Fritz Haber Alfred Nobel And the explosives industry.

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Fritz Haber Alfred Nobel And the explosives industry

Transcript of Fritz Haber Alfred Nobel And the explosives industry.

Page 1: Fritz Haber Alfred Nobel And the explosives industry.

Fritz HaberAlfred Nobel

And the explosives industry

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Explosives

• These are chemicals that react very rapidly when stimulated in the correct and controlled manner.

• There are two main types

• Those that release large amounts of gas very rapidly

• Those that release large amounts of energy very rapidly

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Mechanism of an explosive

Detonation is usually caused by a shock or electrically sensitive compound being stimulated into decomposing rapidly

This sets off the main explosive which is much less sensitive but much more powerful.

Fuse ----- detonator ------ dynamite

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History

China – (10th century) Was thought to be the inventor of the first explosive gunpowder – a mixture of potassium nitrate, sulphur and charcoal (carbon). By the 12th century it had arrived in Europe,

This was the dominating explosive throughout the middle ages and forged a route for western colonisation of India, Africa and South America.

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New explosives

• With chemistry investigations proceeding rapidly during the 18th and 19th century many new unstable substances were discovered.

• Nitroglycerine (Ascanio Sobrero, 1846)

• Picric acid

• Tri-Nitro Toluene (TNT) 1902

• Ammonium nitrate (Amotal)

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Manufacture and use

• All of the explosives contain either the nitro- NO2 group or the nitrate NO3 group of atoms.

• To make them you need nitric acid HNO3

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Nitroglycerine• This is a very unstable compound that was

used as an explosive for many years causing innumerable deaths

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Alfred Nobel

• Alfred Nobel’s family had a nitroglycerine business

• After several fatal explosions in the factory (one of which killed his brother) he set out to find a way to make nitroglycerine safe to handle.

• He invented the blasting cap (using gunpowder)

• He invented dynamite

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Nobel’s contribution

Alfred Nobel made high explosives freely available allowing:

Use of high explosives in war

Engineering projects such as dams for irrigation, bridges, railways, mines and road-building became possible.

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19th and 20th century politics

• Europe, for the past 1000 years has been politically very unstable with many wars between neighbouring countries.

• Although a lot of damage can be caused with gunpowder and steel the new explosives brought warfare into a new dimension…..

• At the beginning of the 20th century the European map looked like

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Raw materialsTo make explosives you need

nitrates…Chile Saltpetre NaNO3

India Bengal saltpetre Ca(NO3)2

Guanine (from guana)

And they come from………………..

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Guanine comes from guana

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And guana comes from

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The Germans needed

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• And to manufacture munitions they needed the raw materials to which they had no access because of the naval blockade.

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So they called on

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Among which was

Fritz Haber

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The Haber process

Fritz Haber, a chemist, recognised that Germany’s requirement of nitrates for explosives could come from the oxidation of ammonia:

Ammonia + oxygen nitrogen oxide + water

Nitrogen oxide + water + oxygen Nitric acid

Nitric acid explosives

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The problem

Ammonia could be made from nitrogen and hydrogen, both of which were freely available in Germany…

BUT

The reaction

N2 + 3H2 2NH3

is very difficult and inefficient

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The Haber process

So Haber developed the process by which…

1. He used pressure to push the reaction to the right hand side

2. He used a catalyst to speed the reaction up

3. He liquefied the ammonia to remove it from the reaction as soon as it was formed, preventing its decomposition.

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Result?

This allowed Germany to fight the war for four years from 1914 to 1918

Fritz Haber was put in charge of Germany’s chemical weapons program

Some of the consequences……….

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The Somme

• 1st July 1916: after a week long bombardment of the German frontline, nearly 100,000 British soldiers rose from their trenches and marched into No Man's Land.

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The Somme

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The Somme

• Wave after wave of British infantry rose from their trenches and walked forward. but they advanced to their deaths: the German machine-gun nests had survived and so had much of the wire, blasted into even more impenetrable tangle. The British army suffered the highest Losses it had ever taken in a single day, 57,000 deaths…

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The Somme

The territorial gains were unspectacular: along a 48-km (30 mile) front the greatest penetration was about 11 km (7 miles) deep and had no strategic significance. The British Empire had sustained 450,000 casualties and the French suffered about 150,000. German losses exceeded 600,000.

All in all....

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Casualties

• Austria-Hungary: 2,300,000 dead

• Belgium: 88,000 dead

• Britain & Empire: 908,371 dead

• Bulgaria: 14,000 dead

• France & Empire: 1,327,000 dead

• Germany: 1,773,700 dead

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• Greece: 5,000 dead• Italy: 460,000 dead• Portugal: 7,000 dead• Romania: 219,800 dead• Russia: 1,700,000 dead• Serbia: 45,000 dead• Turkey: 236,000 dead• USA: 50,585 dead

TOTAL: 12,599,000 deaths

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Poisonous gases

Fritz Haber continued working as a chemist and was responsible for the development of Zyklon B during the first world war as a poison gas weapon…

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Zyklon B

• Zyklon B was later put to an even more notorious use….

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The concentration camps

• Dachau • Auschwitz• Treblinka• Buchenwald

And many more

• Used Zyklon B (among other gases) to kill the prisoners in the concentration camps

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So where’s the good?

• Ammonia is also a raw material in the manufacture of.....

• Ammonium sulphate• Ammonium nitrate• Ammonium chloride• Ammonium phosphate

all used for…

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Fertilizers

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Fertilizers

• Which have saved millions of lives in countries all over the world..

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Haber

• Fritz Haber’s wife could not take the stress and pressure of living with a man who was (she thought) responsible for so many deaths – she committed suicide.

• Haber resigned after the Nazis came to power (he was Jewish) and fled to England in 1933 where he died depressed one year later.

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Nobel

• Nobel became a fabulously wealthy man from his inventions but became increasingly depressed with what he saw to be his culpability in the evils of warfare.

• He left a large amount of money to fund the Nobel prizes that are awarded every year for people that have “conferred the greatest benefit for mankind”

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One World EssayTitle: The explosives industry

You can use the biographies of Haber and Nobel to exemplify the ethics and morals involved.

You should include:1. The chemistry of explosives2. Their uses in society3. Their dangers to society4. Suggestions for their use

You should address the following question:

“Were Nobel and Haber justified in feeling depressed about their contributions to society and humanity?”