered a
process of fermentation by which a large amount of fusel oil can be obtained
from any starchy stuff. Hitherto the aim in fermentation and distillation had been
to obtain as small a proportion of fusel as possible, for fusel oil is a mixture of
the heavier alcohols, all of them more poisonous and malodorous than common
alcohol. But here, as has often happened in the history of industrial chemistry,
the by-product turned out to be more valuable than the product. From fusel oil
by the use of chlorine isoprene can be prepared, so the chain was complete.
But meanwhile the Germans had been making equal progress. In 1905 Prof. Karl
Harries, of Berlin, found out the name of the caoutchouc molecule. This
discovery was to the chemists what the architect's plan of a house is to the
builder. They knew then what they were trying to construct and could go about
their task intelligently.
Mark Twain said that he could understand something about how astronomers
could measure the distance of the planets, calculate their weights and so forth,
but he never could see how they could find out their names even with the largest
telescopes. This is a joke in astronomy but it is not in chemistry. For when the
chemist finds out the structure of a compound he gives it a name which means
that. The stuff came to be called "caoutchouc," because that was the way the
Spaniards of Columbus's time caught the Indian word "cahuchu." When Dr.
Priestley called it "India rubber" he told merely where it came from and what it
was good for. But when Harries named it "1-5-dimethyl-cyclo-octadien-1-5" any
chemist could draw a picture of it and give a guess as to how it could be made.
Even a person without any knowledge of chemistry can get the main point of it
by merely looking at this diagram:
isoprene turns into caoutchouc
isoprene turns into caoutchouc
I have dropped the 16 H's or hydrogen atoms of the formula for simplicity's sake.
They simply hook on wherever they can. You will see that the isoprene consists
of a chain of four carbon atoms (represented by the C's) with an extra carbon on
the side. In the transformation of this colorless liquid into soft rubber two of the
double linkages break and so permit the two chains of 4 C's to unite to form one
ring of eight. If you have ever played ring-around-a-rosy you will get the idea. In
Chapter IV I explained that the anilin dyes are built up upon the benzene ring of
six carbon atoms. The rubber ring consists of eight at least and probably more.
Any substance containing that peculiar carbon chain with two double links C=C-
C=C can double up—polymerize, the chemist calls it—into a rubber-like
substance. So we may have many kinds of rubber, some of which may prove to
be more useful than that which happens to be found in nature.
With the structural formula of Harries as a clue chemists all over the world
plunged into the problem with renewed hope. The famous Bayer dye works at
Elberfeld took it up and there in August, 1909, Dr. Fritz Hofmann worked out a
process for the converting of pure isoprene into rubber by heat. Then in 1910
Harries happened upon the same sodium reaction as Matthews, but when he
came to get it patented he found that the Englishman had beaten him to the
patent office by a few weeks.
This Anglo-German rivalry came to a dramatic climax in 1912 at the great hall
of the College of the City of New York when Dr. Carl Duisberg, of the Elberfeld
factory, delivered an address on the latest achievements of the chemical industry
before the Eighth—and the last for a long time—International Congress of
Applied Chemistry. Duisberg insisted upon talking in German, although more of
his auditors would have understood him in English. He laid full emphasis upon
German achievements and cast doubt upon the claim of "the Englishman Tilden"
to have prepared artificial rubber in the eighties. Perkin, of Manchester,
confronted him with his new process for making rubber from potatoes, but
Duisberg countered by proudly displaying two automobile tires made of
synthetic rubber with which he had made a thousand-mile run.
The intense antagonism between the British and German chemists at this
congress was felt by all present, but we did not foresee that in two years from
that date they would be engaged in manufacturing poison gas to fire at one
another. It was, however, realized that more was at stake than personal reputation
and national prestige. Under pressure of the new demand for automobiles the
price of rubber jumped from $1.25 to $3 a pound in 1910, and millions had been
invested in plantations. If Professor Perkin was right when he told the congress
that by his process rubber could be made for less than 25 cents a pound it meant
that these plantations would go the way of the indigo plantations when the
Germans succeeded in making artificial indigo. If Dr. Duisberg was right when
he told the congress that synthetic rubber would "certainly appear on the market
in a very short time," it meant that Germany in war or peace would become
independent of Brazil in the matter of rubber as she had become independent of
Chile in the matter of nitrates.
As it turned out both scientists were too sanguine. Synthetic rubber has not
proved capable of displacing natural rubber by underbidding it nor even of
replacing natural rubber when this is shut out. When Germany was blockaded
and the success of her armies depended on rubber, price was no object. Three
Danish sailors who were caught by United States officials trying to smuggle
dental rubber into Germany confessed that they had been selling it there for gas
masks at $73 a pound. The German gas masks in the latter part of the war were
made without rubber and were frail and leaky. They could not have withstood
the new gases which American chemists were preparing on an unprecedented
scale. Every scrap of old rubber in Germany was saved and worked over and
over and diluted with fillers and surrogates to the limit of elasticity. Spring tires
were substituted for pneumatics. So it is evident that the supply of synthetic
rubber could not have been adequate or satisfactory. Neither, on the other hand,
have the British made a success of the Perkin process, although they spent
$200,000 on it in the first two years. But, of course, there was not the same
necessity for it as in the case of Germany, for England had practically a
monopoly of the world's supply of natural rubber either through owning
plantations or controlling shipping. If rubber could not be manufactured
profitably in Germany when the demand was imperative and price no
consideration it can hardly be expected to compete with the natural under peace
conditions.
The problem of synthetic rubber has then been solved scientifically but not
industrially. It can be made but cannot be made to pay. The difficulty is to find a
cheap enough material to start with. We can make rubber out of potatoes—but
potatoes have other uses. It would require more land and more valuable land to
raise the potatoes than to raise the rubber. We can get isoprene by the distillation
of turpentine—but why not bleed a rubber tree as well as a pine tree? Turpentine
is neither cheap nor abundant enough. Any kind of wood, sawdust for instance,
can be utilized by converting the cellulose over into sugar and fermenting this to
alcohol, but the process is not likely to prove profitable. Petroleum when cracked
up to make gasoline gives isoprene or other double-bond compounds that go
over into some form of rubber.
But the most interesting and most promising of all is the complete inorganic
synthesis that dispenses with the aid of vegetation and starts with coal and lime.
These heated together in the electric furnace form calcium carbide and this, as
every automobilist knows, gives acetylene by contact with water. From this gas
isoprene can be made and the isoprene converted into rubber by sodium, or acid
or alkali or simple heating. Acetone, which is also made from acetylene, can be
converted directly into rubber by fuming sulfuric acid. This seems to have been
the process chiefly used by the Germans during the war. Several carbide
factories were devoted to it. But the intermediate and by-products of the process,
such as alcohol, acetic acid and acetone, were in as much demand for war
purposes as rubber. The Germans made some rubber from pitch imported from
Sweden. They also found a useful substitute in aluminum naphthenate made
from Baku petroleum, for it is elastic and plastic and can be vulcanized.
So although rubber can be made in many different ways it is not profitable to
make it in any of them. We have to rely still upon the natural product, but we can
greatly improve upon the way nature produces it. When the call came for more
rubber for the electrical and automobile industries the first attempt to increase
the supply was to put pressure upon the natives to bring in more of the latex. As
a consequence the trees were bled to death and sometimes also the natives. The
Belgian atrocities in the Congo shocked the civilized world and at Putumayo on
the upper Amazon the same cause produced the same horrible effects. But no
matter what cruelty was practiced the tropical forests could not be made to yield
a sufficient increase, so the cultivation of the rubber was begun by far-sighted
men in Dutch Java, Sumatra and Borneo and in British Malaya and Ceylon.
Brazil, feeling secure in the possession of a natural monopoly, made no effort to
compete with these parvenus. It cost about as much to gather rubber from the
Amazon forests as it did to raise it on a Malay plantation, that is, 25 cents a
pound. The Brazilian Government clapped on another 25 cents export duty and
spent the money lavishly. In 1911 the treasury of Para took in $2,000,000 from
the rubber tax and a good share of the money was spent on a magnificent new
theater at Manaos—not on setting out rubber trees. The result of this rivalry
between the collector and the cultivator is shown by the fact that in the decade
1907-1917 the world's output of plantation rubber increased from 1000 to
204,000 tons, while the output of wild rubber decreased from 68,000 to 53,000.
Besides this the plantation rubber is a cleaner and more even product, carefully
coagulated by acetic acid instead of being smoked over a forest fire. It comes in
pale yellow sheets instead of big black balls loaded with the dirt or sticks and
stones that the honest Indian sometimes adds to make a bigger lump. What's
better, the man who milks the rubber trees on a plantation may live at home
where he can be decently looked after. The agriculturist and the chemist may do
what the philanthropist and statesman could not accomplish: put an end to the
cruelties involved in the international struggle for "black gold."
The United States uses three-fourths of the world's rubber output and grows none
of it. What is the use of tropical possessions if we do not make use of them? The
Philippines could grow all our rubber and keep a $300,000,000 business under
our flag. Santo Domingo, where rubber was first discovered, is now under our
supervision and could be enriched by the industry. The Guianas, where the
rubber tree was first studied, might be purchased. It is chiefly for lack of a
definite colonial policy that our rubber industry, by far the largest in the world,
has to be dependent upon foreign sources for all its raw materials. Because the
Philippines are likely to be cast off at any moment, American manufacturers are
placing their plantations in the Dutch or British possessions. The Goodyear
Company has secured a concession of 20,000 acres near Medan in Dutch
Sumatra.
While the United States is planning to relinquish its Pacific possessions the
British have more than doubled their holdings in New Guinea by the acquisition
of Kaiser Wilhelm's Land, good rubber country. The British Malay States in
1917 exported over $118,000,000 worth of plantation-grown rubber and could
have sold more if shipping had not been short and production restricted. Fully 90
per cent. of the cultivated rubber is now grown in British colonies or on British
plantations in the Dutch East Indies. To protect this monopoly an act has been
passed preventing foreigners from buying more land in the Malay Peninsula. The
Japanese have acquired there 50,000 acres, on which they are growing more than
a million dollars' worth of rubber a year. The British Tropical Life says of the
American invasion: "As America is so extremely wealthy Uncle Sam can well
afford to continue to buy our rubber as he has been doing instead of coming in to
produce rubber to reduce his competition as a buyer in the world's market." The
Malaya estates calculate to pay a dividend of 20 per cent. on the investment with
rubber selling at 30 cents a pound and every two cents additional on the price
brings a further 3-1/2 per cent. dividend. The output is restricted by the Rubber
Growers' Association so as to keep the price up to 50-70 cents. When the
plantations first came into bearing in 1910 rubber was bringing nearly $3 a
pound, and since it can be produced at less than 30 cents a pound we can
imagine the profits of the early birds.
The fact that the world's rubber trade was in the control of Great Britain caused
America great anxiety and financial loss in the early part of the war when the
British Government, suspecting—not without reason—that some American
rubber goods were getting into Germany through neutral nations, suddenly shut
off our supply. This threatened to kill the fourth largest of our industries and it
was only by the submission of American rubber dealers to the closest
supervision and restriction by the British authorities that they were allowed to
continue their business. Sir Francis Hopwood, in laying down these regulations,
gave emphatic warning "that in case any manufacturer, importer or dealer came
under suspicion his permits should be immediately revoked. Reinstatement will
be slow and difficult. The British Government will cancel first and investigate
afterward." Of course the British had a right to say under what conditions they
should sell their rubber and we cannot blame them for taking such precautions to
prevent its getting to their enemies, but it placed the United States in a
humiliating position and if we had not been in sympathy with their side it would
have aroused more resentment than it did. But it made evident the desirability of
having at least part of our supply under our own control and, if possible, within
our own country. Rubber is not rare in nature, for it is contained in almost every
milky juice. Every country boy knows that he can get a self-feeding mucilage
brush by cutting off a milkweed stalk. The only native source so far utilized is
the guayule, which grows wild on the deserts of the Mexican and the American
border. The plant was discovered in 1852 by Dr. J.M. Bigelow near Escondido
Creek, Texas. Professor Asa Gray described it and named it Parthenium
argentatum, or the silver Pallas. When chopped up and macerated guayule gives
a satisfactory quality of caoutchouc in profitable amounts. In 1911 seven
thousand tons of guayule were imported from Mexico; in 1917 only seventeen
hundred tons. Why this falling off? Because the eager exploiters had killed the
goose that laid the golden egg, or in plain language, pulled up the plant by the
roots. Now guayule is being cultivated and is reaped instead of being uprooted.
Experiments at the Tucson laboratory have recently removed the difficulty of
getting the seed to germinate under cultivation. This seems the most promising
of the home-grown plants and, until artificial rubber can be made profitable,
gives us the only chance of being in part independent of oversea supply.
There are various other gums found in nature that can for some purposes be
substituted for caoutchouc. Gutta percha, for instance, is pliable and tough
though not very elastic. It becomes plastic by heat so it can be molded, but
unlike rubber it cannot be hardened by heating with sulfur. A lump of gutta
percha was brought from Java in 1766 and placed in a British museum, where it
lay for nearly a hundred years before it occurred to anybody to do anything with
it except to look at it. But a German electrician, Siemens, discovered in 1847
that gutta percha was valuable for insulating telegraph lines and it found
extensive employment in submarine cables as well as for golf balls, and the like.
Balata, which is found in the forests of the Guianas, is between gutta percha and
rubber, not so good for insulation but useful for shoe soles and machine belts.
The bark of the tree is so thick that the latex does not run off like caoutchouc
when the bark is cut. So the bark has to be cut off and squeezed in hand presses.
Formerly this meant cutting down the tree, but now alternate strips of the bark
are cut off and squeezed so the tree continues to live.
When Columbus discovered Santo Domingo he found the natives playing with
balls made from the gum of the caoutchouc tree. The soldiers of Pizarro, when
they conquered Inca-Land, adopted the Peruvian custom of smearing caoutchouc
over their coats to keep out the rain. A French scientist, M. de la Condamine,
who went to South America to measure the earth, came back in 1745 with some
specimens of caoutchouc from Para as well as quinine from Peru. The vessel on
which he returned, the brig Minerva, had a narrow escape from capture by an
English cruiser, for Great Britain was jealous of any trespassing on her American
sphere of influence. The Old World need not have waited for the discovery of the
New, for the rubber tree grows wild in Annam as well as Brazil, but none of the
Asiatics seems to have discovered any of the many uses of the juice that exudes
from breaks in the bark.
The first practical use that was made of it gave it the name that has stuck to it in
English ever since. Magellan announced in 1772 that it was good to remove
pencil marks. A lump of it was sent over from France to Priestley, the clergyman
chemist who discovered oxygen and was mobbed out of Manchester for being a
republican and took refuge in Pennsylvania. He cut the lump into little cubes and
gave them to his friends to eradicate their mistakes in writing or figuring. Then
they asked him what the queer things were and he said that they were "India
rubbers."
FOREST RUBBER
FOREST RUBBER
Compare this tropical tangle and gnarled trunk with the straight tree and
cleared ground of the plantation. At the foot of the trunk are cups collecting
rubber juice.
PLANTATION RUBBER
PLANTATION RUBBER
This spiral cut draws off the milk as completely and quickly as possible
without harming the tree. The man is pulling off a strip of coagulated
rubber that clogs it.
IN MAKING GARDEN HOSE THE RUBBER IS FORMED INTO A TUBE
BY THE MACHINE ON THE RIGHT AND COILED ON THE TABLE TO
THE LEFT
IN MAKING GARDEN HOSE THE RUBBER IS FORMED INTO A
TUBE BY THE MACHINE ON THE RIGHT AND COILED ON THE
TABLE TO THE LEFT
The Peruvian natives had used caoutchouc for water-proof clothing, shoes,
bottles and syringes, but Europe was slow to take it up, for the stuff was too
sticky and smelled too bad in hot weather to become fashionable in fastidious
circles. In 1825 Mackintosh made his name immortal by putting a layer of
rubber between two cloths.
A German chemist, Ludersdorf, discovered in 1832 that the gum could be
hardened by treating it with sulfur dissolved in turpentine. But it was left to a
Yankee inventor, Charles Goodyear, of Connecticut, to work out a practical
solution of the problem. A friend of his, Hayward, told him that it had been
revealed to him in a dream that sulfur would harden rubber, but unfortunately the
angel or defunct chemist who inspired the vision failed to reveal the details of
the process. So Hayward sold out his dream to Goodyear, who spent all his own
money and all he could borrow from his friends trying to convert it into a reality.
He worked for ten years on the problem before the "lucky accident" came to
him. One day in 1839 he happened to drop on the hot stove of the kitchen that he
used as a laboratory a mixture of caoutchouc and sulfur. To his surprise he saw
the two substances fuse together into something new. Instead of the soft, tacky
gum and the yellow, brittle brimstone he had the tough, stable, elastic solid that
has done so much since to make our footing and wheeling safe, swift and
noiseless. The gumshoes or galoshes that he was then enabled to make still go by
the name of "rubbers" in this country, although we do not use them for pencil
erasers.
Goodyear found that he could vary this "vulcanized rubber" at will. By adding a
little more sulfur he got a hard substance which, however, could be softened by
heat so as to be molded into any form wanted. Out of this "hard rubber"
"vulcanite" or "ebonite" were made combs, hairpins, penholders and the like,
and it has not yet been superseded for some purposes by any of its recent rivals,
the synthetic resins.
The new form of rubber made by the Germans, methyl rubber, is said to be a
superior substitute for the hard variety but not satisfactory for the soft. The
electrical resistance of the synthetic product is 20 per cent, higher than the
natural, so it is excellent for insulation, but it is inferior in elasticity. In the latter
part of the war the methyl rubber was manufactured at the rate of 165 tons a
month.
The first pneumatic tires, known then as "patent aerial wheels," were invented by
Robert William Thomson of London in 1846. On the following year a carriage
equipped with them was seen in the streets of New York City. But the pneumatic
tire did not come into use until after 1888, when an Irish horse-doctor, John
Boyd Dunlop, of Belfast, tied a rubber tube around the wheels of his little son's
velocipede. Within seven years after that a $25,000,000 corporation was
manufacturing Dunlop tires. Later America took the lead in this business. In
1913 the United States exported $3,000,000 worth of tires and tubes. In 1917 the
American exports rose to $13,000,000, not counting what went to the Allies. The
number of pneumatic tires sold in 1917 is estimated at 18,000,000, which at an
average cost of $25 would amount to $450,000,000.
No matter how much synthetic rubber may be manufactured or how many rubber
trees are set out there is no danger of glutting the market, for as the price falls the
uses of rubber become more numerous. One can think of a thousand ways in
which rubber could be used if it were only cheap enough. In the form of pads
and springs and tires it would do much to render traffic noiseless. Even the
elevated railroad and the subway might be opened to conversation, and the city
made habitable for mild voiced and gentle folk. It would make one's step sure,
noiseless and springy, whether it was used individualistically as rubber heels or
collectivistically as carpeting and paving. In roofing and siding and paint it
would make our buildings warmer and more durable. It would reduce the cost
and permit the extension of electrical appliances of almost all kinds. In short,
there is hardly any other material whose abundance would contribute more to
our comfort and convenience. Noise is an automatic alarm indicating lost motion
and wasted energy. Silence is economy and resiliency is superior to resistance. A
gumshoe outlasts a hobnailed sole and a rubber tube full of air is better than a
steel tire.
IX
THE RIVAL SUGARS
The ancient Greeks, being an inquisitive and acquisitive people, were fond of
collecting tales of strange lands. They did not care much whether the stories
were true or not so long as they were interesting. Among the marvels that the
Greeks heard from the Far East two of the strangest were that in India there were
plants that bore wool without sheep and reeds that bore honey without bees.
These incredible tales turned out to be true and in the course of time Europe
began to get a little calico from Calicut and a kind of edible gravel that the Arabs
who brought it called "sukkar." But of course only kings and queens could afford
to dress in calico and have sugar prescribed for them when they were sick.
Fortunately, however, in the course of time the Arabs invaded Spain and forced
upon the unwilling inhabitants of Europe such instrumentalities of higher
civilization as arithmetic and algebra, soap and sugar. Later the Spaniards by an
act of equally unwarranted and beneficent aggression carried the sugar cane to
the Caribbean, where it thrived amazingly. The West Indies then became a rival
of the East Indies as a treasure-house of tropical wealth and for several centuries
the Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, English, Danes and French fought like wildcats
to gain possession of this little nest of islands and the routes leading thereunto.
The English finally overcame all these enemies, whether they fought her singly
or combined. Great Britain became mistress of the seas and took such Caribbean
lands as she wanted. But in the end her continental foes came out ahead, for they
rendered her victory valueless. They were defeated in geography but they won in
chemistry. Canning boasted that "the New World had been called into existence
to redress the balance of the Old." Napoleon might have boasted that he had
called in the sugar beet to balance the sugar cane. France was then, as Germany
was a century later, threatening to dominate the world. England, then as in the
Great War, shut off from the seas the shipping of the aggressive power. France
then, like Germany later, felt most keenly the lack of tropical products, chief
among which, then but not in the recent crisis, was sugar. The cause of this vital
change is that in 1747 Marggraf, a Berlin chemist, discovered that it was
possible to extract sugar from beets. There was only a little sugar in the beet root
then, some six per cent., and what he got out was dirty and bitter. One of his
pupils in 1801 set up a beet sugar factory near Breslau under the patronage of the
King of Prussia, but the industry was not a success until Napoleon took it up and
in 1810 offered a prize of a million francs for a practical process. How the
French did make fun of him for this crazy notion! In a comic paper of that day
you will find a cartoon of Napoleon in the nursery beside the cradle of his son
and heir, the King of Rome—known to the readers of Rostand as l'Aiglon. The
Emperor is squeezing the juice of a beet into his coffee and the nurse has put a
beet into the mouth of the infant King, saying: "Suck, dear, suck. Your father
says it's sugar."
In like manner did the wits ridicule Franklin for fooling with electricity,
Rumford for trying to improve chimneys, Parmentier for thinking potatoes were
fit to eat, and Jefferson for believing that something might be made of the
country west of the Mississippi. In all ages ridicule has been the chief weapon of
conservatism. If you want to know what line human progress will take in the
future read the funny papers of today and see what they are fighting. The satire
of every century from Aristophanes to the latest vaudeville has been directed
against those who are trying to make the world wiser or better, against the
teacher and the preacher, the scientist and the reformer.
In spite of the ridicule showered upon it the despised beet year by year gained in
sweetness of heart. The percentage of sugar rose from six to eighteen and by
improved methods of extraction became finally as pure and palatable as the
sugar of the cane. An acre of German beets produces more sugar than an acre of
Louisiana cane. Continental Europe waxed wealthy while the British West Indies
sank into decay. As the beets of Europe became sweeter the population of the
islands became blacker. Before the war England was paying out $125,000,000
for sugar, and more than two-thirds of this money was going to Germany and
Austria-Hungary. Fostered by scientific study, protected by tariff duties, and
stimulated by export bounties, the beet sugar industry became one of the
financial forces of the world. The English at home, especially the marmalade-
makers, at first rejoiced at the idea of getting sugar for less than cost at the
expense of her continental rivals. But the suffering colonies took another view of
the situation. In 1888 a conference of the powers called at London agreed to stop
competing by the pernicious practice of export bounties, but France and the
United States refused to enter, so the agreement fell through. Another conference
ten years later likewise failed, but when the parvenu beet sugar ventured to
invade the historic home of the cane the limit of toleration had been reached.
The Council of India put on countervailing duties to protect their homegrown
cane from the bounty-fed beet. This forced the calling of a convention at
Brussels in 1903 "to equalize the conditions of competition between beet sugar
and cane sugar of the various countries," at which the powers agreed to a mutual
suppression of bounties. Beet sugar then divided the world's market equally with
cane sugar and the two rivals stayed substantially neck and neck until the Great
War came. This shut out from England the product of Germany, Austria-
Hungary, Belgium, northern France and Russia and took the farmers from their
fields. The battle lines of the Central Powers enclosed the land which used to
grow a third of the world's supply of sugar. In 1913 the beet and the cane each
supplied about nine million tons of sugar. In 1917 the output of cane sugar was
11,200,000 and of beet sugar 5,300,000 tons. Consequently the Old World had to
draw upon the New. Cuba, on which the United States used to depend for half its
sugar supply, sent over 700,000 tons of raw sugar to England in 1916. The
United States sent as much more refined sugar. The lack of shipping interfered
with our getting sugar from our tropical dependencies, Hawaii, Porto Rico and
the Philippines. The homegrown beets give us only a fifth and the cane of
Louisiana and Texas only a fifteenth of the sugar we need. As a result we were
obliged to file a claim in advance to get a pound of sugar from the corner
grocery and then we were apt to be put off with rock candy, muscovado or
honey. Lemon drops proved useful for Russian tea and the "long sweetening" of
our forefathers came again into vogue in the form of various syrups. The United
States was accustomed to consume almost a fifth of all the sugar produced in the
world—and then we could not get it.
MAP SHOWING LOCATION OF EUROPEAN BEET SUGAR FACTORIES—
ALSO BATTLE LINES AT CLOSE OF 1918 ESTIMATED THAT ONE-
THIRD OF WORLDS PRODUCTION BEFORE THE WAR WAS PRODUCED
WITHIN BATTLE LINES Courtesy American Sugar Refining Co.
MAP SHOWING LOCATION OF EUROPEAN BEET SUGAR
FACTORIES—ALSO BATTLE LINES AT CLOSE OF 1918 ESTIMATED
THAT ONE-THIRD OF WORLDS PRODUCTION BEFORE THE WAR
WAS PRODUCED WITHIN BATTLE LINES Courtesy American Sugar
Refining Co.
The shortage made us realize how dependent we have become upon sugar. Yet it
was, as we have seen, practically unknown to the ancients and only within the
present generation has it become an essential factor in our diet. As soon as the
chemist made it possible to produce sugar at a reasonable price all nations began
to buy it in proportion to their means. Americans, as the wealthiest people in the
world, ate the most, ninety pounds a year on the average for every man, woman
and child. In other words we ate our weight of sugar every year. The English
consumed nearly as much as the Americans; the French and Germans about half
as much; the Balkan peoples less than ten pounds per annum; and the African
savages none.
How the sugar beet has gained enormously in sugar content under chemical
control
How the sugar beet has gained enormously in sugar content under chemical
control
Pure white sugar is the first and greatest contribution of chemistry to the world's
dietary. It is unique in being a single definite chemical compound, sucrose,
C12H22O11. All natural nutriments are more or less complex mixtures. Many of
them, like wheat or milk or fruit, contain in various proportions all of the three
factors of foods, the fats, the proteids and the carbohydrates, as well as water and
the minerals and other ingredients necessary to life. But sugar is a simple
substance, like water or salt, and like them is incapable of sustaining life alone,
although unlike them it is nutritious. In fact, except the fats there is no more
nutritious food than sugar, pound for pound, for it contains no water and no
waste. It is therefore the quickest and usually the cheapest means of supplying
bodily energy. But as may be seen from its formula as given above it contains
only three elements, carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, and omits nitrogen and other
elements necessary to the body. An engine requires not only coal but also
lubricating oil, water and bits of steel and brass to keep it in repair. But as a
source of the energy needed in our strenuous life sugar has no equal and only
one rival, alcohol. Alcohol is the offspring of sugar, a degenerate descendant that
retains but few of the good qualities of its sire and has acquired some evil traits
of its own. Alcohol, like sugar, may serve to furnish the energy of a steam engine
or a human body. Used as a fuel alcohol has certain advantages, but used as a
food it has the disqualification of deranging the bodily mechanism. Even a little
alcohol will impair the accuracy and speed of thought and action, while a large
quantity, as we all know from observation if not experience, will produce
temporary incapacitation.
When man feeds on sugar he splits it up by the aid of air into water and carbon
dioxide in this fashion:
C12H22O11 + 12O2 → 11H2O + 12CO2
cane sugar oxygen water carbon dioxide
When sugar is burned the reaction is just the same.
But when the yeast plant feeds on sugar it carries the process only part way and
instead of water the product is alcohol, a very different thing, so they say who
have tried both as beverages. The yeast or fermentation reaction is this:
C12H22O11 + H2O → 4C2H6O + 4CO2
cane sugar water alcohol carbon dioxide
Alcohol then is the first product of the decomposition of sugar, a dangerous half-
way house. The twin product, carbon dioxide or carbonic acid, is a gas of
slightly sour taste which gives an attractive tang and effervescence to the beer,
wine, cider or champagne. That is to say, one of these twins is a pestilential
fellow and the other is decidedly agreeable. Yet for several thousand years
mankind took to the first and let the second for the most part escape into the air.
But when the chemist appeared on the scene he discovered a way of separating
the two and bottling the harmless one for those who prefer it. An increasing
number of people were found to prefer it, so the American soda-water fountain is
gradually driving Demon Rum out of the civilized world. The brewer nowadays
caters to two classes of customers. He bottles up the beer with the alcohol and a
little carbonic acid in it for the saloon and he catches the rest of the carbonic acid
that he used to waste and sells it to the drug stores for soda-water or uses it to
charge some non-alcoholic beer of his own.
This catering to rival trades is not an uncommon thing with the chemist. As we
have seen, the synthetic perfumes are used to improve the natural perfumes.
Cottonseed is separated into oil and meal; the oil going to make margarin and the
meal going to feed the cows that produce butter. Some people have been
drinking coffee, although they do not like the taste of it, because they want the
stimulating effect of its alkaloid, caffein. Other people liked the warmth and
flavor of coffee but find that caffein does not agree with them. Formerly one had
to take the coffee whole or let it alone. Now one can have his choice, for the
caffein is extracted for use in certain popular cold drinks and the rest of the bean
sold as caffein-free coffee.
Most of the "soft drinks" that are now gradually displacing the hard ones consist
of sugar, water and carbonic acid, with various flavors, chiefly the esters of the
fatty and aromatic acids, such as I described in a previous chapter. These are still
usually made from fruits and spices and in some cases the law or public opinion
requires this, but eventually, I presume, the synthetic flavors will displace the
natural and then we shall get rid of such extraneous and indigestible matter as
seeds, skins and bark. Suppose the world had always been used to synthetic and
hence seedless figs, strawberries and blackberries. Suppose then some
manufacturer of fig paste or strawberry jam should put in ten per cent. of little
round hard wooden nodules, just the sort to get stuck between the teeth or caught
in the vermiform appendix. How long would it be before he was sent to jail for
adulterating food? But neither jail nor boycott has any reformatory effect on
Nature.
Nature is quite human in that respect. But you can reform Nature as you can
human beings by looking out for heredity and culture. In this way Mother Nature
has been quite cured of her bad habit of putting seeds in bananas and oranges.
Figs she still persists in adulterating with particles of cellulose as nutritious as
sawdust. But we can circumvent the old lady at this. I got on Christmas a
package of figs from California without a seed in them. Somebody had taken out
all the seeds—it must have been a big job—and then put the figs together again
as natural looking as life and very much better tasting.
Sugar and alcohol are both found in Nature; sugar in the ripe fruit, alcohol when
it begins to decay. But it was the chemist who discovered how to extract them.
He first worked with alcohol and unfortunately succeeded.
Previous to the invention of the still by the Arabian chemists man could not get
drunk as quickly as he wanted to because his liquors were limited to what the
yeast plant could stand without intoxication. When the alcoholic content of wine
or beer rose to seventeen per cent. at the most the process of fermentation
stopped because the yeast plants got drunk and quit "working." That meant that a
man confined to ordinary wine or beer had to drink ten or twenty quarts of water
to get one quart of the stuff he was after, and he had no liking for water.
So the chemist helped him out of this difficulty and got him into worse trouble
by distilling the wine. The more volatile part that came over first contained the
flavor and most of the alcohol. In this way he could get liquors like brandy and
whisky, rum and gin, containing from thirty to eighty per cent. of alcohol. This
was the origin of the modern liquor problem. The wine of the ancients was
strong enough to knock out Noah and put the companions of Socrates under the
table, but it was not until distilled liquors came in that alcoholism became
chronic, epidemic and ruinous to whole populations.
But the chemist later tried to undo the ruin he had quite inadvertently wrought by
introducing alcohol into the world. One of his most successful measures was the
production of cheap and pure sugar which, as we have seen, has become a large
factor in the dietary of civilized countries. As a country sobers up it takes to
sugar as a "self-starter" to provide the energy needed for the strenuous life. A
five o'clock candy is a better restorative than a five o'clock highball or even a
five o'clock tea, for it is a true nutrient instead of a mere stimulant. It is a matter
of common observation that those who like sweets usually do not like alcohol.
Women, for instance, are apt to eat candy but do not commonly take to alcoholic
beverages. Look around you at a banquet table and you will generally find that
those who turn down their wine glasses generally take two lumps in their demi-
tasses. We often hear it said that whenever a candy store opens up a saloon in the
same block closes up. Our grandmothers used to warn their daughters: "Don't
marry a man who does not want sugar in his tea. He is likely to take to drink."
So, young man, when next you give a box of candy to your best girl and she
offers you some, don't decline it. Eat it and pretend to like it, at least, for it is
quite possible that she looked into a physiology and is trying you out. You never
can tell what girls are up to.
In the army and navy ration the same change has taken place as in the popular
dietary. The ration of rum has been mostly replaced by an equivalent amount of
candy or marmalade. Instead of the tippling trooper of former days we have "the
chocolate soldier." No previous war in history has been fought so largely on
sugar and so little on alcohol as the last one. When the war reduced the supply
and increased the demand we all felt the sugar famine and it became a mark of
patriotism to refuse candy and to drink coffee unsweetened. This, however, is
not, as some think, the mere curtailment of a superfluous or harmful luxury, the
sacrifice of a pleasant sensation. It is a real deprivation and a serious loss to
national nutrition. For there is no reason to think the constantly rising curve of
sugar consumption has yet reached its maximum or optimum. Individuals
overeat, but not the population as a whole. According to experiments of the
Department of Agriculture men doing heavy labor may add three-quarters of a
pound of sugar to their daily diet without any deleterious effects. This is at the
rate of 275 pounds a year, which is three times the average consumption of
England and America. But the Department does not state how much a girl doing
nothing ought to eat between meals.
Of the 2500 to 3500 calories of energy required to keep a man going for a day
the best source of supply is the carbohydrates, that is, the sugars and starches.
The fats are more concentrated but are more expensive and less easily
assimilable. The proteins are also more expensive and their decomposition
products are more apt to clog up the system. Common sugar is almost an ideal
food. Cheap, clean, white, portable, imperishable, unadulterated, pleasant-
tasting, germ-free, highly nutritious, completely soluble, altogether digestible,
easily assimilable, requires no cooking and leaves no residue. Its only fault is its
perfection. It is so pure that a man cannot live on it. Four square lumps give one
hundred calories of energy. But twenty-five or thirty-five times that amount
would not constitute a day's ration, in fact one would ultimately starve on such
fare. It would be like supplying an army with an abundance of powder but
neglecting to provide any bullets, clothing or food. To make sugar the sole food
is impossible. To make it the main food is unwise. It is quite proper for man to
separate out the distinct ingredients of natural products—to extract the butter
from the milk, the casein from the cheese, the sugar from the cane—but he must
not forget to combine them again at each meal with the other essential foodstuffs
in their proper proportion.
THE RIVAL SUGARS The sugar beet of the north has become a close rival of
the sugar cane of the south
THE RIVAL SUGARS The sugar beet of the north has become a close rival
of the sugar cane of the south
INTERIOR OF A SUGAR MILL SHOWING THE MACHINERY FOR
CRUSHING CANE TO EXTRACT THE JUICE
INTERIOR OF A SUGAR MILL SHOWING THE MACHINERY FOR
CRUSHING CANE TO EXTRACT THE JUICE
Courtesy of American Sugar Refinery Co.
Courtesy of American Sugar Refinery Co.
VACUUM PANS OF THE AMERICAN SUGAR REFINERY COMPANY
In these air-tight vats the water is boiled off from the cane juice under
diminished atmospheric pressure until the sugar crystallizes out
Sugar is not a synthetic product and the business of the chemist has been merely
to extract and purify it. But this is not so simple as it seems and every sugar
factory has had to have its chemist. He has analyzed every mother beet for a
hundred years. He has watched every step of the process from the cane to the
crystal lest the sucrose should invert to the less sweet and non-crystallizable
glucose. He has tested with polarized light every shipment of sugar that has
passed through the custom house, much to the mystification of congressmen who
have often wondered at the money and argumentation expended in a tariff
discussion over the question of the precise angle of rotation of the plane of
vibration of infinitesimal waves in a hypothetical ether.
The reason for this painstaking is that there are dozens of different sugars, so
much alike that they are difficult to separate. They are all composed of the same
three elements, C, H and O, and often in the same proportion. Sometimes two
sugars differ only in that one has a right-handed and the other a left-handed twist
to its molecule. They bear the same resemblance to one another as the two
gloves of a pair. Cane sugar and beet sugar are when completely purified the
same substance, that is, sucrose, C12H22O11. The brown and straw-colored
sugars, which our forefathers used and which we took to using during the war,
are essentially the same but have not been so completely freed from moisture
and the coloring and flavoring matter of the cane juice. Maple sugar is mostly
sucrose. So partly is honey. Candies are made chiefly of sucrose with the
addition of glucose, gums or starch, to give them the necessary consistency and
of such colors and flavors, natural or synthetic, as may be desired. Practically all
candy, even the cheapest, is nowadays free from deleterious ingredients in the
manufacture, though it is liable to become contaminated in the handling. In fact
sugar is about the only food that is never adulterated. It would be hard to find
anything cheaper to add to it that would not be easily detected. "Sanding the
sugar," the crime of which grocers are generally accused, is the one they are least
likely to be guilty of.
Besides the big family of sugars which are all more or less sweet, similar in
structure and about equally nutritious, there are, very curiously, other chemical
compounds of altogether different composition which taste like sugar but are not
nutritious at all. One of these is a coal-tar derivative, discovered accidentally by
an American student of chemistry, Ira Remsen, afterward president of Johns
Hopkins University, and named by him "saccharin." This has the composition
C6H4COSO2NH, and as you may observe from the symbol it contains sulfur (S)
and nitrogen (N) and the benzene ring (C 6H4) that are not found in any of the
sugars. It is several hundred times sweeter than sugar, though it has also a
slightly bitter aftertaste. A minute quantity of it can therefore take the place of a
large amount of sugar in syrups, candies and preserves, so because it lends itself
readily to deception its use in food has been prohibited in the United States and
other countries. But during the war, on account of the shortage of sugar, it came
again into use. The European governments encouraged what they formerly tried
to prevent, and it became customary in Germany or Italy to carry about a
package of saccharin tablets in the pocket and drop one or two into the tea or
coffee. Such reversals of administrative attitude are not uncommon. When the
use of hops in beer was new it was prohibited by British law. But hops became
customary nevertheless and now the law requires hops to be used in beer. When
workingmen first wanted to form unions, laws were passed to prevent them. But
now, in Australia for instance, the laws require workingmen to form unions.
Governments naturally tend to a conservative reaction against anything new.
It is amusing to turn back to the pure food agitation of ten years ago and read the
sensational articles in the newspapers about the poisonous nature of this
dangerous drug, saccharin, in view of the fact that it is being used by millions of
people in Europe in amounts greater than once seemed to upset the tender
stomachs of the Washington "poison squads." But saccharin does not appear to
be responsible for any fatalities yet, though people are said to be heartily sick of
it. And well they may be, for it is not a substitute for sugar except to the sense of
taste. Glucose may correctly be called a substitute for sucrose as margarin for
butter, since they not only taste much the same but have about the same food
value. But to serve saccharin in the place of sugar is like giving a rubber bone to
a dog. It is reported from Europe that the constant use of saccharin gives one
eventually a distaste for all sweets. This is quite likely, although it means the
reversal within a few years of prehistoric food habits. Mankind has always
associated sweetness with food value, for there are few sweet things found in
nature except the sugars. We think we eat sugar because it is sweet. But we do
not. We eat it because it is good for us. The reason it tastes sweet to us is because
it is good for us. So man makes a virtue out of necessity, a pleasure out of duty,
which is the essence of ethics.
In the ancient days of Ind the great Raja Trishanku possessed an earthly paradise
that had been constructed for his delectation by a magician. Therein grew all
manner of beautiful flowers, savory herbs and delicious fruits such as had never
been known before outside heaven. Of them all the Raja and his harems liked
none better than the reed from which they could suck honey. But Indra, being a
jealous god, was wroth when he looked down and beheld mere mortals enjoying
such delights. So he willed the destruction of the enchanted garden. With
drought and tempest it was devastated, with fire and hail, until not a leaf was left
of its luxuriant vegetation and the ground was bare as a threshing floor. But the
roots of the sugar cane are not destroyed though the stalk be cut down; so when
men ventured to enter the desert where once had been this garden of Eden, they
found the cane had grown up again and they carried away cuttings of it and
cultivated it in their gardens. Thus it happened that the nectar of the gods
descended first to monarchs and their favorites, then was spread among the
people and carried abroad to other lands until now any child with a penny in his
hand may buy of the best of it. So it has been with many things. So may it be
with all things.
X
WHAT COMES FROM CORN
The discovery of America dowered mankind with a world of new flora. The
early explorers in their haste to gather up gold paid little attention to the more
valuable products of field and forest, but in the course of centuries their
usefulness has become universally recognized. The potato and tomato, which
Europe at first considered as unfit for food or even as poisonous, have now
become indispensable among all classes. New World drugs like quinine and
cocaine have been adopted into every pharmacopeia. Cocoa is proving a rival of
tea and coffee, and even the banana has made its appearance in European
markets. Tobacco and chicle occupy the nostrils and jaws of a large part of the
human race. Maize and rubber are become the common property of mankind, but
still may be called American. The United States alone raises four-fifths of the
corn and uses three-fourths of the caoutchouc of the world.
All flesh is grass. This may be taken in a dietary as well as a metaphorical sense.
The graminaceae provide the greater part of the sustenance of man and beast;
hay and cereals, wheat, oats, rye, barley, rice, sugar cane, sorghum and corn.
From an American viewpoint the greatest of these, physically and financially, is
corn. The corn crop of the United States for 1917, amounting to 3,159,000,000
bushels, brought in more money than the wheat, cotton, potato and rye crops all
together.
When Columbus reached the West Indies he found the savages playing with
rubber balls, smoking incense sticks of tobacco and eating cakes made of a new
grain that they called mahiz. When Pizarro invaded Peru he found this same
cereal used by the natives not only for food but also for making alcoholic liquor,
in spite of the efforts of the Incas to enforce prohibition. When the Pilgrim
Fathers penetrated into the woods back of Plymouth Harbor they discovered a
cache of Indian corn. So throughout the three Americas, from Canada to Peru,
corn was king and it has proved worthy to rank with the rival cereals of other
continents, the wheat of Europe and the rice of Asia. But food habits are hard to
change and for the most part the people of the Old World are still ignorant of the
delights of hasty pudding and Indian pudding, of hoe-cake and hominy, of sweet
corn and popcorn. I remember thirty years ago seeing on a London stand a heap
of dejected popcorn balls labeled "Novel American Confection. Please Try One."
But nobody complied with this pitiful appeal but me and I was sorry that I did.
Americans used to respond with a shipload of corn whenever an appeal came
from famine sufferers in Armenia, Russia, Ireland, India or Austria, but their
generosity was chilled when they found that their gift was resented as an insult
or as an attempt to poison the impoverished population, who declared that they
would rather die than eat it—and some of them did. Our Department of
Agriculture sent maize missionaries to Europe with farmers and millers as
educators and expert cooks to serve free flapjacks and pones, but the propaganda
made little impression and today Americans are urged to eat more of their own
corn because the famished families of the war-stricken region will not touch it.
Just so the beggars of Munich revolted at potato soup when the pioneer of
American food chemists, Bumford, attempted to introduce this transatlantic dish.
But here we are not so much concerned with corn foods as we are with its
manufactured products. If you split a kernel in two you will find that it consists
of three parts: a hard and horny hull on the outside, a small oily and nitrogenous
germ at the point, and a white body consisting mostly of starch. Each of these is
worked up into various products, as may be seen from the accompanying table.
The hull forms bran and may be mixed with the gluten as a cattle food. The corn
steeped for several days with sulfurous acid is disintegrated and on being ground
the germs are floated off, the gluten or nitrogenous portion washed out, the
starch grains settled down and the residue pressed together as oil cake fodder.
The refined oil from the germ is marketed as a table or cooking oil under the
name of "Mazola" and comes into competition with olive, peanut and cottonseed
oil in the making of vegetable substitutes for lard and butter. Inferior grades may
be used for soaps or for glycerin and perhaps nitroglycerin. A bushel of corn
yields a pound or more of oil. From the corn germ also is extracted a gum called
"paragol" that forms an acceptable substitute for rubber in certain uses. The "red
rubber" sponges and the eraser tips to pencils may be made of it and it can
contribute some twenty per cent. to the synthetic soles of shoes.
CORN PRODUCTS
CORN PRODUCTS
Starch, which constitutes fifty-five per cent. of the corn kernel, can be converted
into a variety of products for dietary and industrial uses. As found in corn,
potatoes or any other vegetables starch consists of small, round, white, hard
grains, tasteless, and insoluble in cold water. But hot water converts it into a
soluble, sticky form which may serve for starching clothes or making cornstarch
pudding. Carrying the process further with the aid of a little acid or other catalyst
it takes up water and goes over into a sugar, dextrose, commonly called
"glucose." Expressed in chemical shorthand this reaction is
C6H10O5 + H2O → C6H12O6
starch water dextrose
This reaction is carried out on forty million bushels of corn a year in the United
States. The "starch milk," that is, the starch grains washed out from the
disintegrated corn kernel by water, is digested in large pressure tanks under fifty
pounds of steam with a few tenths of one per cent. of hydrochloric acid until the
required degree of conversion is reached. Then the remaining acid is neutralized
by caustic soda, and thereby converted into common salt, which in this small
amount does not interfere but rather enhances the taste. The product is the
commercial glucose or corn syrup, which may if desired be evaporated to a
white powder. It is a mixture of three derivatives of starch in about this
proportion:
There are also present three- or four-tenths of one per cent. salt and as much of
the corn protein and a variable amount of water. It will be noticed that the
glucose (dextrose), which gives name to the whole, is the least of the three
ingredients.
Maltose, or malt sugar, has the same composition as cane sugar (C 12H22O11), but
is not nearly so sweet. Dextrin, or starch paste, is not sweet at all. Dextrose or
glucose is otherwise known; as grape sugar, for it is commonly found in grapes
and other ripe fruits. It forms half of honey and it is one of the two products into
which cane sugar splits up when we take it into the mouth. It is not so sweet as
cane sugar and cannot be so readily crystallized, which, however, is not
altogether a disadvantage.
The process of changing starch into dextrose that takes place in the great steam
kettles of the glucose factory is essentially the same as that which takes place in
the ripening of fruit and in the digestion of starch. A large part of our nutriment,
therefore, consists of glucose either eaten as such in ripe fruits or produced in the
mouth or stomach by the decomposition of the starch of unripe fruit, vegetables
and cereals. Glucose may be regarded as a predigested food. In spite of this well-
known fact we still sometimes read "poor food" articles in which glucose is
denounced as a dangerous adulterant and even classed as a poison.
The other ingredients of commercial glucose, the maltose and dextrin, have of
course the same food value as the dextrose, since they are made over into
dextrose in the process of digestion. Whether the glucose syrup is fit to eat
depends, like anything else, on how it is made. If, as was formerly sometimes the
case, sulfuric acid was used to effect the conversion of the starch or sulfurous
acid to bleach the glucose and these acids were not altogether eliminated, the
product might be unwholesome or worse. Some years ago in England there was
a mysterious epidemic of arsenical poisoning among beer drinkers. On tracing it
back it was found that the beer had been made from glucose which had been
made from sulfuric acid which had been made from sulfur which had been made
from a batch of iron pyrites which contained a little arsenic. The replacement of
sulfuric acid by hydrochloric has done away with that danger and the glucose
now produced is pure.
The old recipe for home-made candy called for the addition of a little vinegar to
the sugar syrup to prevent "graining." The purpose of the acid was of course to
invert part of the cane sugar to glucose so as to keep it from crystallizing out
again. The professional candy-maker now uses the corn glucose for that purpose,
so if we accuse him of "adulteration" on that ground we must levy the same
accusation against our grandmothers. The introduction of glucose into candy
manufacture has not injured but greatly increased the sale of sugar for the same
purpose. This is not an uncommon effect of scientific progress, for as we have
observed, the introduction of synthetic perfumes has stimulated the production
of odoriferous flowers and the price of butter has gone up with the introduction
of margarin. So, too, there are more weavers employed and they get higher
wages than in the days when they smashed up the first weaving machines, and
the same is true of printers and typesetting machines. The popular animosity
displayed toward any new achievement of applied science is never justified, for
it benefits not only the world as a whole but usually even those interests with
which it seems at first to conflict.
The chemist is an economizer. It is his special business to hunt up waste
products and make them useful. He was, for instance, worried over the waste of
the cores and skins and scraps that were being thrown away when apples were
put up. Apple pulp contains pectin, which is what makes jelly jell, and berries
and fruits that are short of it will refuse to "jell." But using these for their flavor
he adds apple pulp for pectin and glucose for smoothness and sugar for
sweetness and, if necessary, synthetic dyes for color, he is able to put on the
market a variety of jellies, jams and marmalades at very low price. The same
principle applies here as in the case of all compounded food products. If they are
made in cleanly fashion, contain no harmful ingredients and are truthfully
labeled there is no reason for objecting to them. But if the manufacturer goes so
far as to put strawberry seeds—or hayseed—into his artificial "strawberry jam" I
think that might properly be called adulteration, for it is imitating the
imperfections of nature, and man ought to be too proud to do that.
The old-fashioned open kettle molasses consisted mostly of glucose and other
invert sugars together with such cane sugar as could not be crystallized out. But
when the vacuum pan was introduced the molasses was impoverished of its
sweetness and beet sugar does not yield any molasses. So we now have in its
place the corn syrups consisting of about 85 per cent. of glucose and 15 per cent.
of sugar flavored with maple or vanillin or whatever we like. It is encouraging to
see the bill boards proclaiming the virtues of "Karo" syrup and "Mazola" oil
when only a few years ago the products of our national cereal were without
honor in their own country.
Many other products besides foods are made from corn starch. Dextrin serves in
place of the old "gum arabic" for the mucilage of our envelopes and stamps.
Another form of dextrin sold as "Kordex" is used to hold together the sand of the
cores of castings. After the casting has been made the scorched core can be
shaken out. Glucose is used in place of sugar as a filler for cheap soaps and for
leather.
Altogether more than a hundred different commercial products are now made
from corn, not counting cob pipes. Every year the factories of the United States
work up over 50,000,000 bushels of corn into 800,000,000 pounds of corn syrup,
600,000,000 pounds of starch, 230,000,000 pounds of corn sugar, 625,000,000
pounds of gluten feed, 90,000,000 pounds of oil and 90,000,000 pounds of oil
cake.
Two million bushels of cobs are wasted every year in the United States. Can't
something be made out of them? This is the question that is agitating the
chemists of the Carbohydrate Laboratory of the Department of Agriculture at
Washington. They have found it possible to work up the corn cobs into glucose
and xylose by heating with acid. But glucose can be more cheaply obtained from
other starchy or woody materials and they cannot find a market for the xylose.
This is a sort of a sugar but only about half as sweet as that from cane. Who can
invent a use for it! More promising is the discovery by this laboratory that by
digesting the cobs with hot water there can be extracted about 30 per cent. of a
gum suitable for bill posting and labeling.
Since the starches and sugars belong to the same class of compounds as the
celluloses they also can be acted upon by nitric acid with the production of
explosives like guncotton. Nitro-sugar has not come into common use, but nitro-
starch is found to be one of safest of the high explosives. On account of the
danger of decomposition and spontaneous explosion from the presence of
foreign substances the materials in explosives must be of the purest possible. It
was formerly thought that tapioca must be imported from Java for making nitro-
starch. But during the war when shipping was short, the War Department found
that it could be made better and cheaper from our home-grown corn starch.
When the war closed the United States was making 1,720,000 pounds of nitro-
starch a month for loading hand grenades. So, too, the Post Office Department
discovered that it could use mucilage made of corn dextrin as well as that which
used to be made from tapioca. This is progress in the right direction. It would be
well to divert some of the energetic efforts now devoted to the increase of
commerce to the discovery of ways of reducing the need for commerce by the
development of home products. There is no merit in simply hauling things
around the world.
In the last chapter we saw how dextrose or glucose could be converted by
fermentation into alcohol. Since corn starch, as we have seen, can be converted
into dextrose, it can serve as a source of alcohol. This was, in fact, one of the
earliest misuses to which corn was put, and before the war put a stop to it
34,000,000 bushels went into the making of whiskey in the United States every
year, not counting the moonshiners' output. But even though we left off drinking
whiskey the distillers could still thrive. Mars is more thirsty than Bacchus. The
output of whiskey, denatured for industrial purposes, is more than three times
what is was before the war, and the price has risen from 30 cents a gallon to 67
cents. This may make it profitable to utilize sugars, starches and cellulose that
formerly were out of the question. According to the calculations of the Forest
Products Laboratory of Madison it costs from 37 to 44 cents a gallon to make
alcohol from corn, but it may be made from sawdust at a cost of from 14 to 20
cents. This is not "wood alcohol" (that is, methyl alcohol, CH4O) such as is
made by the destructive distillation of wood, but genuine "grain alcohol" (ethyl
alcohol, C2H6O), such as is made by the fermentation of glucose or other sugar.
The first step in the process is to digest the sawdust or chips with dilute sulfuric
acid under heat and pressure. This converts the cellulose (wood fiber) in large
part into glucose ("corn sugar") which may be extracted by hot water in a
diffusion battery as in extracting the sugar from beet chips. This glucose solution
may then be fermented by yeast and the resulting alcohol distilled off. The
process is perfectly practicable but has yet to be proved profitable. But the sulfite
liquors of the paper mills are being worked up successfully into industrial
alcohol.
The rapidly approaching exhaustion of our oil fields which the war has
accelerated leads us to look around to see what we can get to take the place of
gasoline. One of the most promising of the suggested substitutes is alcohol. The
United States is exceptionally rich in mineral oil, but some countries, for
instance England, Germany, France and Australia, have little or none. The
Australian Advisory Council of Science, called to consider the problem,
recommends alcohol for stationary engines and motor cars. Alcohol has the
disadvantage of being less volatile than gasoline so it is hard to start up the
engine from the cold. But the lower volatility and ignition point of alcohol are an
advantage in that it can be put under a pressure of 150 pounds to the square inch.
A pound of gasoline contains fifty per cent. more potential energy than a pound
of alcohol, but since the alcohol vapor can be put under twice the compression of
the gasoline and requires only one-third the amount of air, the thermal efficiency
of an alcohol engine may be fifty per cent. higher than that of a gasoline engine.
Alcohol also has several other conveniences that can count in its favor. In the
case of incomplete combustion the cylinders are less likely to be clogged with
carbon and the escaping gases do not have the offensive odor of the gasoline
smoke. Alcohol does not ignite so easily as gasoline and the fire is more readily
put out, for water thrown upon blazing alcohol dilutes it and puts out the flame
while gasoline floats on water and the fire is spread by it. It is possible to
increase the inflammability of alcohol by mixing with it some hydrocarbon such
as gasoline, benzene or acetylene. In the Taylor-White process the vapor from
low-grade alcohol containing 17 per cent. water is passed over calcium carbide.
This takes out the water and adds acetylene gas, making a suitable mixture for an
internal combustion engine.
Alcohol can be made from anything of a starchy, sugary or woody nature, that is,
from the main substance of all vegetation. If we start with wood (cellulose) we
convert it first into sugar (glucose) and, of course, we could stop here and use it
for food instead of carrying it on into alcohol. This provides one factor of our
food, the carbohydrate, but by growing the yeast plants on glucose and feeding
them with nitrates made from the air we can get the protein and fat. So it is quite
possible to live on sawdust, although it would be too expensive a diet for
anybody but a millionaire, and he would not enjoy it. Glucose has been made
from formaldehyde and this in turn made from carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, so
the synthetic production of food from the elements is not such an absurdity as it
was thought when Berthelot suggested it half a century ago.
The first step in the making of alcohol is to change the starch over into sugar.
This transformation is effected in the natural course of sprouting by which the
insoluble starch stored up in the seed is converted into the soluble glucose for the
sap of the growing plant. This malting process is that mainly made use of in the
production of alcohol from grain. But there are other ways of effecting the
change. It may be done by heating with acid as we have seen, or according to a
method now being developed the final conversion may be accomplished by mold
instead of malt. In applying this method, known as the amylo process, to corn,
the meal is mixed with twice its weight of water, acidified with hydrochloric acid
and steamed. The mash is then cooled down somewhat, diluted with sterilized
water and innoculated with the mucor filaments. As the mash molds the starch is
gradually changed over to glucose and if this is the product desired the process
may be stopped at this point. But if alcohol is wanted yeast is added to ferment
the sugar. By keeping it alkaline and treating with the proper bacteria a high
yield of glycerin can be obtained.
In the fermentation process for making alcoholic liquors a little glycerin is
produced as a by-product. Glycerin, otherwise called glycerol, is intermediate
between sugar and alcohol. Its molecule contains three carbon atoms, while
glucose has six and alcohol two. It is possible to increase the yield of glycerin if
desired by varying the form of fermentation. This was desired most earnestly in
Germany during the war, for the British blockade shut off the importation of the
fats and oils from which the Germans extracted the glycerin for their
nitroglycerin. Under pressure of this necessity they worked out a process of
getting glycerin in quantity from sugar and, news of this being brought to this
country by Dr. Alonzo Taylor, the United States Treasury Department set up a
special laboratory to work out this problem. John R. Eoff and other chemists
working in this laboratory succeeded in getting a yield of twenty per cent. of
glycerin by fermenting black strap molasses or other syrup with California wine
yeast. During the fermentation it is necessary to neutralize the acetic acid formed
with sodium or calcium carbonate. It was estimated that glycerin could be made
from waste sugars at about a quarter of its war-time cost, but it is doubtful
whether the process would be profitable at normal prices.
We can, if we like, dispense with either yeast or bacteria in the production of
glycerin. Glucose syrup suspended in oil under steam pressure with finely
divided nickel as a catalyst and treated with nascent hydrogen will take up the
hydrogen and be converted into glycerin. But the yield is poor and the process
expensive.
Food serves substantially the same purpose in the body as fuel in the engine. It
provides the energy for work. The carbohydrates, that is the sugars, starches and
celluloses, can all be used as fuels and can all—even, as we have seen, the
cellulose—be used as foods. The final products, water and carbon dioxide, are in
both cases the same and necessarily therefore the amount of energy produced is
the same in the body as in the engine. Corn is a good example of the equivalence
of the two sources of energy. There are few better foods and no better fuels. I can
remember the good old days in Kansas when we had corn to burn. It was both an
economy and a luxury, for—at ten cents a bushel—it was cheaper than coal or
wood and preferable to either at any price. The long yellow ears, each wrapped
in its own kindling, could be handled without crocking the fingers. Each kernel
as it crackled sent out a blazing jet of oil and the cobs left a fine bed of coals for
the corn popper to be shaken over. Driftwood and the pyrotechnic fuel they make
now by soaking sticks in strontium and copper salts cannot compare with the
old-fashioned corn-fed fire in beauty and the power of evoking visions.
Doubtless such luxury would be condemned as wicked nowadays, but those who
have known the calorific value of corn would find it hard to abandon it
altogether, and I fancy that the Western farmer's wife, when she has an extra
batch of baking to do, will still steal a few ears from the crib.
XI
SOLIDIFIED SUNSHINE
All life and all that life accomplishes depend upon the supply of solar energy
stored in the form of food. The chief sources of this vital energy are the fats and
the sugars. The former contain two and a quarter times the potential energy of
the latter. Both, when completely purified, consist of nothing but carbon,
hydrogen and oxygen; elements that are to be found freely everywhere in air and
water. So when the sunny southland exports fats and oils, starches and sugar, it is
then sending away nothing material but what comes back to it in the next wind.
What it is sending to the regions of more slanting sunshine is merely some of the
surplus of the radiant energy it has received so abundantly, compacted for
convenience into a portable and edible form.
In previous chapters I have dealt with some of the uses of cotton, its employment
for cloth, for paper, for artificial fibers, for explosives, and for plastics. But I
have ignored the thing that cotton is attached to and for which, in the economy
of nature, the fibers are formed; that is, the seed. It is as though I had described
the aeroplane and ignored the aviator whom it was designed to carry. But in this
neglect I am but following the example of the human race, which for three
thousand years used the fiber but made no use of the seed except to plant the
next crop.
Just as mankind is now divided into the two great classes, the wheat-eaters and
the rice-eaters, so the ancient world was divided into the wool-wearers and the
cotton-wearers. The people of India wore cotton; the Europeans wore wool.
When the Greeks under Alexander fought their way to the Far East they were
surprised to find wool growing on trees. Later travelers returning from Cathay
told of the same marvel and travelers who stayed at home and wrote about what
they had not seen, like Sir John Maundeville, misunderstood these reports and
elaborated a legend of a tree that bore live lambs as fruit. Here, for instance, is
how a French poetical botanist, Delacroix, described it in 1791, as translated
from his Latin verse:
Upon a stalk is fixed a living brute,
A rooted plant bears quadruped for fruit;
It has a fleece, nor does it want for eyes,
And from its brows two wooly horns arise.
The rude and simple country people say
It is an animal that sleeps by day
And wakes at night, though rooted to the ground,
To feed on grass within its reach around.
But modern commerce broke down the barrier between East and West. A new
cotton country, the best in the world, was discovered in America. Cotton invaded
England and after a hard fight, with fists as well as finance, wool was beaten in
its chief stronghold. Cotton became King and the wool-sack in the House of
Lords lost its symbolic significance.
Still two-thirds of the cotton crop, the seed, was wasted and it is only within the
last fifty years that methods of using it have been developed to any extent.
The cotton crop of the United States for 1917 amounted to about 11,000,000
bales of 500 pounds each. When the Great War broke out and no cotton could be
exported to Germany and little to England the South was in despair, for cotton
went down to five or six cents a pound. The national Government, regardless of
states' rights, was called upon for aid and everybody was besought to "buy a
bale." Those who responded to this patriotic appeal were well rewarded, for
cotton rose as the war went on and sold at twenty-nine cents a pound.
PRODUCTS AND USES OF COTTONSEED
PRODUCTS AND USES OF COTTONSEED
PRODUCTS AND USES OF COTTONSEED—Continued
PRODUCTS AND USES OF COTTONSEED—Continued
But the chemist has added some $150,000,000 a year to the value of the crop by
discovering ways of utilizing the cottonseed that used to be thrown away or
burned as fuel. The genealogical table of the progeny of the cottonseed herewith
printed will give some idea of their variety. If you will examine a cottonseed you
will see first that there is a fine fuzz of cotton fiber sticking to it. These linters
can be removed by machinery and used for any purpose where length of fiber is
not essential. For instance, they may be nitrated as described in previous articles
and used for making smokeless powder or celluloid.
On cutting open the seed you will observe that it consists of an oily, mealy
kernel encased in a thin brown hull. The hulls, amounting to 700 or 900 pounds
in a ton of seed, were formerly burned. Now, however, they bring from $4 to $10
a ton because they can be ground up into cattle-feed or paper stock or used as
fertilizer.
The kernel of the cottonseed on being pressed yields a yellow oil and leaves a
mealy cake. This last, mixed with the hulls, makes a good fodder for fattening
cattle. Also, adding twenty-five per cent. of the refined cottonseed meal to our
war bread made it more nutritious and no less palatable. Cottonseed meal
contains about forty per cent. of protein and is therefore a highly concentrated
and very valuable feeding stuff. Before the war we were exporting nearly half a
million tons of cottonseed meal to Europe, chiefly to Germany and Denmark,
where it is used for dairy cows. The British yeoman, his country's pride, has not
yet been won over to the use of any such newfangled fodder and consequently
the British manufacturer could not compete with his continental rivals in the
seed-crushing business, for he could not dispose of his meal-cake by-product as
did they.
Photo by Press Illustrating Service Cottonseed Oil As It Is Squeezed From The
Seed By The Presses
Photo by Press Illustrating Service Cottonseed Oil As It Is Squeezed From
The Seed By The Presses
Photo by Press Illustrating Service
Photo by Press Illustrating Service
Cottonseed Oil As It Comes From The Compressors Flowing Out Of The
Faucets
When cold it is firm and white like lard
Let us now turn to the most valuable of the cottonseed products, the oil. The
seed contains about twenty per cent. of oil, most of which can be squeezed out of
the hot seeds by hydraulic pressure. It comes out as a red liquid of a disagreeable
odor. This is decolorized, deodorized and otherwise purified in various ways: by
treatment with alkalies or acids, by blowing air and steam through it, by shaking
up with fuller's earth, by settling and filtering. The refined product is a yellow
oil, suitable for table use. Formerly, on account of the popular prejudice against
any novel food products, it used to masquerade as olive oil. Now, however, it
boldly competes with its ancient rival in the lands of the olive tree and America
ships some 700,000 barrels of cottonseed oil a year to the Mediterranean. The
Turkish Government tried to check the spread of cottonseed oil by calling it an
adulterant and prohibiting its mixture with olive oil. The result was that the sale
of Turkish olive oil fell off because people found its flavor too strong when
undiluted. Italy imports cottonseed oil and exports her olive oil. Denmark
imports cottonseed meal and margarine and exports her butter.
Northern nations are accustomed to hard fats and do not take to oils for cooking
or table use as do the southerners. Butter and lard are preferred to olive oil and
ghee. But this does not rule out cottonseed. It can be combined with the hard fats
of animal or vegetable origin in margarine or it may itself be hardened by
hydrogen.
To understand this interesting reaction which is profoundly affecting
international relations it will be necessary to dip into the chemistry of the
subject. Here are the symbols of the chief ingredients of the fats and oils. Please
look at them.
Don't skip these because you have not studied chemistry. That's why I am giving
them to you. If you had studied chemistry you would know them without my
telling. Just examine them and you will discover the secret. You will see that all
three are composed of the same elements, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Notice
next the number of atoms in each element as indicated by the little low figures
on the right of each letter. You observe that all three contain the same number of
atoms of carbon and oxygen but differ in the amount of hydrogen. This trifling
difference in composition makes a great difference in behavior. The less the
hydrogen the lower the melting point. Or to say the same thing in other words,
fatty substances low in hydrogen are apt to be liquids and those with a full
complement of hydrogen atoms are apt to be solids at the ordinary temperature
of the air. It is common to call the former "oils" and the latter "fats," but that
implies too great a dissimilarity, for the distinction depends on whether we are
living in the tropics or the arctic. It is better, therefore, to lump them all together
and call them "soft fats" and "hard fats," respectively.
Fats of the third order, the stearic group, are called "saturated" because they have
taken up all the hydrogen they can hold. Fats of the other two groups are called
"unsaturated." The first, which have the least hydrogen, are the most eager for
more. If hydrogen is not handy they will take up other things, for instance
oxygen. Linseed oil, which consists largely, as the name implies, of linoleic acid,
will absorb oxygen on exposure to the air and become hard. That is why it is
used in painting. Such oils are called "drying" oils, although the hardening
process is not really drying, since they contain no water, but is oxidation. The
"semi-drying oils," those that will harden somewhat on exposure to the air,
include the oils of cottonseed, corn, sesame, soy bean and castor bean. Olive oil
and peanut oil are "non-drying" and contain oleic compounds (olein). The hard
fats, such as stearin, palmitin and margarin, are mostly of animal origin, tallow
and lard, though coconut and palm oil contain a large proportion of such
saturated compounds.
Though the chemist talks of the fatty "acids," nobody else would call them so
because they are not sour. But they do behave like the acids in forming salts with
bases. The alkali salts of the fatty acids are known to us as soaps. In the natural
fats they exist not as free acids but as salts of an organic base, glycerin, as I
explained in a previous chapter. The natural fats and oils consist of complex
mixtures of the glycerin compounds of these acids (known as olein, stearin, etc.),
as well as various others of a similar sort. If you will set a bottle of salad oil in
the ice-box you will see it separate into two parts. The white, crystalline solid
that separates out is largely stearin. The part that remains liquid is largely olein.
You might separate them by filtering it cold and if then you tried to sell the two
products you would find that the hard fat would bring a higher price than the oil,
either for food or soap. If you tried to keep them you would find that the hard fat
kept neutral and "sweet" longer than the other. You may remember that the
perfumes (as well as their odorous opposites) were mostly unsaturated
compounds. So we find that it is the free and unsaturated fatty acids that cause
butter and oil to become rank and rancid.
Obviously, then, we could make money if we could turn soft, unsaturated fats
like olein into hard, saturated fats like stearin. Referring to the symbols we see
that all that is needed to effect the change is to get the former to unite with
hydrogen. This requires a little coaxing. The coaxer is called a catalyst. A
catalyst, as I have previously explained, is a substance that by its mere presence
causes the union of two other substances that might otherwise remain separate.
For that reason the catalyst is referred to as "a chemical parson." Finely divided
metals have a strong catalytic action. Platinum sponge is excellent but too
expensive. So in this case nickel is used. A nickel salt mixed with charcoal or
pumice is reduced to the metallic state by heating in a current of hydrogen. Then
it is dropped into the tank of oil and hydrogen gas is blown through. The
hydrogen may be obtained by splitting water into its two components, hydrogen
and oxygen, by means of the electrical current, or by passing steam over spongy
iron which takes out the oxygen. The stream of hydrogen blown through the hot
oil converts the linoleic acid to oleic and then the oleic into stearic. If you
figured up the weights from the symbols given above you would find that it
takes about one pound of hydrogen to convert a hundred pounds of olein to
stearin and the cost is only about one cent a pound. The nickel is unchanged and
is easily separated. A trace of nickel may remain in the product, but as it is very
much less than the amount dissolved when food is cooked in nickel-plated
vessels it cannot be regarded as harmful.
Even more unsaturated fats may be hydrogenated. Fish oil has hitherto been
almost unusable because of its powerful and persistent odor. This is chiefly due
to a fatty acid which properly bears the uneuphonious name of clupanodonic
acid and has the composition of C18H28O2. By comparing this with the symbol
of the odorless stearic acid, C18H36O2, you will see that all the rank fish oil lacks
to make it respectable is eight hydrogen atoms. A Japanese chemist, Tsujimoto,
has discovered how to add them and now the reformed fish oil under the names
of "talgol" and "candelite" serves for lubricant and even enters higher circles as a
soap or food.
This process of hardening fats by hydrogenation resulted from the experiments
of a French chemist, Professor Sabatier of Toulouse, in the last years of the last
century, but, as in many other cases, the Germans were the first to take it up and
profit by it. Before the war the copra or coconut oil from the British Asiatic
colonies of India, Ceylon and Malaya went to Germany at the rate of
$15,000,000 a year. The palm kernels grown in British West Africa were
shipped, not to Liverpool, but to Hamburg, $19,000,000 worth annually. Here
the oil was pressed out and used for margarin and the residual cake used for
feeding cows produced butter or for feeding hogs produced lard. Half of the
copra raised in the British possessions was sent to Germany and half of the oil
from it was resold to the British margarin candle and soap makers at a handsome
profit. The British chemists were not blind to this, but they could do nothing,
first because the English politician was wedded to free trade, second, because the
English farmer would not use oil cake for his stock. France was in a similar
situation. Marseilles produced 15,500,000 gallons of oil from peanuts grown
largely in the French African colonies—but shipped the oil-cake on to Hamburg.
Meanwhile the Germans, in pursuit of their policy of attaining economic
independence, were striving to develop their own tropical territory. The subjects
of King George who because they had the misfortune to live in India were
excluded from the British South African dominions or mistreated when they did
come, were invited to come to German East Africa and set to raising peanuts in
rivalry to French Senegal and British Coromandel. Before the war Germany got
half of the Egyptian cottonseed and half of the Philippine copra. That is one of
the reasons why German warships tried to check Dewey at Manila in 1898 and
German troops tried to conquer Egypt in 1915.
But the tide of war set the other way and the German plantations of palmnuts
and peanuts in Africa have come into British possession and now the British
Government is starting an educational campaign to teach their farmers to feed oil
cake like the Germans and their people to eat peanuts like the Americans.
The Germans shut off from the tropical fats supply were hard up for food and for
soap, for lubricants and for munitions. Every person was given a fat card that
reduced his weekly allowance to the minimum. Millers were required to remove
the germs from their cereals and deliver them to the war department. Children
were set to gathering horse-chestnuts, elderberries, linden-balls, grape seeds,
cherry stones and sunflower heads, for these contain from six to twenty per cent.
of oil. Even the blue-bottle fly—hitherto an idle creature for whom Beelzebub
found mischief—was conscripted into the national service and set to laying eggs
by the billion on fish refuse. Within a few days there is a crop of larvae which, to
quote the "Chemische Zentralblatt," yields forty-five grams per kilogram of a
yellow oil. This product, we should hope, is used for axle-grease and
nitroglycerin, although properly purified it would be as nutritious as any other—
to one who has no imagination. Driven to such straits Germany would have
given a good deal for one of those tropical islands that we are so careless about.
It might have been supposed that since the United States possessed the best land
in the world for the production of cottonseed, coconuts, peanuts, and corn that it
would have led all other countries in the utilization of vegetable oils for food.
That this country has not so used its advantage is due to the fact that the new
products have not merely had to overcome popular conservatism, ignorance and
prejudice—hard things to fight in any case—but have been deliberately checked
and hampered by the state and national governments in defense of vested
interests. The farmer vote is a power that no politician likes to defy and the dairy
business in every state was thoroughly organized. In New York the oleomargarin
industry that in 1879 was turning out products valued at more than $5,000,000 a
year was completely crushed out by state legislation.[2] The output of the United
States, which in 1902 had risen to 126,000,000 pounds, was cut down to
43,000,000 pounds in 1909 by federal legislation. According to the disingenuous
custom of American lawmakers the Act of 1902 was passed through Congress as
a "revenue measure," although it meant a loss to the Government of more than
three million dollars a year over what might be produced by a straight two cents
a pound tax. A wholesale dealer in oleomargarin was made to pay a higher
license than a wholesale liquor dealer. The federal law put a tax of ten cents a
pound on yellow oleomargarin and a quarter of a cent a pound on the uncolored.
But people—doubtless from pure prejudice—prefer a yellow spread for their
bread, so the economical housewife has to work over her oleomargarin with the
annatto which is given to her when she buys a package or, if the law prohibits
this, which she is permitted to steal from an open box on the grocer's counter. A
plausible pretext for such legislation is afforded by the fact that the butter
substitutes are so much like butter that they cannot be easily distinguished from
it unless the use of annatto is permitted to butter and prohibited to its
competitors. Fradulent sales of substitutes of any kind ought to be prevented, but
the recent pure food legislation in America has shown that it is possible to secure
truthful labeling without resorting to such drastic measures. In Europe the laws
against substitution were very strict, but not devised to restrict the industry.
Consequently the margarin output of Germany doubled in the five years
preceding the war and the output of England tripled. In Denmark the
consumption of margarin rose from 8.8 pounds per capita in 1890 to 32.6 pounds
in 1912. Yet the butter business, Denmark's pride, was not injured, and Germany
and England imported more butter than ever before. Now that the price of butter
in America has gone over the seventy-five cent mark Congress may conclude
that it no longer needs to be protected against competition.
The "compound lards" or "lard compounds," consisting usually of cottonseed oil
and oleo-stearin, although the latter may now be replaced by hardened oil, met
with the same popular prejudice and attempted legislative interference, but
succeeded more easily in coming into common use under such names as
"Cottosuet," "Kream Krisp," "Kuxit," "Korno," "Cottolene" and "Crisco."
Oleomargarin, now generally abbreviated to margarin, originated, like many
other inventions, in military necessity. The French Government in 1869 offered a
prize for a butter substitute for the army that should be cheaper and better than
butter in that it did not spoil so easily. The prize was won by a French chemist,
Mége-Mouries, who found that by chilling beef fat the solid stearin could be
separated from an oil (oleo) which was the substantially same as that in milk and
hence in butter. Neutral lard acts the same.
This discovery of how to separate the hard and soft fats was followed by
improved methods for purifying them and later by the process for converting the
soft into the hard fats by hydrogenation. The net result was to put into the hands
of the chemist the ability to draw his materials at will from any land and from
the vegetable and animal kingdoms and to combine them as he will to make new
fat foods for every use; hard for summer, soft for winter; solid for the
northerners and liquid for the southerners; white, yellow or any other color, and
flavored to suit the taste. The Hindu can eat no fat from the sacred cow; the
Mohammedan and the Jew can eat no fat from the abhorred pig; the vegetarian
will touch neither; other people will take both. No matter, all can be
accommodated.
All the fats and oils, though they consist of scores of different compounds, have
practically the same food value when freed from the extraneous matter that gives
them their characteristic flavors. They are all practically tasteless and colorless.
The various vegetable and animal oils and fats have about the same digestibility,
98 per cent.,[3] and are all ordinarily completely utilized in the body, supplying it
with two and a quarter times as much energy as any other food.
It does not follow, however, that there is no difference in the products. The
margarin men accuse butter of harboring tuberculosis germs from which their
product, because it has been heated or is made from vegetable fats, is free. The
butter men retort that margarin is lacking in vitamines, those mysterious
substances which in minute amounts are necessary for life and especially for
growth. Both the claim and the objection lose a large part of their force where
the margarin, as is customarily the case, is mixed with butter or churned up with
milk to give it the familiar flavor. But the difficulty can be easily overcome. The
milk used for either butter or margarin should be free or freed from disease
germs. If margarin is altogether substituted for butter, the necessary vitamines
may be sufficiently provided by milk, eggs and greens.
Owing to these new processes all the fatty substances of all lands have been
brought into competition with each other. In such a contest the vegetable is likely
to beat the animal and the southern to win over the northern zones. In Europe
before the war the proportion of the various ingredients used to make butter
substitutes was as follows:
AVERAGE COMPOSITION OF EUROPEAN MARGARIN
Per Cent.
Animal hard fats 25
Vegetable hard fats 35
Copra 29
Palm-kernel 6
Vegetable soft fats 26
Cottonseed 13
Peanut 6
Sesame 6
Soya-bean 1
Water, milk, salt 14
100
This is not the composition of any particular brand but the average of them all.
The use of a certain amount of the oil of the sesame seed is required by the laws
of Germany and Denmark because it can be easily detected by a chemical color
test and so serves to prevent the margarin containing it from being sold as butter.
"Open sesame!" is the password to these markets. Remembering that margarin
originally was made up entirely of animal fats, soft and hard, we can see from
the above figures how rapidly they are being displaced by the vegetable fats. The
cottonseed and peanut oils have replaced the original oleo oil and the tropical
oils from the coconut (copra) and African palm are crowding out the animal hard
fats. Since now we can harden at will any of the vegetable oils it is possible to
get along altogether without animal fats. Such vegetable margarins were
originally prepared for sale in India, but proved unexpectedly popular in Europe,
and are now being introduced into America. They are sold under various trade
names suggesting their origin, such as "palmira," "palmona," "milkonut,"
"cocose," "coconut oleomargarin" and "nucoa nut margarin." The last named is
stated to be made of coconut oil (for the hard fat) and peanut oil (for the soft fat),
churned up with a culture of pasteurized milk (to impart the butter flavor). The
law requires such a product to be branded "oleomargarine" although it is not.
Such cases of compulsory mislabeling are not rare. You remember the "Pigs is
Pigs" story.
Peanut butter has won its way into the American menu without any camouflage
whatever, and as a salad oil it is almost equally frank about its lowly origin. This
nut, which grows on a vine instead of a tree, and is dug from the ground like
potatoes instead of being picked with a pole, goes by various names according to
locality, peanuts, ground-nuts, monkey-nuts, arachides and goobers. As it takes
the place of cotton oil in some of its products so it takes its place in the fields
and oilmills of Texas left vacant by the bollweevil. The once despised peanut
added some $56,000,000 to the wealth of the South in 1916. The peanut is rich
in the richest of foods, some 50 per cent. of oil and 30 per cent. of protein. The
latter can be worked up into meat substitutes that will make the vegetarian cease
to envy his omnivorous neighbor. Thanks largely to the chemist who has opened
these new fields of usefulness, the peanut-raiser got $1.25 a bushel in 1917
instead of the 30 cents that he got four years before.
It would be impossible to enumerate all the available sources of vegetable oils,
for all seeds and nuts contain more or less fatty matter and as we become more
economical we shall utilize of what we now throw away. The germ of the corn
kernel, once discarded in the manufacture of starch, now yields a popular table
oil. From tomato seeds, one of the waste products of the canning factory, can be
extracted 22 per cent. of an edible oil. Oats contain 7 per cent. of oil. From rape
seed the Japanese get 20,000 tons of oil a year. To the sources previously
mentioned may be added pumpkin seeds, poppy seeds, raspberry seeds, tobacco
seeds, cockleburs, hazelnuts, walnuts, beechnuts and acorns.
The oil-bearing seeds of the tropics are innumerable and will become
increasingly essential to the inhabitants of northern lands. It was the realization
of this that brought on the struggle of the great powers for the possession of
tropical territory which, for years before, they did not think worth while raising a
flag over. No country in the future can consider itself safe unless it has secure
access to such sources. We had a sharp lesson in this during the war. Palm oil, it
seems, is necessary for the manufacture of tinplate, an industry that was built up
in the United States by the McKinley tariff. The British possessions in West
Africa were the chief source of palm oil and the Germans had the handling of it.
During the war the British Government assumed control of the palm oil products
of the British and German colonies and prohibited their export to other countries
than England. Americans protested and beseeched, but in vain. The British held,
quite correctly, that they needed all the oil they could get for food and lubrication
and nitroglycerin. But the British also needed canned meat from America for
their soldiers and when it was at length brought to their attention that the packers
could not ship meat unless they had cans and that cans could not be made
without tin and that tin could not be made without palm oil the British
Government consented to let us buy a little of their palm oil. The lesson is that of
Voltaire's story, "Candide," "Let us cultivate our own garden"—and plant a few
palm trees in it—also rubber trees, but that is another story.
The international struggle for oil led to the partition of the Pacific as the struggle
for rubber led to the partition of Africa. Theodor Weber, as Stevenson says,
"harried the Samoans" to get copra much as King Leopold of Belgium harried
the Congoese to get caoutchouc. It was Weber who first fully realized that the
South Sea islands, formerly given over to cannibals, pirates and missionaries,
might be made immensely valuable through the cultivation of the coconut palms.
When the ripe coconut is split open and exposed to the sun the meat dries up and
shrivels and in this form, called "copra," it can be cut out and shipped to the
factory where the oil is extracted and refined. Weber while German Consul in
Samoa was also manager of what was locally known as "the long-handled
concern" (Deutsche Handels und Plantagen Gesellschaft der Südsee Inseln zu
Hamburg), a pioneer commercial and semi-official corporation that played a part
in the Pacific somewhat like the British Hudson Bay Company in Canada or East
India Company in Hindustan. Through the agency of this corporation on the start
Germany acquired a virtual monopoly of the transportation and refining of
coconut oil and would have become the dominant power in the Pacific if she had
not been checked by force of arms. In Apia Bay in 1889 and again in Manila
Bay in 1898 an American fleet faced a German fleet ready for action while a
British warship lay between. So we rescued the Philippines and Samoa from
German rule and in 1914 German power was eliminated from the Pacific.
During the ten years before the war, the production of copra in the German
islands more than doubled and this was only the beginning of the business. Now
these islands have been divided up among Australia, New Zealand and Japan,
and these countries are planning to take care of the copra.
But although we get no extension of territory from the war we still have the
Philippines and some of the Samoan Islands, and these are capable of great
development. From her share of the Samoan Islands Germany got a million
dollars' worth of copra and we might get more from ours. The Philippines now
lead the world in the production of copra, but Java is a close second and Ceylon
not far behind. If we do not look out we will be beaten both by the Dutch and the
British, for they are undertaking the cultivation of the coconut on a larger scale
and in a more systematic way. According to an official bulletin of the Philippine
Government a coconut plantation should bring in "dividends ranging from 10 to
75 per cent. from the tenth to the hundredth year." And this being printed in 1913
figured the price of copra at 3-1/2 cents, whereas it brought 4-1/2 cents in 1918,
so the prospect is still more encouraging. The copra is half fat and can be
cheaply shipped to America, where it can be crushed in the southern oilmills
when they are not busy on cottonseed or peanuts. But even this cost of
transportation can be reduced by extracting the oil in the islands and shipping it
in bulk like petroleum in tank steamers.
In the year ending June, 1918, the United States imported from the Philippines
155,000,000 pounds of coconut oil worth $18,000,000 and 220,000,000 pounds
of copra worth $10,000,000. But this was about half our total importations; the
rest of it we had to get from foreign countries. Panama palms may give us a little
relief from this dependence on foreign sources. In 1917 we imported 19,000,000
whole coconuts from Panama valued at $700,000.
SPLITTING COCONUTS ON THE ISLAND OF TAHITI After drying in the
sun the meat is picked and the oil extracted for making coconut butter
SPLITTING COCONUTS ON THE ISLAND OF TAHITI After drying in
the sun the meat is picked and the oil extracted for making coconut butter
From "America's Munitions"
From "America's Munitions"
THE ELECTRIC CURRENT PASSING THROUGH SALT WATER IN
THESE CELLS DECOMPOSES THE SALT INTO CAUSTIC SODA AND
CHLORINE GAS
There were eight rooms like this in the Edgewood plant, capable of
producing 200,000 pounds of chlorine a day
A new form of fat that has rapidly come into our market is the oil of the soya or
soy bean. In 1918 we imported over 300,000,000 pounds of soy-bean oil, mostly
from Manchuria. The oil is used in manufacture of substitutes for butter, lard,
cheese, milk and cream, as well as for soap and paint. The soy-bean can be
raised in the United States wherever corn can be grown and provides provender
for man and beast. The soy meal left after the extraction of the oil makes a good
cattle food and the fermented juice affords the shoya sauce made familiar to us
through the popularity of the chop-suey restaurants.
As meat and dairy products become scarcer and dearer we shall become
increasingly dependent upon the vegetable fats. We should therefore devise
means of saving what we now throw away, raise as much as we can under our
own flag, keep open avenues for our foreign supply and encourage our cooks to
make use of the new products invented by our chemists.
CHAPTER XII
FIGHTING WITH FUMES
The Germans opened the war using projectiles seventeen inches in diameter.
They closed it using projectiles one one-hundred millionth of an inch in
diameter. And the latter were more effective than the former. As the dimensions
were reduced from molar to molecular the battle became more intense. For when
the Big Bertha had shot its bolt, that was the end of it. Whomever it hit was hurt,
but after that the steel fragments of the shell lay on the ground harmless and
inert. The men in the dugouts could hear the shells whistle overhead without
alarm. But the poison gas could penetrate where the rifle ball could not. The
malignant molecules seemed to search out their victims. They crept through the
crevices of the subterranean shelters. They hunted for the pinholes in the face
masks. They lay in wait for days in the trenches for the soldiers' return as a cat
watches at the hole of a mouse. The cannon ball could be seen and heard. The
poison gas was invisible and inaudible, and sometimes even the chemical sense
which nature has given man for his protection, the sense of smell, failed to give
warning of the approach of the foe.
The smaller the matter that man can deal with the more he can get out of it. So
long as man was dependent for power upon wind and water his working capacity
was very limited. But as soon as he passed over the border line from physics into
chemistry and learned how to use the molecule, his efficiency in work and
warfare was multiplied manifold. The molecular bombardment of the piston by
steam or the gases of combustion runs his engines and propels his cars. The first
man who wanted to kill another from a safe distance threw the stone by his arm's
strength. David added to his arm the centrifugal force of a sling when he slew
Goliath. The Romans improved on this by concentrating in a catapult the
strength of a score of slaves and casting stone cannon balls to the top of the city
wall. But finally man got closer to nature's secret and discovered that by loosing
a swarm of gaseous molecules he could throw his projectile seventy-five miles
and then by the same force burst it into flying fragments. There is no smaller
projectile than the atom unless our belligerent chemists can find a way of using
the electron stream of the cathode ray. But this so far has figured only in the
pages of our scientific romancers and has not yet appeared on the battlefield. If,
however, man could tap the reservoir of sub-atomic energy he need do no more
work and would make no more war, for unlimited powers of construction and
destruction would be at his command. The forces of the infinitesimal are infinite.
The reason why a gas is so active is because it is so egoistic. Psychologically
interpreted, a gas consists of particles having the utmost aversion to one another.
Each tries to get as far away from every other as it can. There is no cohesive
force; no attractive impulse; nothing to draw them together except the all too
feeble power of gravitation. The hotter they get the more they try to disperse and
so the gas expands. The gas represents the extreme of individualism as steel
represents the extreme of collectivism. The combination of the two works
wonders. A hot gas in a steel cylinder is the most powerful agency known to
man, and by means of it he accomplishes his greatest achievements in peace or
war time.
The projectile is thrown from the gun by the expansive force of the gases
released from the powder and when it reaches its destination it is blown to pieces
by the same force. This is the end of it if it is a shell of the old-fashioned sort, for
the gases of combustion mingle harmlessly with the air of which they are normal
constituents. But if it is a poison gas shell each molecule as it is released goes off
straight into the air with a speed twice that of the cannon ball and carries death
with it. A man may be hit by a heavy piece of lead or iron and still survive, but
an unweighable amount of lethal gas may be fatal to him.
Most of the novelties of the war were merely extensions of what was already
known. To increase the caliber of a cannon from 38 to 42 centimeters or its range
from 30 to 75 miles does indeed make necessary a decided change in tactics, but
it is not comparable to the revolution effected by the introduction of new
weapons of unprecedented power such as airplanes, submarines, tanks, high
explosives or poison gas. If any army had been as well equipped with these in
the beginning as all armies were at the end it might easily have won the war.
That is to say, if the general staff of any of the powers had had the foresight and
confidence to develop and practise these modes of warfare on a large scale in
advance it would have been irresistible against an enemy unprepared to meet
them. But no military genius appeared on either side with sufficient courage and
imagination to work out such schemes in secret before trying them out on a
small scale in the open. Consequently the enemy had fair warning and ample
time to learn how to meet them and methods of defense developed concurrently
with methods of attack. For instance, consider the motor fortresses to which
Ludendorff ascribes his defeat. The British first sent out a few clumsy tanks
against the German lines. Then they set about making a lot of stronger and
livelier ones, but by the time these were ready the Germans had field guns to
smash them and chain fences with concrete posts to stop them. On the other
hand, if the Germans had followed up their advantage when they first set the
cloud of chlorine floating over the battlefield of Ypres they might have won the
war in the spring of 1915 instead of losing it in the fall of 1918. For the British
were unprepared and unprotected against the silent death that swept down upon
them on the 22nd of April, 1915. What happened then is best told by Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle in his "History of the Great War."
From the base of the German trenches over a considerable length there appeared
jets of whitish vapor, which gathered and swirled until they settled into a definite
low cloud-bank, greenish-brown below and yellow above, where it reflected the
rays of the sinking sun. This ominous bank of vapor, impelled by a northern
breeze, drifted swiftly across the space which separated the two lines. The
French troops, staring over the top of their parapet at this curious screen which
ensured them a temporary relief from fire, were observed suddenly to throw up
their hands, to clutch at their throats, and to fall to the ground in the agonies of
asphyxiation. Many lay where they had fallen, while their comrades, absolutely
helpless against this diabolical agency, rushed madly out of the mephitic mist
and made for the rear, over-running the lines of trenches behind them. Many of
them never halted until they had reached Ypres, while others rushed westwards
and put the canal between themselves and the enemy. The Germans, meanwhile,
advanced, and took possession of the successive lines of trenches, tenanted only
by the dead garrisons, whose blackened faces, contorted figures, and lips fringed
with the blood and foam from their bursting lungs, showed the agonies in which
they had died. Some thousands of stupefied prisoners, eight batteries of French
field-guns, and four British 4.7's, which had been placed in a wood behind the
French position, were the trophies won by this disgraceful victory.
Under the shattering blow which they had received, a blow particularly
demoralizing to African troops, with their fears of magic and the unknown, it
was impossible to rally them effectually until the next day. It is to be
remembered in explanation of this disorganization that it was the first experience
of these poison tactics, and that the troops engaged received the gas in a very
much more severe form than our own men on the right of Langemarck. For a
time there was a gap five miles broad in the front of the position of the Allies,
and there were many hours during which there was no substantial force between
the Germans and Ypres. They wasted their time, however, in consolidating their
ground, and the chance of a great coup passed forever. They had sold their souls
as soldiers, but the Devil's price was a poor one. Had they had a corps of cavalry
ready, and pushed them through the gap, it would have been the most dangerous
moment of the war.
A deserter had come over from the German side a week before and told them
that cylinders of poison gas had been laid in the front trenches, but no one
believed him or paid any attention to his tale. War was then, in the Englishman's
opinion, a gentleman's game, the royal sport, and poison was prohibited by the
Hague rules. But the Germans were not playing the game according to the rules,
so the British soldiers were strangled in their own trenches and fell easy victims
to the advancing foe. Within half an hour after the gas was turned on 80 per cent.
of the opposing troops were knocked out. The Canadians, with wet
handkerchiefs over their faces, closed in to stop the gap, but if the Germans had
been prepared for such success they could have cleared the way to the coast. But
after such trials the Germans stopped the use of free chlorine and began the
preparation of more poisonous gases. In some way that may not be revealed till
the secret history of the war is published, the British Intelligence Department
obtained a copy of the lecture notes of the instructions to the German staff giving
details of the new system of gas warfare to be started in December. Among the
compounds named was phosgene, a gas so lethal that one part in ten thousand of
air may be fatal. The antidote for it is hexamethylene tetramine. This is not
something the soldier—or anybody else—is accustomed to carry around with
him, but the British having had a chance to cram up in advance on the stolen
lecture notes were ready with gas helmets soaked in the reagent with the long
name.
The Germans rejoiced when gas bombs took the place of bayonets because this
was a field in which intelligence counted for more than brute force and in which
therefore they expected to be supreme. As usual they were right in their major
premise but wrong in their conclusion, owing to the egoism of their implicit
minor premise. It does indeed give the advantage to skill and science, but the
Germans were beaten at their own game, for by the end of the war the United
States was able to turn out toxic gases at a rate of 200 tons a day, while the
output of Germany or England was only about 30 tons. A gas plant was started at
Edgewood, Maryland, in November, 1917. By March it was filling shell and
before the war put a stop to its activities in the fall it was producing 1,300,000
pounds of chlorine, 1,000,000 pounds of chlorpicrin, 1,300,000 pounds of
phosgene and 700,000 pounds of mustard gas a month.
Chlorine, the first gas used, is unpleasantly familiar to every one who has
entered a chemical laboratory or who has smelled the breath of bleaching
powder. It is a greenish-yellow gas made from common salt. The Germans
employed it at Ypres by laying cylinders of the liquefied gas in the trenches,
about a yard apart, and running a lead discharge pipe over the parapet. When the
stop cocks are turned the gas streams out and since it is two and a half times as
heavy as air it rolls over the ground like a noisome mist. It works best when the
ground slopes gently down toward the enemy and when the wind blows in that
direction at a rate between four and twelve miles an hour. But the wind, being
strictly neutral, may change its direction without warning and then the gases turn
back in their flight and attack their own side, something that rifle bullets have
never been known to do.
© International Film Service
© International Film Service
GERMANS STARTING A GAS ATTACK ON THE RUSSIAN LINES
Behind the cylinders from which the gas streams are seen three lines of
German troops waiting to attack. The photograph was taken from above by
a Russian airman
© Press Illustrating Service
© Press Illustrating Service
FILLING THE CANNISTERS OF GAS MASKS WITH CHARCOAL
MADE FROM FRUIT PITS IN LONG ISLAND CITY
Because free chlorine would not stay put and was dependent on the favor of the
wind for its effect, it was later employed, not as an elemental gas, but in some
volatile liquid that could be fired in a shell and so released at any particular point
far back of the front trenches.
The most commonly used of these compounds was phosgene, which, as the
reader can see by inspection of its formula, COCl 2, consists of chlorine (Cl)
combined with carbon monoxide (CO), the cause of deaths from illuminating
gas. These two poisonous gases, chlorine and carbon monoxide, when mixed
together, will not readily unite, but if a ray of sunlight falls upon the mixture
they combine at once. For this reason John Davy, who discovered the compound
over a hundred years ago, named it phosgene, that is, "produced by light." The
same roots recur in hydrogen, so named because it is "produced from water," and
phosphorus, because it is a "light-bearer."
In its modern manufacture the catalyzer or instigator of the combination is not
sunlight but porous carbon. This is packed in iron boxes eight feet long, through
which the mixture of the two gases was forced. Carbon monoxide may be made
by burning coke with a supply of air insufficient for complete combustion, but in
order to get the pure gas necessary for the phosgene common air was not used,
but instead pure oxygen extracted from it by a liquid air plant.
Phosgene is a gas that may be condensed easily to a liquid by cooling it down to
46 degrees Fahrenheit. A mixture of three-quarters chlorine with one-quarter
phosgene has been found most effective. By itself phosgene has an inoffensive
odor somewhat like green corn and so may fail to arouse apprehension until a
toxic concentration is reached. But even small doses have such an effect upon
the heart action for days afterward that a slight exertion may prove fatal.
The compound manufactured in largest amount in America was chlorpicrin.
This, like the others, is not so unfamiliar as it seems. As may be seen from its
formula, CCl3NO2, it is formed by joining the nitric acid radical (NO2), found in
all explosives, with the main part of chloroform (HCCl 3). This is not quite so
poisonous as phosgene, but it has the advantage that it causes nausea and
vomiting. The soldier so affected is forced to take off his gas mask and then may
fall victim to more toxic gases sent over simultaneously.
Chlorpicrin is a liquid and is commonly loaded in a shell or bomb with 20 per
cent. of tin chloride, which produces dense white fumes that go through gas
masks. It is made from picric acid (trinitrophenol), one of the best known of the
high explosives, by treatment with chlorine. The chlorine is obtained, as it is in
the household, from common bleaching powder, or "chloride of lime." This is
mixed with water to form a cream in a steel still 18 feet high and 8 feet in
diameter. A solution of calcium picrate, that is, the lime salt of picric acid, is
pumped in and as the reaction begins the mixture heats up and the chlorpicrin
distils over with the steam. When the distillate is condensed the chlorpicrin,
being the heavier liquid, settles out under the layer of water and may be drawn
off to fill the shell.
Much of what a student learns in the chemical laboratory he is apt to forget in
later life if he does not follow it up. But there are two gases that he always
remembers, chlorine and hydrogen sulfide. He is lucky if he has escaped being
choked by the former or sickened by the latter. He can imagine what the effect
would be if two offensive fumes could be combined without losing their
offensive features. Now a combination something like this is the so-called
mustard gas, which is not a gas and is not made from mustard. But it is easily
gasified, and oil of mustard is about as near as Nature dare come to making such
sinful stuff. It was first made by Guthrie, an Englishman, in 1860, and
rediscovered by a German chemist, Victor Meyer, in 1886, but he found it so
dangerous to work with that he abandoned the investigation. Nobody else cared
to take it up, for nobody could see any use for it. So it remained in innocuous
desuetude, a mere name in "Beilstein's Dictionary," together with the thousands
of other organic compounds that have been invented and never utilized. But on
July 12, 1917, the British holding the line at Ypres were besprinkled with this
villainous substance. Its success was so great that the Germans henceforth made
it their main reliance and soon the Allies followed suit. In one offensive of ten
days the Germans are said to have used a million shells containing 2500 tons of
mustard gas.
The making of so dangerous a compound on a large scale was one of the most
difficult tasks set before the chemists of this and other countries, yet it was
successfully solved. The raw materials are chlorine, alcohol and sulfur. The
alcohol is passed with steam through a vertical iron tube filled with kaolin and
heated. This converts the alcohol into a gas known as ethylene (C2H4). Passing a
stream of chlorine gas into a tank of melted sulfur produces sulfur monochloride
and this treated with the ethylene makes the "mustard." The final reaction was
carried on at the Edgewood Arsenal in seven airtight tanks or "reactors," each
having a capacity of 30,000 pounds. The ethylene gas being led into the tank and
distributed through the liquid sulfur chloride by porous blocks or fine nozzles,
the two chemicals combined to form what is officially named "di-chlor-di-ethyl-
sulfide" (ClC2H4SC2H4Cl). This, however, is too big a mouthful, so even the
chemists were glad to fall in with the commonalty and call it "mustard gas."
The effectiveness of "mustard" depends upon its persistence. It is a stable liquid,
evaporating slowly and not easily decomposed. It lingers about trenches and
dugouts and impregnates soil and cloth for days. Gas masks do not afford
complete protection, for even if they are impenetrable they must be taken off
some time and the gas lies in wait for that time. In some cases the masks were
worn continuously for twelve hours after the attack, but when they were
removed the soldiers were overpowered by the poison. A place may seem to be
free from it but when the sun heats up the ground the liquid volatilizes and the
vapor soaks through the clothing. As the men become warmed up by work their
skin is blistered, especially under the armpits. The mustard acts like steam,
producing burns that range from a mere reddening to serious ulcerations, always
painful and incapacitating, but if treated promptly in the hospital rarely causing
death or permanent scars. The gas attacks the eyes, throat, nose and lungs and
may lead to bronchitis or pneumonia. It was found necessary at the front to put
all the clothing of the soldiers into the sterilizing ovens every night to remove all
traces of mustard. General Johnson and his staff in the 77th Division were
poisoned in their dugouts because they tried to alleviate the discomfort of their
camp cots by bedding taken from a neighboring village that had been shelled the
day before.
Of the 925 cases requiring medical attention at the Edgewood Arsenal 674 were
due to mustard. During the month of August 3-1/2 per cent. of the mustard plant
force were sent to the hospital each day on the average. But the record of the
Edgewood Arsenal is a striking demonstration of what can be done in the
prevention of industrial accidents by the exercise of scientific prudence. In spite
of the fact that from three to eleven thousand men were employed at the plant for
the year 1918 and turned out some twenty thousand tons of the most poisonous
gases known to man, there were only three fatalities and not a single case of
blindness.
Besides the four toxic gases previously described, chlorine, phosgene,
chlorpicrin and mustard, various other compounds have been and many others
might be made. A list of those employed in the present war enumerates thirty,
among them compounds of bromine, arsenic and cyanogen that may prove more
formidable than any so far used. American chemists kept very mum during the
war but occasionally one could not refrain from saying: "If the Kaiser knew what
I know he would surrender unconditionally by telegraph." No doubt the science
of chemical warfare is in its infancy and every foresighted power has concealed
weapons of its own in reserve. One deadly compound, whose identity has not yet
been disclosed, is known as "Lewisite," from Professor Lewis of Northwestern,
who was manufacturing it at the rate of ten tons a day in the "Mouse Trap"
stockade near Cleveland.
Throughout the history of warfare the art of defense has kept pace with the art of
offense and the courage of man has never failed, no matter to what new danger
he was exposed. As each new gas employed by the enemy was detected it
became the business of our chemists to discover some method of absorbing or
neutralizing it. Porous charcoal, best made from such dense wood as coconut
shells, was packed in the respirator box together with layers of such chemicals as
will catch the gases to be expected. Charcoal absorbs large quantities of any gas.
Soda lime and potassium permanganate and nickel salts were among the
neutralizers used.
The mask is fitted tightly about the face or over the head with rubber. The
nostrils are kept closed with a clip so breathing must be done through the mouth
and no air can be inhaled except that passing through the absorbent cylinder.
Men within five miles of the front were required to wear the masks slung on
their chests so they could be put on within six seconds. A well-made mask with a
fresh box afforded almost complete immunity for a time and the soldiers learned
within a few days to handle their masks adroitly. So the problem of defense
against this new offensive was solved satisfactorily, while no such adequate
protection against the older weapons of bayonet and shrapnel has yet been
devised.
Then the problem of the offense was to catch the opponent with his mask off or
to make him take it off. Here the lachrymators and the sternutators, the tear gases
and the sneeze gases, came into play. Phenylcarbylamine chloride would make
the bravest soldier weep on the battlefield with the abandonment of a Greek
hero. Di-phenyl-chloro-arsine would set him sneezing. The Germans alternated
these with diabolical ingenuity so as to catch us unawares. Some shells gave off
voluminous smoke or a vile stench without doing much harm, but by the time
our men got used to these and grew careless about their masks a few shells of
some extremely poisonous gas were mixed with them.
The ideal gas for belligerent purposes would be odorless, colorless and invisible,
toxic even when diluted by a million parts of air, not set on fire or exploded by
the detonator of the shell, not decomposed by water, not readily absorbed, stable
enough to stand storage for six months and capable of being manufactured by
the thousands of tons. No one gas will serve all aims. For instance, phosgene
being very volatile and quickly dissipated is thrown into trenches that are soon to
be taken while mustard gas being very tenacious could not be employed in such
a case for the trenches could not be occupied if they were captured.
The extensive use of poison gas in warfare by all the belligerents is a vindication
of the American protest at the Hague Conference against its prohibition. At the
First Conference of 1899 Captain Mahan argued very sensibly that gas shells
were no worse than other projectiles and might indeed prove more merciful and
that it was illogical to prohibit a weapon merely because of its novelty. The
British delegates voted with the Americans in opposition to the clause "the
contracting parties agree to abstain from the use of projectiles the sole object of
which is the diffusion of asphyxiating or deleterious gases." But both Great
Britain and Germany later agreed to the provision. The use of poison gas by
Germany without warning was therefore an act of treachery and a violation of
her pledge, but the United States has consistently refused to bind herself to any
such restriction. The facts reported by General Amos A. Fries, in command of
the overseas branch of the American Chemical Warfare Service, give ample
support to the American contention at The Hague:
Out of 1000 gas casualties there are from 30 to 40 fatalities, while out of 1000
high explosive casualties the number of fatalities run from 200 to 250. While
exact figures are as yet not available concerning the men permanently crippled
or blinded by high explosives one has only to witness the debarkation of a
shipload of troops to be convinced that the number is very large. On the other
hand there is, so far as known at present, not a single case of permanent
disability or blindness among our troops due to gas and this in face of the fact
that the Germans used relatively large quantities of this material.
In the light of these facts the prejudice against the use of gas must gradually give
way; for the statement made to the effect that its use is contrary to the principles
of humanity will apply with far greater force to the use of high explosives. As a
matter of fact, for certain purposes toxic gas is an ideal agent. For example, it is
difficult to imagine any agent more effective or more humane that may be used
to render an opposing battery ineffective or to protect retreating troops.
Captain Mahan's argument at The Hague against the proposed prohibition of
poison gas is so cogent and well expressed that it has been quoted in treatises on
international law ever since. These reasons were, briefly:
1. That no shell emitting such gases is as yet in practical use or has undergone
adequate experiment; consequently, a vote taken now would be taken in
ignorance of the facts as to whether the results would be of a decisive character
or whether injury in excess of that necessary to attain the end of warfare—the
immediate disabling of the enemy—would be inflicted.
2. That the reproach of cruelty and perfidy, addressed against these supposed
shells, was equally uttered formerly against firearms and torpedoes, both of
which are now employed without scruple. Until we know the effects of such
asphyxiating shells, there was no saying whether they would be more or less
merciful than missiles now permitted. That it was illogical, and not
demonstrably humane, to be tender about asphyxiating men with gas, when all
are prepared to admit that it was allowable to blow the bottom out of an ironclad
at midnight, throwing four or five hundred into the sea, to be choked by water,
with scarcely the remotest chance of escape.
As Captain Mahan says, the same objection has been raised at the introduction of
each new weapon of war, even though it proved to be no more cruel than the old.
The modern rifle ball, swift and small and sterilized by heat, does not make so
bad a wound as the ancient sword and spear, but we all remember how
gunpowder was regarded by the dandies of Hotspur's time:
And it was great pity, so it was,
This villainous saltpeter should be digg'd
Out of the bowels of the harmless earth
Which many a good tall fellow had destroy'd
So cowardly; and but for these vile guns
He would himself have been a soldier.
The real reason for the instinctive aversion manifested against any new arm or
mode of attack is that it reveals to us the intrinsic horror of war. We naturally
revolt against premeditated homicide, but we have become so accustomed to the
sword and latterly to the rifle that they do not shock us as they ought when we
think of what they are made for. The Constitution of the United States prohibits
the infliction of "cruel and unusual punishments." The two adjectives were
apparently used almost synonymously, as though any "unusual" punishment
were necessarily "cruel," and so indeed it strikes us. But our ingenious lawyers
were able to persuade the courts that electrocution, though unknown to the
Fathers and undeniably "unusual," was not unconstitutional. Dumdum bullets are
rightfully ruled out because they inflict frightful and often incurable wounds, and
the aim of humane warfare is to disable the enemy, not permanently to injure
him.
From "America's Munitions"
From "America's Munitions"
THE CHLORPICRIN PLANT AT THE EDGEWOOD ARSENAL
From these stills, filled with a mixture of bleaching powder, lime, and picric
acid, the poisonous gas, chlorpicrin, distills off. This plant produced 31 tons
in one day
Courtesy of the Metal and Thermit Corporation, N.Y.
Courtesy of the Metal and Thermit Corporation, N.Y.
REPAIRING THE BROKEN STERN POST OF THE U.S.S. NORTHERN
PACIFIC, THE BIGGEST MARINE WELD IN THE WORLD
On the right the fractured stern post is shown. On the left it is being mended by
means of thermit. Two crucibles each containing 700 pounds of the thermit
mixture are seen on the sides of the vessel. From the bottom of these the melted
steel flowed down to fill the fracture]
In spite of the opposition of the American and British delegates the First Hague
Conference adopted the clause, "The contracting powers agree to abstain from
the use of projectiles the [sole] object of which is the diffusion of asphyxiating
or deleterious gases." The word "sole" (unique) which appears in the original
French text of The Hague convention is left out of the official English
translation. This is a strange omission considering that the French and British
defended their use of explosives which diffuse asphyxiating and deleterious
gases on the ground that this was not the "sole" purpose of the bombs but merely
an accidental effect of the nitric powder used.
The Hague Congress of 1907 placed in its rules for war: "It is expressly
forbidden to employ poisons or poisonous weapons." But such attempts to rule
out new and more effective means of warfare are likely to prove futile in any
serious conflict and the restriction gives the advantage to the most unscrupulous
side. We Americans, if ever we give our assent to such an agreement, would of
course keep it, but our enemy—whoever he may be in the future—will be, as he
always has been, utterly without principle and will not hesitate to employ any
weapon against us. Besides, as the Germans held, chemical warfare favors the
army that is most intelligent, resourceful and disciplined and the nation that
stands highest in science and industry. This advantage, let us hope, will be on
our side.
CHAPTER XIII
PRODUCTS OF THE ELECTRIC FURNACE
The control of man over the materials of nature has been vastly enhanced by the
recent extension of the range of temperature at his command. When Fahrenheit
stuck the bulb of his thermometer into a mixture of snow and salt he thought he
had reached the nadir of temperature, so he scratched a mark on the tube where
the mercury stood and called it zero. But we know that absolute zero, the total
absence of heat, is 459 of Fahrenheit's degrees lower than his zero point. The
modern scientist can get close to that lowest limit by making use of the cooling
by the expansion principle. He first liquefies air under pressure and then
releasing the pressure allows it to boil off. A tube of hydrogen immersed in the
liquid air as it evaporates is cooled down until it can be liquefied. Then the
boiling hydrogen is used to liquefy helium, and as this boils off it lowers the
temperature to within three or four degrees of absolute zero.
The early metallurgist had no hotter a fire than he could make by blowing
charcoal with a bellows. This was barely enough for the smelting of iron. But by
the bringing of two carbon rods together, as in the electric arc light, we can get
enough heat to volatilize the carbon at the tips, and this means over 7000 degrees
Fahrenheit. By putting a pressure of twenty atmospheres onto the arc light we
can raise it to perhaps 14,000 degrees, which is 3000 degrees hotter than the sun.
This gives the modern man a working range of about 14,500 degrees, so it is no
wonder that he can perform miracles.
When a builder wants to make an old house over into a new one he takes it apart
brick by brick and stone by stone, then he puts them together in such new
fashion as he likes. The electric furnace enables the chemist to take his materials
apart in the same way. As the temperature rises the chemical and physical forces
that hold a body together gradually weaken. First the solid loosens up and
becomes a liquid, then this breaks bonds and becomes a gas. Compounds break
up into their elements. The elemental molecules break up into their component
atoms and finally these begin to throw off corpuscles of negative electricity
eighteen hundred times smaller than the smallest atom. These electrons appear to
be the building stones of the universe. No indication of any smaller units has
been discovered, although we need not assume that in the electron science has
delivered, what has been called, its "ultim-atom." The Greeks called the
elemental particles of matter "atoms" because they esteemed them "indivisible,"
but now in the light of the X-ray we can witness the disintegration of the atom
into electrons. All the chemical and physical properties of matter, except perhaps
weight, seem to depend upon the number and movement of the negative and
positive electrons and by their rearrangement one element may be transformed
into another.
So the electric furnace, where the highest attainable temperature is combined
with the divisive and directive force of the current, is a magical machine for
accomplishment of the metamorphoses desired by the creative chemist. A
hundred years ago Davy, by dipping the poles of his battery into melted soda lye,
saw forming on one of them a shining globule like quicksilver. It was the metal
sodium, never before seen by man. Nowadays this process of electrolysis
(electric loosening) is carried out daily by the ton at Niagara.
The reverse process, electro-synthesis (electric combining), is equally simple
and even more important. By passing a strong electric current through a mixture
of lime and coke the metal calcium disengages itself from the oxygen of the lime
and attaches itself to the carbon. Or, to put it briefly,
CaO + 3C → CaC2 + CO
lime coke calcium carbon
carbide monoxide
This reaction is of peculiar importance because it bridges the gulf between the
organic and inorganic worlds. It was formerly supposed that the substances
found in plants and animals, mostly complex compounds of carbon, hydrogen
and oxygen, could only be produced by "vital forces." If this were true it meant
that chemistry was limited to the mineral kingdom and to the extraction of such
carbon compounds as happened to exist ready formed in the vegetable and
animal kingdoms. But fortunately this barrier to human achievement proved
purely illusory. The organic field, once man had broken into it, proved easier to
work in than the inorganic.
But it must be confessed that man is dreadfully clumsy about it yet. He takes a
thousand horsepower engine and an electric furnace at several thousand degrees
to get carbon into combination with hydrogen while the little green leaf in the
sunshine does it quietly without getting hot about it. Evidently man is working as
wastefully as when he used a thousand slaves to drag a stone to the pyramid or
burned down a house to roast a pig. Not until his laboratory is as cool and calm
and comfortable as the forest and the field can the chemist call himself
completely successful.
But in spite of his clumsiness the chemist is actually making things that he wants
and cannot get elsewhere. The calcium carbide that he manufactures from
inorganic material serves as the raw material for producing all sorts of organic
compounds. The electric furnace was first employed on a large scale by the
Cowles Electric Smelting and Aluminum Company at Cleveland in 1885. On the
dump were found certain lumps of porous gray stone which, dropped into water,
gave off a gas that exploded at touch of a match with a splendid bang and flare.
This gas was acetylene, and we can represent the reaction thus:
CaC2 + 2 H2O → C2H2 + CaO2H2
Tons Value
Silicon carbide 8,323 $1,074,152
Aluminum oxide 48,463 6,969,387
A new use for carborundum was found during the war when Uncle Sam assumed
the rôle of Jove as "cloud-compeller." Acting on carborundum with chlorine—
also, you remember, a product of electrical dissolution—the chlorine displaces
the carbon, forming silicon tetra-chloride (SiCl4), a colorless liquid resembling
chloroform. When this comes in contact with moist air it gives off thick, white
fumes, for water decomposes it, giving a white powder (silicon hydroxide) and
hydrochloric acid. If ammonia is present the acid will unite with it, giving
further white fumes of the salt, ammonium chloride. So a mixture of two parts of
silicon chloride with one part of dry ammonia was used in the war to produce
smoke-screens for the concealment of the movements of troops, batteries and
vessels or put in shells so the outlook could see where they burst and so get the
range. Titanium tetra-chloride, a similar substance, proved 50 per cent. better
than silicon, but phosphorus—which also we get from the electric furnace—was
the most effective mistifier of all.
Before the introduction of the artificial abrasives fine grinding was mostly done
by emery, which is an impure form of aluminum oxide found in nature. A purer
form is made from the mineral bauxite by driving off its combined water.
Bauxite is the ore from which is made the pure aluminum oxide used in the
electric furnace for the production of metallic aluminum. Formerly we imported
a large part of our bauxite from France, but when the war shut off this source we
developed our domestic fields in Arkansas, Alabama and Georgia, and these are
now producing half a million tons a year. Bauxite simply fused in the electric
furnace makes a better abrasive than the natural emery or corundum, and it is
sold for this purpose under the name of "aloxite," "alundum," "exolon," "lionite"
or "coralox." When the fused bauxite is worked up with a bonding material into
crucibles or muffles and baked in a kiln it forms the alundum refractory ware.
Since alundum is porous and not attacked by acids it is used for filtering hot and
corrosive liquids that would eat up filter-paper. Carborundum or crystolon is also
made up into refractory ware for high temperature work. When the fused mass of
the carborundum furnace is broken up there is found surrounding the
carborundum core a similar substance though not quite so hard and infusible,
known as "carborundum sand" or "siloxicon." This is mixed with fireclay and
used for furnace linings.
Many new forms of refractories have come into use to meet the demands of the
new high temperature work. The essentials are that it should not melt or crumble
at high heat and should not expand and contract greatly under changes of
temperature (low coefficient of thermal expansion). Whether it is desirable that it
should heat through readily or slowly (coefficient of thermal conductivity)
depends on whether it is wanted as a crucible or as a furnace lining. Lime
(calcium oxide) fuses only at the highest heat of the electric furnace, but it
breaks down into dust. Magnesia (magnesium oxide) is better and is most
extensively employed. For every ton of steel produced five pounds of magnesite
is needed. Formerly we imported 90 per cent. of our supply from Austria, but
now we get it from California and Washington. In 1913 the American production
of magnesite was only 9600 tons. In 1918 it was 225,000. Zirconia (zirconium
oxide) is still more refractory and in spite of its greater cost zirkite is coming
into use as a lining for electric furnaces.
Silicon is next to oxygen the commonest element in the world. It forms a quarter
of the earth's crust, yet it is unfamiliar to most of us. That is because it is always
found combined with oxygen in the form of silica as quartz crystal or sand. This
used to be considered too refractory to be blown but is found to be easily
manipulable at the high temperatures now at the command of the glass-blower.
So the chemist rejoices in flasks that he can heat red hot in the Bunsen burner
and then plunge into ice water without breaking, and the cook can bake and
serve in a dish of "pyrex," which is 80 per cent. silica.
At the beginning of the twentieth century minute specimens of silicon were sold
as laboratory curiosities at the price of $100 an ounce. Two years later it was
turned out by the barrelful at Niagara as an accidental by-product and could not
find a market at ten cents a pound. Silicon from the electric furnace appears in
the form of hard, glittering metallic crystals.
An alloy of iron and silicon, ferro-silicon, made by heating a mixture of iron ore,
sand and coke in the electrical furnace, is used as a deoxidizing agent in the
manufacture of steel.
Since silicon has been robbed with difficulty of its oxygen it takes it on again
with great avidity. This has been made use of in the making of hydrogen. A
mixture of silicon (or of the ferro-silicon alloy containing 90 per cent. of silicon)
with soda and slaked lime is inert, compact and can be transported to any point
where hydrogen is needed, say at a battle front. Then the "hydrogenite," as the
mixture is named, is ignited by a hot iron ball and goes off like thermit with the
production of great heat and the evolution of a vast volume of hydrogen gas. Or
the ferro-silicon may be simply burned in an atmosphere of steam in a closed
tank after ignition with a pinch of gunpowder. The iron and the silicon revert to
their oxides while the hydrogen of the water is set free. The French "silikol"
method consists in treating silicon with a 40 per cent. solution of soda.
Another source of hydrogen originating with the electric furnace is "hydrolith,"
which consists of calcium hydride. Metallic calcium is prepared from lime in the
electric furnace. Then pieces of the calcium are spread out in an oven heated by
electricity and a current of dry hydrogen passed through. The gas is absorbed by
the metal, forming the hydride (CaH2). This is packed up in cans and when
hydrogen is desired it is simply dropped into water, when it gives off the gas just
as calcium carbide gives off acetylene.
This last reaction was also used in Germany for filling Zeppelins. For calcium
carbide is convenient and portable and acetylene, when it is once started, as by
an electric shock, decomposes spontaneously by its own internal heat into
hydrogen and carbon. The latter is left as a fine, pure lampblack, suitable for
printer's ink.
Napoleon, who was always on the lookout for new inventions that could be
utilized for military purposes, seized immediately upon the balloon as an
observation station. Within a few years after the first ascent had been made in
Paris Napoleon took balloons and apparatus for generating hydrogen with him
on his "archeological expedition" to Egypt in which he hoped to conquer Asia.
But the British fleet in the Mediterranean put a stop to this experiment by
intercepting the ship, and military aviation waited until the Great War for its full
development. This caused a sudden demand for immense quantities of hydrogen
and all manner of means was taken to get it. Water is easily decomposed into
hydrogen and oxygen by passing an electric current through it. In various
electrolytical processes hydrogen has been a wasted by-product since the balloon
demand was slight and it was more bother than it was worth to collect and purify
the hydrogen. Another way of getting hydrogen in quantity is by passing steam
over red-hot coke. This produces the blue water-gas, which contains about 50
per cent. hydrogen, 40 per cent. carbon monoxide and the rest nitrogen and
carbon dioxide. The last is removed by running the mixed gases through lime.
Then the nitrogen and carbon monoxide are frozen out in an air-liquefying
apparatus and the hydrogen escapes to the storage tank. The liquefied carbon
monoxide, allowed to regain its gaseous form, is used in an internal combustion
engine to run the plant.
There are then many ways of producing hydrogen, but it is so light and bulky
that it is difficult to get it where it is wanted. The American Government in the
war made use of steel cylinders each holding 161 cubic feet of the gas under a
pressure of 2000 pounds per square inch. Even the hydrogen used by the troops
in France was shipped from America in this form. For field use the ferro-silicon
and soda process was adopted. A portable generator of this type was capable of
producing 10,000 cubic feet of the gas per hour.
The discovery by a Kansas chemist of natural sources of helium may make it
possible to free ballooning of its great danger, for helium is non-inflammable
and almost as light as hydrogen.
Other uses of hydrogen besides ballooning have already been referred to in other
chapters. It is combined with nitrogen to form synthetic ammonia. It is combined
with oxygen in the oxy-hydrogen blowpipe to produce heat. It is combined with
vegetable and animal oils to convert them into solid fats. There is also the
possibility of using it as a fuel in the internal combustion engine in place of
gasoline, but for this purpose we must find some way of getting hydrogen
portable or producible in a compact form.
Aluminum, like silicon, sodium and calcium, has been rescued by violence from
its attachment to oxygen and like these metals it reverts with readiness to its
former affinity. Dr. Goldschmidt made use of this reaction in his thermit process.
Powdered aluminum is mixed with iron oxide (rust). If the mixture is heated at
any point a furious struggle takes place throughout the whole mass between the
iron and the aluminum as to which metal shall get the oxygen, and the aluminum
always comes out ahead. The temperature runs up to some 6000 degrees
Fahrenheit within thirty seconds and the freed iron, completely liquefied, runs
down into the bottom of the crucible, where it may be drawn off by opening a
trap door. The newly formed aluminum oxide (alumina) floats as slag on top.
The applications of the thermit process are innumerable. If, for instance, it is
desired to mend a broken rail or crank shaft without moving it from its place, the
two ends are brought together or fixed at the proper distance apart. A crucible
filled with the thermit mixture is set up above the joint and the thermit ignited
with a priming of aluminum and barium peroxide to start it off. The barium
peroxide having a superabundance of oxygen gives it up readily and the
aluminum thus encouraged attacks the iron oxide and robs it of its oxygen. As
soon as the iron is melted it is run off through the bottom of the crucible and fills
the space between the rail ends, being kept from spreading by a mold of
refractory material such as magnesite. The two ends of the rail are therefore
joined by a section of the same size, shape, substance and strength as
themselves. The same process can be used for mending a fracture or supplying a
missing fragment of a steel casting of any size, such as a ship's propeller or a
cogwheel.
TYPES OF GAS MASK USED BY AMERICA, THE ALLIES, AND
GERMANY DURING THE WAR
TYPES OF GAS MASK USED BY AMERICA, THE ALLIES, AND
GERMANY DURING THE WAR
In the top row are the American masks, chronologically, from left to right:
U.S. Navy mask (obsolete), U.S. Navy mask (final type), U.S. Army box
respirator (used throughout the war), U.S.R.F.K. respirator, U.S.A.T.
respirator (an all-rubber mask), U.S.K.T. respirator (a sewed fabric mask),
and U.S. "Model 1919," ready for production when the armistice was
signed. In the middle row, left to right, are: British veil (the original
emergency mask used in April, 1915), British P.H. helmet (the next
emergency mask), British box respirator (standard British army type),
French M2 mask (original type), French Tissot artillery mask, and French
A.R.S. mask (latest type). In the front row: the latest German mask, the
Russian mask, Italian mask, British motor corps mask, U.S. rear area
emergency respirator, and U.S. Connell mask
PUMPING MELTED WHITE PHOSPHORUS INTO HAND GRENADES
FILLED WITH WATER—EDGEWOOD ARSENAL
PUMPING MELTED WHITE PHOSPHORUS INTO HAND GRENADES
FILLED WITH WATER—EDGEWOOD ARSENAL
FILLING SHELL WITH "MUSTARD GAS"
FILLING SHELL WITH "MUSTARD GAS"
Empty shells are being placed on small trucks to be run into the filling
chamber. The large truck in the foreground contains loaded shell
For smaller work thermit has two rivals, the oxy-acetylene torch and electric
welding. The former has been described and the latter is rather out of the range
of this volume, although I may mention that in the latter part of 1918 there was
launched from a British shipyard the first rivotless steel vessel. In this the steel
plates forming the shell, bulkheads and floors are welded instead of being
fastened together by rivets. There are three methods of doing this depending
upon the thickness of the plates and the sort of strain they are subject to. The
plates may be overlapped and tacked together at intervals by pressing the two
electrodes on opposite sides of the same point until the spot is sufficiently heated
to fuse together the plates here. Or roller electrodes may be drawn slowly along
the line of the desired weld, fusing the plates together continuously as they go.
Or, thirdly, the plates may be butt-welded by being pushed together edge to edge
without overlapping and the electric current being passed from one plate to the
other heats up the joint where the conductivity is interrupted.
It will be observed that the thermit process is essentially like the ordinary blast
furnace process of smelting iron and other metals except that aluminum is used
instead of carbon to take the oxygen away from the metal in the ore. This has an
advantage in case carbon-free metals are desired and the process is used for
producing manganese, tungsten, titanium, molybdenum, vanadium and their
allows with iron and copper.
During the war thermit found a new and terrible employment, as it was used by
the airmen for setting buildings on fire and exploding ammunition dumps. The
German incendiary bombs consisted of a perforated steel nose-piece, a tail to
keep it falling straight and a cylindrical body which contained a tube of thermit
packed around with mineral wax containing potassium perchlorate. The fuse was
ignited as the missile was released and the thermit, as it heated up, melted the
wax and allowed it to flow out together with the liquid iron through the holes in
the nose-piece. The American incendiary bombs were of a still more malignant
type. They weighed about forty pounds apiece and were charged with oil
emulsion, thermit and metallic sodium. Sodium decomposes water so that if any
attempt were made to put out with a hose a fire started by one of these bombs the
stream of water would be instantaneously changed into a jet of blazing
hydrogen.
Besides its use in combining and separating different elements the electric
furnace is able to change a single element into its various forms. Carbon, for
instance, is found in three very distinct forms: in hard, transparent and colorless
crystals as the diamond, in black, opaque, metallic scales as graphite, and in
shapeless masses and powder as charcoal, coke, lampblack, and the like. In the
intense heat of the electric arc these forms are convertible one into the other
according to the conditions. Since the third form is the cheapest the object is to
change it into one of the other two. Graphite, plumbago or "blacklead," as it is
still sometimes called, is not found in many places and more rarely found pure.
The supply was not equal to the demand until Acheson worked out the process
of making it by packing powdered anthracite between the electrodes of his
furnace. In this way graphite can be cheaply produced in any desired quantity
and quality.
Since graphite is infusible and incombustible except at exceedingly high
temperatures, it is extensively used for crucibles and electrodes. These electrodes
are made in all sizes for the various forms of electric lamps and furnaces from
rods one-sixteenth of an inch in diameter to bars a foot thick and six feet long. It
is graphite mixed with fine clay to give it the desired degree of hardness that
forms the filling of our "lead" pencils. Finely ground and flocculent graphite
treated with tannin may be held in suspension in liquids and even pass through
filter-paper. The mixture with water is sold under the name of "aquadag," with
oil as "oildag" and with grease as "gredag," for lubrication. The smooth, slippery
scales of graphite in suspension slide over each other easily and keep the
bearings from rubbing against each other.
The other and more difficult metamorphosis of carbon, the transformation of
charcoal into diamond, was successfully accomplished by Moissan in 1894.
Henri Moissan was a toxicologist, that is to say, a Professor of Poisoning, in the
Paris School of Pharmacy, who took to experimenting with the electric furnace
in his leisure hours and did more to demonstrate its possibilities than any other
man. With it he isolated fluorine, most active of the elements, and he prepared
for the first time in their purity many of the rare metals that have since found
industrial employment. He also made the carbides of the various metals,
including the now common calcium carbide. Among the problems that he
undertook and solved was the manufacture of artificial diamonds. He first made
pure charcoal by burning sugar. This was packed with iron in the hollow of a
block of lime into which extended from opposite sides the carbon rods connected
to the dynamo. When the iron had melted and dissolved all the carbon it could,
Moissan dumped it into water or better into melted lead or into a hole in a copper
block, for this cooled it most rapidly. After a crust was formed it was left to
solidify slowly. The sudden cooling of the iron on the outside subjected the
carbon, which was held in solution, to intense pressure and when the bit of iron
was dissolved in acid some of the carbon was found to be crystallized as
diamond, although most of it was graphite. To be sure, the diamonds were hardly
big enough to be seen with the naked eye, but since Moissan's aim was to make
diamonds, not big diamonds, he ceased his efforts at this point.
To produce large diamonds the carbon would have to be liquefied in
considerable quantity and kept in that state while it slowly crystallized. But that
could only be accomplished at a temperature and pressure and duration
unattainable as yet. Under ordinary atmospheric pressure carbon passes over
from the solid to the gaseous phase without passing through the liquid, just as
snow on a cold, clear day will evaporate without melting.
Probably some one in the future will take up the problem where Moissan
dropped it and find out how to make diamonds of any size. But it is not a
question that greatly interests either the scientist or the industrialist because there
is not much to be learned from it and not much to be made out of it. If the
inventor of a process for making cheap diamonds could keep his electric furnace
secretly in his cellar and market his diamonds cautiously he might get rich out of
it, but he would not dare to turn out very large stones or too many of them, for if
a suspicion got around that he was making them the price would fall to almost
nothing even if he did sell another one. For the high price of the diamond is
purely fictitious. It is in the first place kept up by limiting the output of the
natural stone by the combination of dealers and, further, the diamond is valued
not for its usefulness or beauty but by its real or supposed rarity. Chesterton
says: "All is gold that glitters, for the glitter is the gold." This is not so true of
gold, for if gold were as cheap as nickel it would be very valuable, since we
should gold-plate our machinery, our ships, our bridges and our roofs. But if
diamonds were cheap they would be good for nothing except grindstones and
drills. An imitation diamond made of heavy glass (paste) cannot be distinguished
from the genuine gem except by an expert. It sparkles about as brilliantly, for its
refractive index is nearly as high. The reason why it is not priced so highly is
because the natural stone has presumably been obtained through the toil and
sweat of hundreds of negroes searching in the blue ground of the Transvaal for
many months. It is valued exclusively by its cost. To wear a diamond necklace is
the same as hanging a certified check for $100,000 by a string around the neck.
Real values are enhanced by reduction in the cost of the price of production.
Fictitious values are destroyed by it. Aluminum at twenty-five cents a pound is
immensely more valuable to the world than when it is a curiosity in the chemist's
cabinet and priced at $160 a pound.
So the scope of the electric furnace reaches from the costly but comparatively
valueless diamond to the cheap but indispensable steel. As F.J. Tone says, if the
automobile manufacturers were deprived of Niagara products, the abrasives,
aluminum, acetylene for welding and high-speed tool steel, a factory now
turning out five hundred cars a day would be reduced to one hundred. I have
here been chiefly concerned with electricity as effecting chemical changes in
combining or separating elements, but I must not omit to mention its rapidly
extending use as a source of heat, as in the production and casting of steel. In
1908 there were only fifty-five tons of steel produced by the electric furnace in
the United States, but by 1918 this had risen to 511,364 tons. And besides
ordinary steel the electric furnace has given us alloys of iron with the once "rare
metals" that have created a new science of metallurgy.
CHAPTER XIV
METALS, OLD AND NEW
The primitive metallurgist could only make use of such metals as he found free
in nature, that is, such as had not been attacked and corroded by the ubiquitous
oxygen. These were primarily gold or copper, though possibly some original
genius may have happened upon a bit of meteoric iron and pounded it out into a
sword. But when man found that the red ocher he had hitherto used only as a
cosmetic could be made to yield iron by melting it with charcoal he opened a
new era in civilization, though doubtless the ocher artists of that day denounced
him as a utilitarian and deplored the decadence of the times.
Iron is one of the most timid of metals. It has a great disinclination to be alone. It
is also one of the most altruistic of the elements. It likes almost every other
element better than itself. It has an especial affection for oxygen, and, since this
is in both air and water, and these are everywhere, iron is not long without a
mate. The result of this union goes by various names in the mineralogical and
chemical worlds, but in common language, which is quite good enough for our
purpose, it is called iron rust.
By courtesy Mineral Foote-Notes.
By courtesy Mineral Foote-Notes.
From Agricola's "De Re Metallica 1550." Primitive furnace for smelting
iron ore.
Not many of us have ever seen iron, the pure metal, soft, ductile and white like
silver. As soon as it is exposed to the air it veils itself with a thin film of rust and
becomes black and then red. For that reason there is practically no iron in the
world except what man has made. It is rarer than gold, than diamonds; we find in
the earth no nuggets or crystals of it the size of the fist as we find of these. But
occasionally there fall down upon us out of the clear sky great chunks of it
weighing tons. These meteorites are the mavericks of the universe. We do not
know where they come from or what sun or planet they belonged to. They are
our only visitors from space, and if all the other spheres are like these fragments
we know we are alone in the universe. For they contain rustless iron, and where
iron does not rust man cannot live, nor can any other animal or any plant.
Iron rusts for the same reason that a stone rolls down hill, because it gets rid of
its energy that way. All things in the universe are constantly trying to get rid of
energy except man, who is always trying to get more of it. Or, on second
thought, we see that man is the greatest spendthrift of all, for he wants to expend
so much more energy than he has that he borrows from the winds, the streams
and the coal in the rocks. He robs minerals and plants of the energy which they
have stored up to spend for their own purposes, just as he robs the bee of its
honey and the silk worm of its cocoon.
Man's chief business is in reversing the processes of nature. That is the way he
gets his living. And one of his greatest triumphs was when he discovered how to
undo iron rust and get the metal out of it. In the four thousand years since he first
did this he has accomplished more than in the millions of years before. Without
knowing the value of iron rust man could attain only to the culture of the Aztecs
and Incas, the ancient Egyptians and Assyrians.
The prosperity of modern states is dependent on the amount of iron rust which
they possess and utilize. England, United States, Germany, all nations are
competing to see which can dig the most iron rust out of the ground and make
out of it railroads, bridges, buildings, machinery, battleships and such other tools
and toys and then let them relapse into rust again. Civilization can be measured
by the amount of iron rusted per capita, or better, by the amount rescued from
rust.
But we are devoting so much space to the consideration of the material aspects
of iron that we are like to neglect its esthetic and ethical uses. The beauty of
nature is very largely dependent upon the fact that iron rust and, in fact, all the
common compounds of iron are colored. Few elements can assume so many
tints. Look at the paint pot cañons of the Yellowstone. Cheap glass bottles turn
out brown, green, blue, yellow or black, according to the amount and kind of
iron they contain. We build a house of cream-colored brick, varied with speckled
brick and adorned with terra cotta ornaments of red, yellow and green, all due to
iron. Iron rusts, therefore it must be painted; but what is there better to paint it
with than iron rust itself? It is cheap and durable, for it cannot rust any more than
a dead man can die. And what is also of importance, it is a good, strong, clean
looking, endurable color. Whenever we take a trip on the railroad and see the
miles of cars, the acres of roofing and wall, the towns full of brick buildings, we
rejoice that iron rust is red, not white or some leas satisfying color.
We do not know why it is so. Zinc and aluminum are metals very much like iron
in chemical properties, but all their salts are colorless. Why is it that the most
useful of the metals forms the most beautiful compounds? Some say,
Providence; some say, chance; some say nothing. But if it had not been so we
would have lost most of the beauty of rocks and trees and human beings. For the
leaves and the flowers would all be white, and all the men and women would
look like walking corpses. Without color in the flower what would the bees and
painters do? If all the grass and trees were white, it would be like winter all the
year round. If we had white blood in our veins like some of the insects it would
be hard lines for our poets. And what would become of our morality if we could
not blush?
"As for me, I thrill to see
The bloom a velvet cheek discloses!
Made of dust! I well believe it,
So are lilies, so are roses."
An etiolated earth would be hardly worth living in.
The chlorophyll of the leaves and the hemoglobin of the blood are similar in
constitution. Chlorophyll contains magnesium in place of iron but iron is
necessary to its formation. We all know how pale a plant gets if its soil is short
of iron. It is the iron in the leaves that enables the plants to store up the energy of
the sunshine for their own use and ours. It is the iron in our blood that enables us
to get the iron out of iron rust and make it into machines to supplement our
feeble hands. Iron is for us internally the carrier of energy, just as in the form of
a trolley wire or of a third rail it conveys power to the electric car. Withdraw the
iron from the blood as indicated by the pallor of the cheeks, and we become
weak, faint and finally die. If the amount of iron in the blood gets too small the
disease germs that are always attacking us are no longer destroyed, but multiply
without check and conquer us. When the iron ceases to work efficiently we are
killed by the poison we ourselves generate.
Counting the number of iron-bearing corpuscles in the blood is now a common
method of determining disease. It might also be useful in moral diagnosis. A
microscopical and chemical laboratory attached to the courtroom would give
information of more value than some of the evidence now obtained. For the
anemic and the florid vices need very different treatment. An excess or a
deficiency of iron in the body is liable to result in criminality. A chemical system
of morals might be developed on this basis. Among the ferruginous sins would
be placed murder, violence and licentiousness. Among the non-ferruginous,
cowardice, sloth and lying. The former would be mostly sins of commission, the
latter, sins of omission. The virtues could, of course, be similarly classified; the
ferruginous virtues would include courage, self-reliance and hopefulness; the
non-ferruginous, peaceableness, meekness and chastity. According to this ethical
criterion the moral man would be defined as one whose conduct is better than we
should expect from the per cent. of iron in his blood.
The reason why iron is able to serve this unique purpose of conveying life-
giving air to all parts of the body is because it rusts so readily. Oxidation and de-
oxidation proceed so quietly that the tenderest cells are fed without injury. The
blood changes from red to blue and vice versa with greater ease and rapidity than
in the corresponding alternations of social status in a democracy. It is because
iron is so rustable that it is so useful. The factories with big scrap-heaps of
rusting machinery are making the most money. The pyramids are the most
enduring structures raised by the hand of man, but they have not sheltered so
many people in their forty centuries as our skyscrapers that are already rusting.
We have to carry on this eternal conflict against rust because oxygen is the most
ubiquitous of the elements and iron can only escape its ardent embraces by
hiding away in the center of the earth. The united elements, known to the
chemist as iron oxide and to the outside world as rust, are among the commonest
of compounds and their colors, yellow and red like the Spanish flag, are
displayed on every mountainside. From the time of Tubal Cain man has
ceaselessly labored to divorce these elements and, having once separated them,
to keep them apart so that the iron may be retained in his service. But here, as
usual, man is fighting against nature and his gains, as always, are only
temporary. Sooner or later his vigilance is circumvented and the metal that he
has extricated by the fiery furnace returns to its natural affinity. The flint
arrowheads, the bronze spearpoints, the gold ornaments, the wooden idols of
prehistoric man are still to be seen in our museums, but his earliest steel swords
have long since crumbled into dust.
Every year the blast furnaces of the world release 72,000,000 tons of iron from
its oxides and every year a large part, said to be a quarter of that amount, reverts
to its primeval forms. If so, then man after five thousand years of metallurgical
industry has barely got three years ahead of nature, and should he cease his
efforts for a generation there would be little left to show that man had ever
learned to extract iron from its ores. The old question, "What becomes of all the
pins?" may be as well asked of rails, pipes and threshing machines. The end of
all iron is the same. However many may be its metamorphoses while in the
service of man it relapses at last into its original state of oxidation. To save a
pound of iron from corrosion is then as much a benefit to the world as to produce
another pound from the ore. In fact it is of much greater benefit, for it takes four
pounds of coal to produce one pound of steel, so whenever a piece of iron is
allowed to oxidize it means that four times as much coal must be oxidized in
order to replace it. And the beds of coal will be exhausted before the beds of iron
ore.
If we are ever to get ahead, if we are to gain any respite from this enormous
waste of labor and natural resources, we must find ways of preventing the iron
which we have obtained and fashioned into useful tools from being lost through
oxidation. Now there is only one way of keeping iron and oxygen from uniting
and that is to keep them apart. A very thin dividing wall will serve for the
purpose, for instance, a film of oil. But ordinary oil will rub off, so it is better to
cover the surface with an oil-like linseed which oxidizes to a hard elastic and
adhesive coating. If with linseed oil we mix iron oxide or some other pigment
we have a paint that will protect iron perfectly so long as it is unbroken. But let
the paint wear off or crack so that air can get at the iron, then rust will form and
spread underneath the paint on all sides. The same is true of the porcelain-like
enamel with which our kitchen iron ware is nowadays coated. So long as the
enamel holds it is all right but once it is broken through at any point it begins to
scale off and gets into our food.
Obviously it would be better for some purposes if we could coat our iron with
another and less easily oxidized metal than with such dissimilar substances as
paint or porcelain. Now the nearest relative to iron is nickel, and a layer of this
of any desired thickness may be easily deposited by electricity upon any surface
however irregular. Nickel takes a bright polish and keeps it well, so nickel
plating has become the favorite method of protection for small objects where the
expense is not prohibitive. Copper plating is used for fine wires. A sheet of iron
dipped in melted tin comes out coated with a thin adhesive layer of the latter
metal. Such tinned plate commonly known as "tin" has become the favorite
material for pans and cans. But if the tin is scratched the iron beneath rusts more
rapidly than if the tin were not there, for an electrolytic action is set up and the
iron, being the negative element of the couple, suffers at the expense of the tin.
With zinc it is quite the opposite. Zinc is negative toward iron, so when the two
are in contact and exposed to the weather the zinc is oxidized first. A zinc plating
affords the protection of a Swiss Guard, it holds out as long as possible and
when broken it perishes to the last atom before it lets the oxygen get at the iron.
The zinc may be applied in four different ways. (1) It may be deposited by
electrolysis as in nickel plating, but the zinc coating is more apt to be porous. (2)
The sheets or articles may be dipped in a bath of melted zinc. This gives us the
familiar "galvanized iron," the most useful and when well done the most
effective of rust preventives. Besides these older methods of applying zinc there
are now two new ones. (3) One is the Schoop process by which a wire of zinc or
other metal is fed into an oxy-hydrogen air blast of such heat and power that it is
projected as a spray of minute drops with the speed of bullets and any object
subjected to the bombardment of this metallic mist receives a coating as thick as
desired. The zinc spray is so fine and cool that it may be received on cloth, lace,
or the bare hand. The Schoop metallizing process has recently been improved by
the use of the electric current instead of the blowpipe for melting the metal. Two
zinc wires connected with any electric system, preferably the direct, are fed into
the "pistol." Where the wires meet an electric arc is set up and the melted zinc is
sprayed out by a jet of compressed air. (4) In the Sherardizing process the
articles are put into a tight drum with zinc dust and heated to 800° F. The zinc at
this temperature attacks the iron and forms a series of alloys ranging from pure
zinc on the top to pure iron at the bottom of the coating. Even if this cracks in
part the iron is more or less protected from corrosion so long as any zinc
remains. Aluminum is used similarly in the calorizing process for coating iron,
copper or brass. First a surface alloy is formed by heating the metal with
aluminum powder. Then the temperature is raised to a high degree so as to cause
the aluminum on the surface to diffuse into the metal and afterwards it is again
baked in contact with aluminum dust which puts upon it a protective plating of
the pure aluminum which does not oxidize.
PHOTOMICROGRAPHS SHOWING THE STRUCTURE OF STEEL MADE
BY PROFESSOR E.G. MARTIN OF PURDUE UNIVERSITY
PHOTOMICROGRAPHS SHOWING THE STRUCTURE OF STEEL
MADE BY PROFESSOR E.G. MARTIN OF PURDUE UNIVERSITY
1. Cold-worked steel showing ferrite and sorbite (enlarged 500 times)
2. Steel showing pearlite crystals (enlarged 500 times)
3. Structure characteristic of air-cooled steel (enlarged 50 times)
4. The triangular structure characteristic of cast steel showing ferrite and
pearlite (enlarged 50 times)
Courtesy of E.G. Mahin
Courtesy of E.G. Mahin
THE MICROSCOPIC STRUCTURE OF METALS
1. Malleabilized casting; temper carbon in ferrite (enlarged 50 times)
2. Type metal; lead-antimony alloy in matrix of lead (enlarged 100 times)
3. Gray cast iron; carbon as graphite (enlarged 500 times)
4. Steel composed of cementite (white) and pearlite (black) (enlarged 50
times)
Another way of protecting iron ware from rusting is to rust it. This is a sort of
prophylactic method like that adopted by modern medicine where inoculation
with a mild culture prevents a serious attack of the disease. The action of air an d
water on iron forms a series of compounds and mixtures of them. Those that
contain least oxygen are hard, black and magnetic like iron itself. Those that
have most oxygen are red and yellow powders. By putting on a tight coating of
the black oxide we can prevent or hinder the oxidation from going on into the
pulverulent stage. This is done in several ways. In the Bower-Barff process the
articles to be treated are put into a closed retort and a current of superheated
steam passed through for twenty minutes followed by a current of producer gas
(carbon monoxide), to reduce any higher oxides that may have been formed. In
the Gesner process a current of gasoline vapor is used as the reducing agent. The
blueing of watch hands, buckles and the like may be done by dipping them into
an oxidizing bath such as melted saltpeter. But in order to afford complete
protection the layer of black oxide must be thickened by repeating the process
which adds to the time and expense. This causes a slight enlargement and the
high temperature often warps the ware so it is not suitable for nicely adjusted
parts of machinery and of course tools would lose their temper by the heat.
A new method of rust proofing which is free from these disadvantages is the
phosphate process invented by Thomas Watts Coslett, an English chemist, in
1907, and developed in America by the Parker Company of Detroit. This
consists simply in dipping the sheet iron or articles into a tank filled with a dilute
solution of iron phosphate heated nearly to the boiling point by steam pipes.
Bubbles of hydrogen stream off rapidly at first, then slower, and at the end of
half an hour or longer the action ceases, and the process is complete. What has
happened is that the iron has been converted into a basic iron phosphate to a
depth depending upon the density of articles processed. Any one who has
studied elementary qualitative analysis will remember that when he added
ammonia to his "unknown" solution, iron and phosphoric acid, if present, were
precipitated together, or in other words, iron phosphate is insoluble except in
acids. Therefore a superficial film of such phosphate will protect the iron
underneath except from acids. This film is not a coating added on the outside
like paint and enamel or tin and nickel plate. It is therefore not apt to scale off
and it does not increase the size of the article. No high heat is required as in the
Sherardizing and Bower-Barff processes, so steel tools can be treated without
losing their temper or edge.
The deposit consisting of ferrous and ferric phosphates mixed with black iron
oxide may be varied in composition, texture and color. It is ordinarily a dull gray
and oiling gives a soft mat black more in accordance with modern taste than the
shiny nickel plating that delighted our fathers. Even the military nowadays show
more quiet taste than formerly and have abandoned their glittering
accoutrements.
The phosphate bath is not expensive and can be used continuously for months by
adding more of the concentrated solution to keep up the strength and removing
the sludge that is precipitated. Besides the iron the solution contains the
phosphates of other metals such as calcium or strontium, manganese,
molybdenum, or tungsten, according to the particular purpose. Since the
phosphating solution does not act on nickel it may be used on articles that have
been partly nickel-plated so there may be produced, for instance, a bright raised
design against a dull black background. Then, too, the surface left by the Parker
process is finely etched so it affords a good attachment for paint or enamel if
further protection is needed. Even if the enamel does crack, the iron beneath is
not so apt to rust and scale off the coating.
These, then, are some of the methods which are now being used to combat our
eternal enemy, the rust that doth corrupt. All of them are useful in their several
ways. No one of them is best for all purposes. The claim of "rust-proof" is no
more to be taken seriously than "fire-proof." We should rather, if we were
finical, have to speak of "rust-resisting" coatings as we do of "slow-burning"
buildings. Nature is insidious and unceasing in her efforts to bring to ruin the
achievements of mankind and we need all the weapons we can find to frustrate
her destructive determination.
But it is not enough for us to make iron superficially resistant to rust from the
atmosphere. We should like also to make it so that it would withstand corrosion
by acids, then it could be used in place of the large and expensive platinum or
porcelain evaporating pans and similar utensils employed in chemical works.
This requirement also has been met in the non-corrosive forms of iron, which
have come into use within the last five years. One of these, "tantiron," invented
by a British metallurgist, Robert N. Lennox, in 1912, contains 15 per cent. of
silicon. Similar products are known as "duriron" and "Buflokast" in America,
"metilure" in France, "ileanite" in Italy and "neutraleisen" in Germany. It is a
silvery-white close-grained iron, very hard and rather brittle, somewhat like cast
iron but with silicon as the main additional ingredient in place of carbon. It is
difficult to cut or drill but may be ground into shape by the new abrasives. It is
rustproof and is not attacked by sulfuric, nitric or acetic acid, hot or cold, diluted
or concentrated. It does not resist so well hydrochloric acid or sulfur dioxide or
alkalies.
The value of iron lies in its versatility. It is a dozen metals in one. It can be made
hard or soft, brittle or malleable, tough or weak, resistant or flexible, elastic or
pliant, magnetic or non-magnetic, more or less conductive to electricity, by slight
changes of composition or mere differences of treatment. No wonder that the
medieval mind ascribed these mysterious transformations to witchcraft. But the
modern micrometallurgist, by etching the surface of steel and photographing it,
shows it up as composite as a block of granite. He is then able to pick out its
component minerals, ferrite, austenite, martensite, pearlite, graphite, cementite,
and to show how their abundance, shape and arrangement contribute to the
strength or weakness of the specimen. The last of these constituents, cementite,
is a definite chemical compound, an iron carbide, Fe3C, containing 6.6 per cent.
of carbon, so hard as to scratch glass, very brittle, and imparting these properties
to hardened steel and cast iron.
With this knowledge at his disposal the iron-maker can work with his eyes open
and so regulate his melt as to cause these various constituents to crystallize out
as he wants them to. Besides, he is no longer confined to the alloys of iron and
carbon. He has ransacked the chemical dictionary to find new elements to add to
his alloys, and some of these rarities have proved to possess great practical
value. Vanadium, for instance, used to be put into a fine print paragraph in the
back of the chemistry book, where the class did not get to it until the term
closed. Yet if it had not been for vanadium steel we should have no Ford cars.
Tungsten, too, was relegated to the rear, and if the student remembered it at all it
was because it bothered him to understand why its symbol should be W instead
of T. But the student of today studies his lesson in the light of a tungsten wire
and relieves his mind by listening to a phonograph record played with a "tungs-
tone" stylus. When I was assistant in chemistry an "analysis" of steel consisted
merely in the determination of its percentage of carbon, and I used to take
Saturday for it so I could have time enough to complete the combustion. Now
the chemists of a steel works' laboratory may have to determine also the
tungsten, chromium, vanadium, titanium, nickel, cobalt, phosphorus,
molybdenum, manganese, silicon and sulfur, any or all of them, and be spry
about it, because if they do not get the report out within fifteen minutes while the
steel is melting in the electrical furnace the whole batch of 75 tons may go
wrong. I'm glad I quit the laboratory before they got to speeding up chemists so.
The quality of the steel depends upon the presence and the relative proportions
of these ingredients, and a variation of a tenth of 1 per cent. in certain of them
will make a different metal out of it. For instance, the steel becomes stronger and
tougher as the proportion of nicked is increased up to about 15 per cent. Raising
the percentage to 25 we get an alloy that does not rust or corrode and is non-
magnetic, although both its component metals, iron and nickel, are by
themselves attracted by the magnet. With 36 per cent. nickel and 5 per cent.
manganese we get the alloy known as "invar," because it expands and contracts
very little with changes of temperature. A bar of the best form of invar will
expand less than one-millionth part of its length for a rise of one degree
Centigrade at ordinary atmospheric temperature. For this reason it is used in
watches and measuring instruments. The alloy of iron with 46 per cent. nickel is
called "platinite" because its rate of expansion and contraction is the same as
platinum and glass, and so it can be used to replace the platinum wire passing
through the glass of an electric light bulb.
A manganese steel of 11 to 14 per cent. is too hard to be machined. It has to be
cast or ground into shape and is used for burglar-proof safes and armor plate.
Chrome steel is also hard and tough and finds use in files, ball bearings and
projectiles. Titanium, which the iron-maker used to regard as his implacable
enemy, has been drafted into service as a deoxidizer, increasing the strength and
elasticity of the steel. It is reported from France that the addition of three-tenths
of 1 per cent. of zirconium to nickel steel has made it more resistant to the
German perforating bullets than any steel hitherto known. The new "stainless"
cutlery contains 12 to 14 per cent. of chromium.
With the introduction of harder steels came the need of tougher tools to work
them. Now the virtue of a good tool steel is the same as of a good man. It must
be able to get hot without losing its temper. Steel of the old-fashioned sort, as
everybody knows, gets its temper by being heated to redness and suddenly
cooled by quenching or plunging it into water or oil. But when the point gets
heated up again, as it does by friction in a lathe, it softens and loses its cutting
edge. So the necessity of keeping the tool cool limited the speed of the machine.
But about 1868 a Sheffield metallurgist, Robert F. Mushet, found that a piece of
steel he was working with did not require quenching to harden it. He had it
analyzed to discover the meaning of this peculiarity and learned that it contained
tungsten, a rare metal unrecognized in the metallurgy of that day. Further
investigation showed that steel to which tungsten and manganese or chromium
had been added was tougher and retained its temper at high temperature better
than ordinary carbon steel. Tools made from it could be worked up to a white
heat without losing their cutting power. The new tools of this type invented by
"Efficiency" Taylor at the Bethlehem Steel Works in the nineties have
revolutionized shop practice the world over. A tool of the old sort could not cut
at a rate faster than thirty feet a minute without overheating, but the new
tungsten tools will plow through steel ten times as fast and can cut away a ton of
the material in an hour. By means of these high-speed tools the United States
was able to turn out five times the munitions that it could otherwise have done in
the same time. On the other hand, if Germany alone had possessed the secret of
the modern steels no power could have withstood her. A slight superiority in
metallurgy has been the deciding factor in many a battle. Those of my readers
who have had the advantages of Sunday school training will recall the case
described in I Samuel 13:19-22.
By means of these new metals armor plate has been made invulnerable—except
to projectiles pointed with similar material. Flying has been made possible
through engines weighing no more than two pounds per horse power. The
cylinders of combustion engines and the casing of cannon have been made to
withstand the unprecedented pressure and corrosive action of the fiery gases
evolved within. Castings are made so hard that they cannot be cut—save with
tools of the same sort. In the high-speed tools now used 20 or 30 per cent, of the
iron is displaced by other ingredients; for example, tungsten from 14 to 25 per
cent., chromium from 2 to 7 per cent., vanadium from 1/2 to 1-1/2 per cent.,
carbon from 6 to 8 per cent., with perhaps cobalt up to 4 per cent. Molybdenum
or uranium may replace part of the tungsten.
Some of the newer alloys for high-speed tools contain no iron at all. That which
bears the poetic name of star-stone, stellite, is composed of chromium, cobalt
and tungsten in varying proportions. Stellite keeps a hard cutting edge and gets
tougher as it gets hotter. It is very hard and as good for jewelry as platinum
except that it is not so expensive. Cooperite, its rival, is an alloy of nickel and
zirconium, stronger, lighter and cheaper than stellite.
Before the war nearly half of the world's supply of tungsten ore (wolframite)
came from Burma. But although Burma had belonged to the British for a
hundred years they had not developed its mineral resources and the tungsten
trade was monopolized by the Germans. All the ore was shipped to Germany and
the British Admiralty was content to buy from the Germans what tungsten was
needed for armor plate and heavy guns. When the war broke out the British had
the ore supply, but were unable at first to work it because they were not familiar
with the processes. Germany, being short of tungsten, had to sneak over a little
from Baltimore in the submarine Deutschland. In the United States before the
war tungsten ore was selling at $6.50 a unit, but by the beginning of 1916 it had
jumped to $85 a unit. A unit is 1 per cent. of tungsten trioxide to the ton, that is,
twenty pounds. Boulder County, Colorado, and San Bernardino, California, then
had mining booms, reminding one of older times. Between May and December,
1918, there was manufactured in the United States more than 45,500,000 pounds
of tungsten steel containing some 8,000,000 pounds of tungsten.
If tungsten ores were more abundant and the metal more easily manipulated, it
would displace steel for many purposes. It is harder than steel or even quartz. It
never rusts and is insoluble in acids. Its expansion by heat is one-third that of
iron. It is more than twice as heavy as iron and its melting point is twice as high.
Its electrical resistance is half that of iron and its tensile strength is a third
greater than the strongest steel. It can be worked into wire .0002 of an inch in
diameter, almost too thin to be seen, but as strong as copper wire ten times the
size.
The tungsten wires in the electric lamps are about .03 of an inch in diameter, and
they give three times the light for the same consumption of electricity as the old
carbon filament. The American manufacturers of the tungsten bulb have very
appropriately named their lamp "Mazda" after the light god of the Zoroastrians.
To get the tungsten into wire form was a problem that long baffled the inventors
of the world, for it was too refractory to be melted in mass and too brittle to be
drawn. Dr. W.D. Coolidge succeeded in accomplishing the feat in 1912 by
reducing the tungstic acid by hydrogen and molding the metallic powder into a
bar by pressure. This is raised to a white heat in the electric furnace, taken out
and rolled down, and the process repeated some fifty times, until the wire is
small enough so it can be drawn at a red heat through diamond dies of
successively smaller apertures.
The German method of making the lamp filaments is to squirt a mixture of
tungsten powder and thorium oxide through a perforated diamond of the desired
diameter. The filament so produced is drawn through a chamber heated to 2500°
C. at a velocity of eight feet an hour, which crystallizes the tungsten into a
continuous thread.
The first metallic filament used in the electric light on a commercial scale was
made of tantalum, the metal of Tantalus. In the period 1905-1911 over
100,000,000 tantalus lamps were sold, but tungsten displaced them as soon as
that metal could be drawn into wire.
A recent rival of tungsten both as a filament for lamps and hardener for steel is
molybdenum. One pound of this metal will impart more resiliency to steel than
three or four pounds of tungsten. The molybdenum steel, because it does not
easily crack, is said to be serviceable for armor-piercing shells, gun linings, air-
plane struts, automobile axles and propeller shafts. In combination with its rival
as a tungsten-molybdenum alloy it is capable of taking the place of the
intolerably expensive platinum, for it resists corrosion when used for spark plugs
and tooth plugs. European steel men have taken to molybdenum more than
Americans. The salts of this metal can be used in dyeing and photography.
Calcium, magnesium and aluminum, common enough in their compounds, have
only come into use as metals since the invention of the electric furnace. Now the
photographer uses magnesium powder for his flashlight when he wants to take a
picture of his friends inside the house, and the aviator uses it when he wants to
take a picture of his enemies on the open field. The flares prepared by our
Government for the war consist of a sheet iron cylinder, four feet long and six
inches thick, containing a stick of magnesium attached to a tightly rolled silk
parachute twenty feet in diameter when expanded. The whole weighed 32
pounds. On being dropped from the plane by pressing a button, the rush of air set
spinning a pinwheel at the bottom which ignited the magnesium stick and
detonated a charge of black powder sufficient to throw off the case and release
the parachute. The burning flare gave off a light of 320,000 candle power lasting
for ten minutes as the parachute slowly descended. This illuminated the ground
on the darkest night sufficiently for the airman to aim his bombs or to take
photographs.
The addition of 5 or 10 per cent. of magnesium to aluminum gives an alloy
(magnalium) that is almost as light as aluminum and almost as strong as steel.
An alloy of 90 per cent. aluminum and 10 per cent. calcium is lighter and harder
than aluminum and more resistant to corrosion. The latest German airplane, the
"Junker," was made entirely of duralumin. Even the wings were formed of
corrugated sheets of this alloy instead of the usual doped cotton-cloth.
Duralumin is composed of about 85 per cent. of aluminum, 5 per cent. of copper,
5 per cent. of zinc and 2 per cent. of tin.
When platinum was first discovered it was so cheap that ingots of it were gilded
and sold as gold bricks to unwary purchasers. The Russian Government used it
as we use nickel, for making small coins. But this is an exception to the rule that
the demand creates the supply. Platinum is really a "rare metal," not merely an
unfamiliar one. Nowhere except in the Urals is it found in quantity, and since it
seems indispensable in chemical and electrical appliances, the price has
continually gone up. Russia collapsed into chaos just when the war work made
the heaviest demand for platinum, so the governments had to put a stop to its use
for jewelry and photography. The "gold brick" scheme would now have to be
reversed, for gold is used as a cheaper metal to "adulterate" platinum. All the
members of the platinum family, formerly ignored, were pressed into service,
palladium, rhodium, osmium, iridium, and these, alloyed with gold or silver,
were employed more or less satisfactorily by the dentist, chemist and electrician
as substitutes for the platinum of which they had been deprived. One of these
alloys, composed of 20 per cent. palladium and 80 per cent. gold, and bearing
the telescoped name of "palau" (palladium au-rum) makes very acceptable
crucibles for the laboratory and only costs half as much as platinum.
"Rhotanium" is a similar alloy recently introduced. The points of our gold pens
are tipped with an osmium-iridium alloy. It is a pity that this family of noble
metals is so restricted, for they are unsurpassed in tenacity and incorruptibility.
They could be of great service to the world in war and peace. As the "Bad Child"
says in his "Book of Beasts":
I shoot the hippopotamus with bullets made of platinum,
Because if I use leaden ones, his hide is sure to flatten 'em.
Along in the latter half of the last century chemists had begun to perceive certain
regularities and relationships among the various elements, so they conceived the
idea that some sort of a pigeon-hole scheme might be devised in which the
elements could be filed away in the order of their atomic weights so that one
could see just how a certain element, known or unknown, would behave from
merely observing its position in the series. Mendeléef, a Russian chemist,
devised the most ingenious of such systems called the "periodic law" and gave
proof that there was something in his theory by predicting the properties of three
metallic elements, then unknown but for which his arrangement showed three
empty pigeon-holes. Sixteen years later all three of these predicted elements had
been discovered, one by a Frenchman, one by a German and one by a
Scandinavian, and named from patriotic impulse, gallium, germanium and
scandium. This was a triumph of scientific prescience as striking as the
mathematical proof of the existence of the planet Neptune by Leverrier before it
had been found by the telescope.
But although Mendeléef's law told "the truth," it gradually became evident that it
did not tell "the whole truth and nothing but the truth," as the lawyers put it. As
usually happens in the history of science the hypothesis was found not to explain
things so simply and completely as was at first assumed. The anomalies in the
arrangement did not disappear on closer study, but stuck out more conspicuously.
Though Mendeléef had pointed out three missing links, he had failed to make
provision for a whole group of elements since discovered, the inert gases of the
helium-argon group. As we now know, the scheme was built upon the false
assumptions that the elements are immutable and that their atomic weights are
invariable.
The elements that the chemists had most difficulty in sorting out and identifying
were the heavy metals found in the "rare earths." There were about twenty of
them so mixed up together and so much alike as to baffle all ordinary means of
separating them. For a hundred years chemists worked over them and quarreled
over them before they discovered that they had a commercial value. It was a
problem as remote from practicality as any that could be conceived. The man in
the street did not see why chemists should care whether there were two
didymiums any more than why theologians should care whether there were two
Isaiahs. But all of a sudden, in 1885, the chemical puzzle became a business
proposition. The rare earths became household utensils and it made a big
difference with our monthly gas bills whether the ceria and the thoria in the
burner mantles were absolutely pure or contained traces of some of the other
elements that were so difficult to separate.
This sudden change of venue from pure to applied science came about through a
Viennese chemist, Dr. Carl Auer, later and in consequence known as Baron Auer
von Welsbach. He was trying to sort out the rare earths by means of the
spectroscopic method, which consists ordinarily in dipping a platinum wire into
a solution of the unknown substance and holding it in a colorless gas flame. As it
burns off, each element gives a characteristic color to the flame, which is seen as
a series of lines when looked at through the spectroscope. But the flash of the
flame from the platinum wire was too brief to be studied, so Dr. Auer hit upon
the plan of soaking a thread in the liquid and putting this in the gas jet. The
cotton of course burned off at once, but the earths held together and when heated
gave off a brilliant white light, very much like the calcium or limelight which is
produced by heating a stick of quicklime in the oxy-hydrogen flame. But these
rare earths do not require any such intense heat as that, for they will glow in an
ordinary gas jet.
So the Welsbach mantle burner came into use everywhere and rescued the coal
gas business from the destruction threatened by the electric light. It was no
longer necessary to enrich the gas with oil to make its flame luminous, for a
cheaper fuel gas such as is used for a gas stove will give, with a mantle, a fine
white light of much higher candle power than the ordinary gas jet. The mantles
are knit in narrow cylinders on machines, cut off at suitable lengths, soaked in a
solution of the salts of the rare earths and dried. Artificial silk (viscose) has been
found better than cotton thread for the mantles, for it is solid, not hollow, more
uniform in quality and continuous instead of being broken up into one-inch
fibers. There is a great deal of difference in the quality of these mantles, as every
one who has used them knows. Some that give a bright glow at first with the
gas-cock only half open will soon break up or grow dull and require more gas to
get any kind of a light out of them. Others will last long and grow better to the
last. Slight impurities in the earths or the gas will speedily spoil the light. The
best results are obtained from a mixture of 99 parts thoria and 1 part ceria. It is
the ceria that gives the light, yet a little more of it will lower the luminosity.
The non-chemical reader is apt to be confused by the strange names and their
varied terminations, but he need not be when he learns that the new metals are
given names ending in -um, such as sodium, cerium, thorium, and that their
oxides (compounds with oxygen, the earths) are given the termination -a, like
soda, ceria, thoria. So when he sees a name ending in -um let him picture to
himself a metal, any metal since they mostly look alike, lead or silver, for
example. And when he comes across a name ending in -a he may imagine a
white powder like lime. Thorium, for instance, is, as its name implies, a metal
named after the thunder god Thor, to whom we dedicate one day in each week,
Thursday. Cerium gets its name from the Roman goddess of agriculture by way
of the asteroid.
The chief sources of the material for the Welsbach burners is monazite, a
glittering yellow sand composed of phosphate of cerium with some 5 per cent. of
thorium. In 1916 the United States imported 2,500,000 pounds of monazite from
Brazil and India, most of which used to go to Germany. In 1895 we got over a
million and a half pounds from the Carolinas, but the foreign sand is richer and
cheaper. The price of the salts of the rare metals fluctuates wildly. In 1895
thorium nitrate sold at $200 a pound; in 1913 it fell to $2.60, and in 1916 it rose
to $8.
Since the monazite contains more cerium than thorium and the mantles made
from it contain more thorium than cerium, there is a superfluity of cerium. The
manufacturers give away a pound of cerium salts with every purchase of a
hundred pounds of thorium salts. It annoyed Welsbach to see the cerium residues
thrown away and accumulating around his mantle factory, so he set out to find
some use for it. He reduced the mixed earths to a metallic form and found that it
gave off a shower of sparks when scratched. An alloy of cerium with 30 or 35
per cent. of iron proved the best and was put on the market in the form of
automatic lighters. A big business was soon built up in Austria on the basis of
this obscure chemical element rescued from the dump-heap. The sale of the
cerite lighters in France threatened to upset the finances of the republic, which
derived large revenue from its monopoly of match-making, so the French
Government imposed a tax upon every man who carried one. American tourists
who bought these lighters in Germany used to be much annoyed at being held up
on the French frontier and compelled to take out a license. During the war the
cerium sparklers were much used in the trenches for lighting cigarettes, but—as
those who have seen "The Better 'Ole" will know—they sometimes fail to strike
fire. Auer-metal or cerium-iron alloy was used in munitions to ignite hand
grenades and to blazon the flight of trailer shells. There are many other
pyrophoric (light-producing) alloys, including steel, which our ancestors used
with flint before matches and percussion caps were invented.
There are more than fifty metals known and not half of them have come into
common use, so there is still plenty of room for the expansion of the science of
metallurgy. If the reader has not forgotten his arithmetic of permutations he can
calculate how many different alloys may be formed by varying the combinations
and proportions of these fifty. We have seen how quickly elements formerly
known only to chemists—and to some of them known only by name—have
become indispensable in our daily life. Any one of those still unutilized may be
found to have peculiar properties that fit it for filling a long unfelt want in
modern civilization.
Who, for instance, will find a use for gallium, the metal of France? It was
described in 1869 by Mendeléef in advance of its advent and has been known in
person since 1875, but has not yet been set to work. It is such a remarkable metal
that it must be good for something. If you saw it in a museum case on a cold day
you might take it to be a piece of aluminum, but if the curator let you hold it in
your hand—which he won't—it would melt and run over the floor like mercury.
The melting point is 87° Fahr. It might be used in thermometers for measuring
temperatures above the boiling point of mercury were it not for the peculiar fact
that gallium wets glass so it sticks to the side of the tube instead of forming a
clear convex curve on top like mercury.
Then there is columbium, the American metal. It is strange that an element
named after Columbia should prove so impractical. Columbium is a metal
closely resembling tantalum and tantalum found a use as electric light filaments.
A columbium lamp should appeal to our patriotism.
The so-called "rare elements" are really abundant enough considering the earth's
crust as a whole, though they are so thinly scattered that they are usually
overlooked and hard to extract. But whenever one of them is found valuable it is
soon found available. A systematic search generally reveals it somewhere in
sufficient quantity to be worked. Who, then, will be the first to discover a use for
indium, germanium, terbium, thulium, lanthanum, neodymium, scandium,
samarium and others as unknown to us as tungsten was to our fathers?
As evidence of the statement that it does not matter how rare an element may be
it will come into common use if it is found to be commonly useful, we may refer
to radium. A good rich specimen of radium ore, pitchblende, may contain as
much, as one part in 4,000,000. Madame Curie, the brilliant Polish Parisian, had
to work for years before she could prove to the world that such an element
existed and for years afterwards before she could get the metal out. Yet now we
can all afford a bit of radium to light up our watch dials in the dark. The amount
needed for this is infinitesimal. If it were more it would scorch our skins, for
radium is an element in eruption. The atom throws off corpuscles at intervals as
a Roman candle throws off blazing balls. Some of these particles, the alpha rays,
are atoms of another element, helium, charged with positive electricity and are
ejected with a velocity of 18,000 miles a second. Some of them, the beta rays,
are negative electrons, only about one seven-thousandth the size of the others,
but are ejected with almost the speed of light, 186,000 miles a second. If one of
the alpha projectiles strikes a slice of zinc sulfide it makes a splash of light big
enough to be seen with a microscope, so we can now follow the flight of a single
atom. The luminous watch dials consist of a coating of zinc sulfide under
continual bombardment by the radium projectiles. Sir William Crookes invented
this radium light apparatus and called it a "spinthariscope," which is Greek for
"spark-seer."
Evidently if radium is so wasteful of its substance it cannot last forever nor could
it have forever existed. The elements then ate not necessarily eternal and
immutable, as used to be supposed. They have a natural length of life; they are
born and die and propagate, at least some of them do. Radium, for instance, is
the offspring of ionium, which is the great-great-grandson of uranium, the
heaviest of known elements. Putting this chemical genealogy into biblical
language we might say: Uranium lived 5,000,000,000 years and begot Uranium
X1, which lived 24.6 days and begot Uranium X2, which lived 69 seconds and
begot Uranium 2, which lived 2,000,000 years and begot Ionium, which lived
200,000 years and begot Radium, which lived 1850 years and begot Niton,
which lived 3.85 days and begot Radium A, which lived 3 minutes and begot
Radium B, which lived 26.8 minutes and begot Radium C, which lived 19.5
minutes and begot Radium D, which lived 12 years and begot Radium E, which
lived 5 days and begot Polonium, which lived 136 days and begot Lead.
The figures I have given are the times when half the parent substance has gone
over into the next generation. It will be seen that the chemist is even more liberal
in his allowance of longevity than was Moses with the patriarchs. It appears
from the above that half of the radium in any given specimen will be
transformed in about 2000 years. Half of what is left will disappear in the next
2000 years, half of that in the next 2000 and so on. The reader can figure out for
himself when it will all be gone. He will then have the answer to the old Eleatic
conundrum of when Achilles will overtake the tortoise. But we may say that
after 100,000 years there would not be left any radium worth mentioning, or in
other words practically all the radium now in existence is younger than the
human race. The lead that is found in uranium and has presumably descended
from uranium, behaves like other lead but is lighter. Its atomic weight is only
206, while ordinary lead weighs 207. It appears then that the same chemical
element may have different atomic weights according to its ancestry, while on
the other hand different chemical elements may have the same atomic weight.
This would have seemed shocking heresy to the chemists of the last century, who
prided themselves on the immutability of the elements and did not take into
consideration their past life or heredity. The study of these radioactive elements
has led to a new atomic theory. I suppose most of us in our youth used to
imagine the atom as a little round hard ball, but now it is conceived as a sort of
solar system with an electropositive nucleus acting as the sun and negative
electrons revolving around it like the planets. The number of free positive
electrons in the nucleus varies from one in hydrogen to 92 in uranium. This
leaves room for 92 possible elements and of these all but six are more or less
certainly known and definitely placed in the scheme. The atom of uranium,
weighing 238 times the atom of hydrogen, is the heaviest known and therefore
the ultimate limit of the elements, though it is possible that elements may be
found beyond it just as the planet Neptune was discovered outside the orbit of
Uranus. Considering the position of uranium and its numerous progeny as
mentioned above, it is quite appropriate that this element should bear the name
of the father of all the gods.
In these radioactive elements we have come upon sources of energy such as was
never dreamed of in our philosophy. The most striking peculiarity of radium is
that it is always a little warmer than its surroundings, no matter how warm these
may be. Slowly, spontaneously and continuously, it decomposes and we know no
way of hastening or of checking it. Whether it is cooled in liquefied air or heated
to its melting point the change goes on just the same. An ounce of radium salt
will give out enough heat in one hour to melt an ounce of ice and in the next
hour will raise this water to the boiling point, and so on again and again without
cessation for years, a fire without fuel, a realization of the philosopher's lamp
that the alchemists sought in vain. The total energy so emitted is millions of
times greater than that produced by any chemical combination such as the union
of oxygen and hydrogen to form water. From the heavy white salt there is
continually rising a faint fire-mist like the will-o'-the-wisp over a swamp. This
gas is known as the emanation or niton, "the shining one." A pound of niton
would give off energy at the rate of 23,000 horsepower; fine stuff to run a
steamer, one would think, but we must remember that it does not last. By the
sixth day the power would have fallen off by half. Besides, no one would dare to
serve as engineer, for the radiation will rot away the flesh of a living man who
comes near it, causing gnawing ulcers or curing them. It will not only break
down the complex and delicate molecules of organic matter but will attack the
atom itself, changing, it is believed, one element into another, again the
fulfilment of a dream of the alchemists. And its rays, unseen and unfelt by us,
are yet strong enough to penetrate an armorplate and photograph what is behind
it.
But radium is not the most mysterious of the elements but the least so. It is
giving out the secret that the other elements have kept. It suggests to us that all
the other elements in proportion to their weight have concealed within them
similar stores of energy. Astronomers have long dazzled our imaginations by
calculating the horsepower of the world, making us feel cheap in talking about
our steam engines and dynamos when a minutest fraction of the waste dynamic
energy of the solar system would make us all as rich as millionaires. But the
heavenly bodies are too big for us to utilize in this practical fashion.
And now the chemists have become as exasperating as the astronomers, for they
give us a glimpse of incalculable wealth in the meanest substance. For wealth is
measured by the available energy of the world, and if a few ounces of anything
would drive an engine or manufacture nitrogenous fertilizer from the air all our
troubles would be over. Kipling in his sketch, "With the Night Mail," and Wells
in his novel, "The World Set Free," stretched their imaginations in trying to tell
us what it would mean to have command of this power, but they are a little hazy
in their descriptions of the machinery by which it is utilized. The atom is as
much beyond our reach as the moon. We cannot rob its vault of the treasure.
READING REFERENCES
The foregoing pages will not have achieved their aim unless their readers have
become sufficiently interested in the developments of industrial chemistry to
desire to pursue the subject further in some of its branches. Assuming such
interest has been aroused, I am giving below a few references to books and
articles which may serve to set the reader upon the right track for additional
information. To follow the rapid progress of applied science it is necessary to
read continuously such periodicals as the Journal of Industrial and Engineering
Chemistry (New York), Metallurgical and Chemical Engineering (New York),
Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry (London), Chemical Abstracts
(published by the American Chemical Society, Easton, Pa.), and the various
journals devoted to special trades. The reader may need to be reminded that the
United States Government publishes for free distribution or at low price annual
volumes or special reports dealing with science and industry. Among these may
be mentioned "Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture"; "Mineral Resources
of the United States," published by the United States Geological Survey in two
annual volumes, Vol. I on the metals and Vol. II on the non-metals; the "Annual
Report of the Smithsonian Institution," containing selected articles on pure and
applied science; the daily "Commerce Reports" and special bulletins of
Department of Commerce. Write for lists of publications of these departments.
The following books on industrial chemistry in general are recommended for
reading and reference: "The Chemistry of Commerce" and "Some Chemical
Problems of To-Day" by Robert Kennedy Duncan (Harpers, N.Y.), "Modern
Chemistry and Its Wonders" by Martin (Van Nostrand), "Chemical Discovery
and Invention in the Twentieth Century" by Sir William A. Tilden (Dutton,
N.Y.), "Discoveries and Inventions of the Twentieth Century" by Edward Cressy
(Dutton), "Industrial Chemistry" by Allen Rogers (Van Nostrand).
"Everyman's Chemistry" by Ellwood Hendrick (Harpers, Modern Science
Series) is written in a lively style and assumes no previous knowledge of
chemistry from the reader. The chapters on cellulose, gums, sugars and oils are
particularly interesting. "Chemistry of Familiar Things" by S.S. Sadtler
(Lippincott) is both comprehensive and comprehensible.
The following are intended for young readers but are not to be despised by their
elders who may wish to start in on an easy up-grade: "Chemistry of Common
Things" (Allyn & Bacon, Boston) is a popular high school text-book but
differing from most text-books in being readable and attractive. Its descriptions
of industrial processes are brief but clear. The "Achievements of Chemical
Science" by James C. Philip (Macmillan) is a handy little book, easy reading for
pupils. "Introduction to the Study of Science" by W.P. Smith and E.G. Jewett
(Macmillan) touches upon chemical topics in a simple way.
On the history of commerce and the effect of inventions on society the following
titles may be suggested: "Outlines of Industrial History" by E. Cressy
(Macmillan); "The Origin of Invention," a study of primitive industry, by O.T.
Mason (Scribner); "The Romance of Commerce" by Gordon Selbridge (Lane);
"Industrial and Commercial Geography" or "Commerce and Industry" by J.
Russell Smith (Holt); "Handbook of Commercial Geography" by G.G. Chisholm
(Longmans).
The newer theories of chemistry and the constitution of the atom are explained
in "The Realities of Modern Science" by John Mills (Macmillan), and "The
Electron" by R.A. Millikan (University of Chicago Press), but both require a
knowledge of mathematics. The little book on "Matter and Energy" by Frederick
Soddy (Holt) is better adapted to the general reader. The most recent text-book is
the "Introduction to General Chemistry" by H.N. McCoy and E.M. Terry.
(Chicago, 1919.)
CHAPTER II
The reader who may be interested in following up this subject will find
references to all the literature in the summary by Helen R. Hosmer, of the
Research Laboratory of the General Electric Company, in the Journal of
Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, New York, for April, 1917. Bucher's
paper may be found in the same journal for March, and the issue for September
contains a full report of the action of U.S. Government and a comparison of the
various processes. Send fifteen cents to the U.S. Department of Commerce (or to
the nearest custom house) for Bulletin No. 52, Special Agents Series on
"Utilization of Atmospheric Nitrogen" by T.H. Norton. The Smithsonian
Institution of Washington has issued a pamphlet on "Sources of Nitrogen
Compounds in the United States." In the 1913 report of the Smithsonian
Institution there are two fine articles on this subject: "The Manufacture of
Nitrates from the Atmosphere" and "The Distribution of Mankind," which
discusses Sir William Crookes' prediction of the exhaustion of wheat land. The
D. Van Nostrand Co., New York, publishes a monograph on "Fixation of
Atmospheric Nitrogen" by J. Knox, also "TNT and Other Nitrotoluenes" by G.C.
Smith. The American Cyanamid Company, New York, gives out some attractive
literature on their process.
"American Munitions 1917-1918," the report of Benedict Crowell, Director of
Munitions, to the Secretary of War, gives a fully illustrated account of the
manufacture of arms, explosives and toxic gases. Our war experience in the
"Oxidation of Ammonia" is told by C.L. Parsons in Journal of Industrial and
Engineering Chemistry, June, 1919, and various other articles on the government
munition work appeared in the same journal in the first half of 1919. "The
Muscle Shoals Nitrate Plant" in Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering,
January, 1919.
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
Send ten cents to the Department of Commerce, Washington, for "Dyestuffs for
American Textile and Other Industries," by Thomas H. Norton, Special Agents'
Series, No. 96. A more technical bulletin by the same author is "Artificial
Dyestuffs Used in the United States," Special Agents' Series, No. 121, thirty
cents. "Dyestuff Situation in U.S.," Special Agents' Series, No. 111, five cents.
"Coal-Tar Products," by H.G. Porter, Technical Paper 89, Bureau of Mines,
Department of the Interior, five cents. "Wealth in Waste," by Waldemar
Kaempfert, McClure's, April, 1917. "The Evolution of Artificial Dyestuffs," by
Thomas H. Norton, Scientific American, July 21, 1917. "Germany's Commercial
Preparedness for Peace," by James Armstrong, Scientific American, January 29,
1916. "The Conquest of Commerce" and "American Made," by Edwin E.
Slosson in The Independent of September 6 and October 11, 1915. The H.
Koppers Company, Pittsburgh, give out an illustrated pamphlet on their "By-
Product Coke and Gas Ovens." The addresses delivered during the war on "The
Aniline Color, Dyestuff and Chemical Conditions," by I.F. Stone, president of
the National Aniline and Chemical Company, have been collected in a volume
by the author. For "Dyestuffs as Medicinal Agents" by G. Heyl, see Color Trade
Journal, vol. 4, p. 73, 1919. "The Chemistry of Synthetic Drugs" by Percy May,
and "Color in Relation to Chemical Constitution" by E.R. Watson are published
in Longmans' "Monographs on Industrial Chemistry." "Enemy Property in the
United States" by A. Mitchell Palmer in Saturday Evening Post, July 19, 1919,
tells of how Germany monopolized chemical industry. "The Carbonization of
Coal" by V.B. Lewis (Van Nostrand, 1912). "Research in the Tar Dye Industry"
by B.C. Hesse in Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, September,
1916.
Kekulé tells how he discovered the constitution of benzene in the Berichte der
Deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft, V. XXIII, I, p. 1306. I have quoted it with
some other instances of dream discoveries in The Independent of Jan. 26, 1918.
Even this innocent scientific vision has not escaped the foul touch of the
Freudians. Dr. Alfred Robitsek in "Symbolisches Denken in der chemischen
Forschung," Imago, V. I, p. 83, has deduced from it that Kekulé was morally
guilty of the crime of Œdipus as well as minor misdemeanors.
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
The speeches made when Hyatt was awarded the Perkin medal by the American
Chemical Society for the discovery of celluloid may be found in the Journal of
the Society of Chemical Industry for 1914, p. 225. In 1916 Baekeland received
the same medal, and the proceedings are reported in the same Journal, v. 35, p.
285.
A comprehensive technical paper with bibliography on "Synthetic Resins" by
L.V. Redman appeared in the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry,
January, 1914. The controversy over patent rights may be followed in the same
Journal, v. 8 (1915), p. 1171, and v. 9 (1916), p. 207. The "Effects of Heat on
Celluloid" have been examined by the Bureau of Standards, Washington
(Technological Paper No. 98), abstract in Scientific American Supplement, June
29, 1918.
For casein see Tague's article in Rogers' "Industrial Chemistry" (Van Nostrand).
See also Worden's "Nitrocellulose Industry" and "Technology of the Cellulose
Esters" (Van Nostrand); Hodgson's "Celluloid" and Cross and Bevan's
"Cellulose."
For references to recent research and new patent specifications on artificial
plastics, resins, rubber, leather, wood, etc., see the current numbers of Chemical
Abstracts (Easton, Pa.) and such journals as the India Rubber Journal, Paper,
Textile World, Leather World and Journal of American Leather Chemical
Association.
The General Bakelite Company, New York, the Redmanol Products Company,
Chicago, the Condensite Company, Bloomfield, N.J., the Arlington Company,
New York (handling pyralin), give out advertising literature regarding their
respective products.
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
"The Cane Sugar Industry" (Bulletin No. 53, Miscellaneous Series, Department
of Commerce, 50 cents) gives agricultural and manufacturing costs in Hawaii,
Porto Rico, Louisiana and Cuba.
"Sugar and Its Value as Food," by Mary Hinman Abel. (Farmer's Bulletin No.
535, Department of Agriculture, free.)
"Production of Sugar in the United States and Foreign Countries," by Perry
Elliott. (Department of Agriculture, 10 cents.)
"Conditions in the Sugar Market January to October, 1917," a pamphlet
published by the American Sugar Refining Company, 117 Wall Street, New
York, gives an admirable survey of the present situation as seen by the refiners.
"Cuban Cane Sugar," by Robert Wiles, 1916 (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Co.,
75 cents), an attractive little book in simple language.
"The World's Cane Sugar Industry, Past and Present," by H.C.P. Geering.
"The Story of Sugar," by Prof. G.T. Surface of Yale (Appleton, 1910). A very
interesting and reliable book.
The "Digestibility of Glucose" is discussed in Journal of Industrial and
Engineering Chemistry, August, 1917. "Utilization of Beet Molasses" in
Metallurgical and Chemical Engineering, April 5, 1917.
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
A full account of the development of the American Warfare Service has been
published in the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry in the monthly
issues from January to August, 1919, and an article on the British service in the
issue of April, 1918. See also Crowell's Report on "America's Munitions,"
published by War Department. Scientific American, March 29, 1919, contains
several articles. A. Russell Bond's "Inventions of the Great War" (Century)
contains chapters on poison gas and explosives.
Lieutenant Colonel S.J.M. Auld, Chief Gas Officer of Sir Julian Byng's army
and a member of the British Military Mission to the United States, has published
a volume on "Gas and Flame in Modern Warfare" (George H. Doran Co.).
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
Baekeland, 137
Baeyer, Adolf von, 77
Bakelite, 138, 303
Balata, 159
Bauxite, 31
Beet sugar, 165, 169, 305
Benzene formula, 67, 301, 101
Berkeley, 61
Berthelot, 7, 94
Birkeland-Eyde process, 26
Bucher process, 32
Butter, 201, 208
Galalith, 142
Gas masks, 223, 226, 230, 231
Gerhardt, 6, 7
Glucose, 137, 184-189, 194, 305
Glycerin, 194, 203
Goldschmidt, 256
Goodyear, 161
Graphite, 258
Guayule, 159, 304
Guncotton, 17, 117, 125, 130
Gunpowder, 14, 15, 22, 234
Gutta percha, 159
Magnesium, 283
Maize products, 181-196, 305
Manganese, 278
Margarin, 207-212, 307
Mauve, discovery of, 74
Mendeléef, 285, 291
Mercerized cotton, 115
Moissan, 259
Molybdenum, 283, 308
Munition manufacture in U.S., 33, 224, 299, 307
Mushet, 279
Musk, synthetic, 96, 97, 106
Mustard gas, 224, 227-229
Tantalum, 282
Terpenes, 100, 154
Textile industry, 5, 112, 121, 300
Thermit, 256
Thermodynamics, Second law of, 145
Three periods of progress, 3
Tin plating, 271
Tilden, 146, 298
Titanium, 278, 308
TNT, 19, 21, 84, 299
Trinitrotoluol, 19, 21, 84, 299
Tropics, value of, 96, 156, 165, 196, 206, 213, 216
Tungsten, 257, 277, 281, 308
Uranium, 28
Welding, 256
Welsbach burner, 287-289, 308
Wheat problem, 43, 299
Wood, distillation of, 126, 127
Wood pulp, 112, 120, 303
Transcriber's notes:
The book starts using the word "CHAPTER" only after its chapter number XI. I
have left it the same in this text.
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