
Creative Chemistry
by Edward Slosson
Slosson reviews the transformation of alchemistry from an obscure and imprecise practice to the science of chemistry. Along the way, he explains how the modern industrial world now relies on fertilizers, explosives, textile materials, polymers and metals.By exploring the properties of a once undervalued element, the high strength of vanadium steel made the Ford car possible. Another element, cerium, appears in butane lighters and was once seen as a threat to the match industry in France. In his chapter on oils, Slosson reviews the development of hydrogenated oils, especially during WWII, in the search for a way to reuse otherwise discarded components of corn and cottonseed. Through the revolutionary reaction of hydrogenation, waste materials became a stable product that wouldn't spoil when packaged or carried without refrigeration. Once thought of as a miracle, shoppers were once willing to pay more for fully hydrogenated oils than their natural, unsaturated forms. Only in recent years has evidence of health risks checked their popularity and given them the image of cheap, unhealthy fillers.
Episodes
17 episodes available
01 - Three Periods of Progress
02 - Nitrogen
03 - Feeding the Soil
04 - Coal-Tar Colors 1
05 - Coal-Tar Colors 2
06 - Synthetic Perfumes and Flavors
07 - Cellulose
08 - Synthetic Plastics
09 - The Race for Rubber
10 - The Rival Sugars
11 - What Comes From Corn
12 - Solidified Sunshine
13 - Fighting With Fumes
14 - Products of the Electric Furnace
15 - Metals Old and New 1
16 - Metals Old and New 2
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