IC 7340 Hazards From Chlorates And Perchlorates In Mixtures With Reducing Materials ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Irving Kabik
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
7
File Size:
1016 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

Chlorates and perchlorates, when mixed with certain reducing materials, may give a detonating explosive of considerable power. Concerning explosive chlorate mixtures, Guttman3/ states that they "have at all times fascinated inventors on account of the large amount of oxygen stored up in potassium chlorate, which can be given off so readily. When Lavoiser and Berthollet tried to make a chlorate powder in a stamp mill in 1788, they made a great show of it, and even two ladies were present. Unfortunately, after a certain amount of pounding the powder exploded and killed an official and the daughter of the Government commissary, who assisted at the experiments.***. It is interesting to observe how the same old mixtures are proposed over and over again with slight alterations only, in order to qualify for a patent. Potassium chlorate with some carbonaceous matter like charcoal, sugar, starch, glycerin, flour, or sometimes a vegetable or mineral oil and the like occurs again and again." Sprengel explosives, in which some of the undesirable sensitivity of the chlorate was minimized by coating the crystals with a liquid reducing agent, received some attention after a patent was issued to Dr. Herman Sprengel in England in 1871.4/ A somewhat similar explosive, known as Rack-a-
Citation

APA: Irving Kabik  (1945)  IC 7340 Hazards From Chlorates And Perchlorates In Mixtures With Reducing Materials ? Introduction

MLA: Irving Kabik IC 7340 Hazards From Chlorates And Perchlorates In Mixtures With Reducing Materials ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1945.

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