The Dependence of the Canadian Chemical Company on Mining and Metallurgy

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. R. Keck
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
2925 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

"SINCE the .Canadian Chemical Company has no direct connection with mining operations, and I have had no experience with mining, there is little I can tell you that you do not already know. However, we have had considerable experience with certain types of metallurgical problems and I would like to discuss with you some of these problems and their solutions by our metallurgists.In order to acquaint you with the type of plant and processes to be employed at Edmonton, I would like first to take a few .minutes to trace briefly the history -of the Canadian Chemical Company's affiliate, The Celanese Corporation of America. In the early •part of the twentieth century, two young Swiss brothers, Camille and Henri Dreyfus, received their P.h.D. degrees in chemistry. They were extremely interested in work which was being carried on at that time to find a suitable synthetic fiber that could compete with natural fibers, both quality and price-wise. Early man-made fibers were both coarse and hard to dye. The Doctors Dreyfus• poured all their earnings into research and ultimately developed cellulose acetate filament. During World War I, the Dreyfus brothers were invited to the United States to produce cellulose acetate 'dope' for airplane wing coverings. Dr. Camille Dreyfus built the first American plant for fiber production at Cumberland, Maryland, in 1924.Due to resistance of textile mills to the new fibers, Celanese was forced to set up its own dying, weaving, and finishing mills to prove the new materials. Through the years, however, this operation has •been retained primarily for fabric development purposes,.. with the majority of the acetate being sold to other textile mills."
Citation

APA: D. R. Keck  (1953)  The Dependence of the Canadian Chemical Company on Mining and Metallurgy

MLA: D. R. Keck The Dependence of the Canadian Chemical Company on Mining and Metallurgy. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1953.

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