Chemical Products, ACC-FLI
Although nature provides us with a staggering amount of natural resources, humankind has also made use of a great variety of man-made compounds and substances. The chemical industry converts raw materials such as fossil fuels, water, salt, limestone, and sulfur into primary, secondary, and tertiary products.
Chemical Products Encyclopedia Articles By Title
accelerator, in the rubber industry, any of numerous chemical substances that cause vulcanization (q.v.) of rubber......
acid dye, any bright-coloured synthetic organic compound whose molecule contains two groups of atoms—one acidic,......
acriflavine, dye obtained from coal tar, introduced as an antiseptic in 1912 by the German medical-research worker......
acrylic, any of a broad array of synthetic resins and fibres that are based on derivatives of acrylic and methacrylic......
acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene copolymer (ABS), a hard, tough, heat-resistant engineering plastic that is widely......
adobe, a heavy clay soil used to make sun-dried bricks. The term, Spanish-Moorish in origin, also denotes the bricks......
advanced ceramics, substances and processes used in the development and manufacture of ceramic materials that exhibit......
advanced structural ceramics, ceramic materials that demonstrate enhanced mechanical properties under demanding......
aldehyde condensation polymer, any of a number of industrially produced polymeric substances (substances composed......
alizarin, a red dye originally obtained from the root of the common madder plant, Rubia tinctorum, in which it......
alkyd resin, a complex oil-modified polyester that serves as the film-forming agent in some paints and clear coatings.......
Amelung glass, American glass produced from 1784 to about 1795 by John Frederick Amelung, a native of Bremen in......
ammonia-soda process, modern method of manufacturing the industrial alkali sodium carbonate, also known as soda......
anthraquinone, the most important quinone derivative of anthracene and the parent substance of a large class of......
anthraquinone dye, any of a group of organic dyes having molecular structures based upon that of anthraquinone.......
antioxidant, any of various chemical compounds added to certain foods, natural and synthetic rubbers, gasolines,......
asphalt, black or brown petroleum-like material that has a consistency varying from viscous liquid to glassy solid.......
autoclave, vessel, usually of steel, able to withstand high temperatures and pressures. The chemical industry uses......
automotive ceramics, advanced ceramic materials that are made into components for automobiles. Examples include......
azlon, synthetic textile fibre composed of protein material derived from natural sources. It is produced, like......
azo dye, any of a large class of synthetic organic dyes that contain nitrogen as the azo group ―N=N― as part of......
Leo Baekeland was a U.S. industrial chemist who helped found the modern plastics industry through his invention......
Bakelite, trademarked synthetic resin invented in 1907 by Belgian-born American chemist Leo Hendrik Baekeland.......
balata, hard rubberlike material made by drying the milky juice produced principally by the bully tree (species......
balsam, aromatic resinous substance that flows from a plant, either spontaneously or from an incision; it consists......
Friedrich Bayer was a German businessman who founded the chemical firm that became the world-famous Bayer AG (q.v.).......
bioceramics, ceramic products or components employed in medical and dental applications, mainly as implants and......
Biodegradability is the capability of a material to be broken down by living organisms, such as bacteria, fungi,......
bioplastic, moldable plastic material made up of chemical compounds that are derived from or synthesized by microbes......
bittern, very bitter-tasting solution that remains after evaporation and crystallization of sodium chloride (table......
bitumen, dense, highly viscous, petroleum-based hydrocarbon that is found in deposits such as oil sands and pitch......
black powder, first type of explosive mixture invented for use in firearms and for blasting (see...
black varnish, any of a class of oil varnishes in which bitumen (a mixture of asphaltlike hydrocarbons) replaces......
blasting cap, device that initiates the detonation of a charge of a high explosive by subjecting it to percussion......
bleach, solid or liquid chemical used to whiten or remove the natural colour of fibres, yarns, other textiles,......
blow molding, in glass production, method of forming an article of glass by blowing molten glass into a mold. This......
Carl Bosch was a German industrial chemist who developed the Haber-Bosch process for high-pressure synthesis of......
brick and tile, structural clay products, manufactured as standard units, used in building construction. The brick,......
brilliant green, a triphenylmethane dye of the malachite-green series (see malachite green) used in dilute solution......
bronzing, coating an object of wood, plaster, clay, or other substance to give it the colour and lustre of bronze.......
Brunswick black, quick-drying black varnish used for metal, particularly iron, stoves, fenders, and surfaces of......
butadiene rubber, synthetic rubber widely employed in tire treads for trucks and automobiles. It consists of polybutadiene,......
butyl rubber (IIR), a synthetic rubber produced by copolymerizing isobutylene with small amounts of isoprene. Valued......
Canada balsam, oleoresin consisting of a viscous yellowish to greenish liquid exuded by the balsam fir of North......
capacitor dielectric and piezoelectric ceramics, advanced industrial materials that, by virtue of their poor electrical......
carbon black, any of a group of intensely black, finely divided forms of amorphous carbon, usually obtained as......
carmine, red or purplish-red pigment obtained from cochineal (q.v.), a red dyestuff extracted from the dried bodies......
George Washington Carver was a revolutionary American agricultural chemist, agronomist, and experimenter who was......
castor oil, nonvolatile fatty oil obtained from the seeds of the castor bean, Ricinus communis, of the spurge family......
cellophane, a thin film of regenerated cellulose, usually transparent, employed primarily as a packaging material.......
celluloid, the first synthetic plastic material, developed in the 1860s and 1870s from a homogeneous colloidal......
cellulose acetate, synthetic compound derived from the acetylation of the plant substance cellulose. Cellulose......
ceramic composition and properties, atomic and molecular nature of ceramic materials and their resulting characteristics......
chamber process, method of producing sulfuric acid by oxidizing sulfur dioxide with moist air, using gaseous nitrogen......
chicle, gum that consists of the coagulated milky latex of the sapodilla tree (Manilkara zapota), a tropical American......
chromophore, a group of atoms and electrons forming part of an organic molecule that causes it to be coloured.......
coal gas, gaseous mixture—mainly hydrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide—formed by the destructive distillation......
coal tar, principal liquid product resulting from the carbonization of coal, i.e., the heating of coal in the absence......
cochineal, red dyestuff consisting of the dried, pulverized bodies of certain female scale insects, Dactylopius......
coke, solid residue remaining after certain types of bituminous coals are heated to a high temperature out of contact......
composite material, a solid material that results when two or more different substances, each with its own characteristics,......
conductive ceramics, advanced industrial materials that, owing to modifications in their structure, serve as electrical......
Congo red, first of the synthetic dyestuffs of the direct type, that is, not requiring application of a mordant......
contact process, modern industrial method of producing sulfuric acid; it has largely replaced the chamber, or lead-chamber,......
copal, any of various varnish resins, consisting of the exudates obtained from various tropical trees. The name......
copolyester elastomer, a synthetic rubber consisting of hard polyester crystallites dispersed in a soft, flexible......
cordite, a propellant of the double-base type, so called because of its customary but not universal cordlike shape.......
crown glass, handmade glass of soda-lime composition for domestic glazing or optical uses. The technique of crown......
crude oil, liquid petroleum that is found accumulated in various porous rock formations in Earth’s crust and is......
cryonics, the practice of freezing an individual who has died, with the object of reviving the individual sometime......
cryopreservation, the preservation of cells and tissue by freezing. For the production of low-temperature phenomena,......
cudbear, violet, red, or bluish dyestuff, considered similar to orchil and used in colouring pharmaceuticals; also......
cyanine dye, any member of a class of highly coloured organic compounds used for increasing the range of wavelengths......
dammar, any of a variety of hard varnish resins obtained from coniferous and hardwood trees characteristic of Southeast......
Abraham Darby was a British ironmaster who first successfully smelted iron ore with coke. Darby, who had used coke......
detergent, any of various surfactants (surface-active agents) particularly effective in dislodging foreign matter......
diesel fuel, combustible liquid used as fuel for diesel engines, ordinarily obtained from fractions of crude oil......
direct dye, any of a class of coloured, water-soluble compounds that have an affinity for fibre and are taken up......
Herbert H. Dow was a pioneer in the American chemical industry and founder of the Dow Chemical Company. Dow first......
dragon’s blood, red resin obtained from the fruit of several palms of the genus Daemonorops and used in colouring......
dry ice, carbon dioxide in its solid form, a dense, snowlike substance that sublimes (passes directly into the......
drying oil, unsaturated fatty oil, either natural (such as linseed oil) or synthetic, that when spread into a thin......
du Pont Family, French-descended American family whose fortune was founded on explosive powders and textiles and......
Pierre Samuel du Pont was a manufacturer and the largest American munitions producer during World War I. Pierre......
Dud Dudley was an English ironmaster usually credited with having been the first to smelt iron ore with coke, which......
dye, substance used to impart colour to textiles, paper, leather, and other materials such that the colouring is......
dynamite, blasting explosive, patented in 1867 by the Swedish physicist Alfred Nobel. Dynamite is based on nitroglycerin......
electroceramics, category of advanced ceramic materials that are employed in a wide variety of electric, optical,......
electronic substrate and package ceramics, advanced industrial materials that, owing to their insulating qualities,......
engraved glass, glassware decorated with finely carved, three-dimensional patterns or pictures. The most common......
ethylene glycol, the simplest member of the glycol family of organic compounds. A glycol is an alcohol with two......
ethylene-propylene copolymer, a class of synthetic rubber produced by copolymerizing ethylene and propylene, usually......
explosive, any substance or device that can be made to produce a volume of rapidly expanding gas in an extremely......
man-made fibre, fibre whose chemical composition, structure, and properties are significantly modified during the......
fibreglass, fibrous form of glass that is used principally as insulation and as a reinforcing agent in plastics.......
firebrick, refractory material consisting of nonmetallic minerals formed in a variety of shapes for use at high......
firework, explosive or combustible used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out......
Fischer-Tropsch reaction, conversion of so-called synthesis gas, composed mainly of carbon monoxide and hydrogen,......
Flick Group, former diversified industrial and manufacturing company founded in Germany in the early 1920s by Friedrich......
flint glass, heavy and durable glass characterized by its brilliance, clarity, and highly refractive quality. Developed......