This monograph is the first comprehensive historical overview of the global synthetic ammonia industry, highlighting its critical role in fixing nitrogen from the air in order to produce the fertilizers that support a significant portion of the world’s population. While the first part includes the storied Haber-Bosch process, introduced in 1913 by the German firm BASF, its main focus is on the largely forgotten Italian chemist Luigi Casale, the inventor of an alternative synthetic ammonia process. Casale had the distinction of launching the global synthetic ammonia industry through, and unlike BASF, the licensing of his technology. The narrative here incorporates the first biography of Casale, with descriptions of his innovations and the early years of his company, Ammonia Casale SA. Technical challenges, relationships with collaborators and investors, and patent issues are discussed. The second part, through a macro perspective, explores the industry’s international expansion, the evolution of novel technologies, and contributions to the Green Revolution. Included are the roles of engineering contractors, high-capacity manufacturing units, and geopolitical contexts. The final chapter covers the recent past and briefly looks to the future with moves towards sustainability within the context of green hydrogen and ammonia production. This story of one of the world’s most important industries is recommended for historians of modern science, technology, and business, chemical engineers, practitioners in the petroleum and chemical industries, and readers interested in technological advances that have shaped our world today.
This monograph is the first comprehensive historical overview of the global synthetic ammonia industry, highlighting its critical role in fixing nitrogen from the air in order to produce the fertilizers that support a significant portion of the world’s population.
Agriculture: Fertilizers for Feeding Growing Populations.- The Great Nitrogen Challenge: Synthetic Ammonia.- Luigi Casale and the Foundation of Ammonia Casale SA.- Ammonia Casale in Nobeoka, Japan, and Toulouse, France.- Reorganisation, and Research and Development at Ammonia Casale. The Final Years of Luigi Casale’s Remarkable Life Story.- Casale’s Process Described.- Pure Gases, Compressors, Catalysts, and Special Steels.- American Synthetic Ammonia, 1920-1940.- The United States Emerges as the Global Leader.- Methanol and Urea, New Feedstocks, Steam Reforming, Fertilizers, Postwar Recovery, Regional Expansion.- The Green Revolution, 1,000-tpd Single-Train Ammonia Synthesis.- The Energy Crises, The People’s Republic of China, the Soviet Union, and the 1970s.- Process Innovations in the 1970s and 1980s. International Growth.- Revamping, Catalyst Studies, and Green Hydrogen.
This monograph is the first comprehensive historical overview of the global synthetic ammonia industry, highlighting its critical role in fixing nitrogen from the air in order to produce the fertilizers that support a significant portion of the world’s population. While the first part includes the storied Haber-Bosch process, introduced in 1913 by the German firm BASF, its main focus is on the largely forgotten Italian chemist Luigi Casale, the inventor of an alternative synthetic ammonia process. Casale had the distinction of launching the global synthetic ammonia industry through, and unlike BASF, the licensing of his technology. The narrative here incorporates the first biography of Casale, with descriptions of his innovations, and the early years of his company, Ammonia Casale SA. Technical challenges, relationships with collaborators and investors, and patent issues are discussed. The second part, through a macro perspective, explores the industry’s international expansion, the evolution of novel technologies, and contributions to the Green Revolution. Included are the roles of engineering contractors, high-capacity manufacturing units, and geopolitical contexts. The final chapter covers the recent past, and briefly looks to the future with moves towards sustainability within the context of green hydrogen and ammonia production. This story of one of the world’s most important industries is recommended for historians of modern science, technology, and business, chemical engineers, practitioners in the petroleum and chemical industries, and readers interested in technological advances that have shaped our world today.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Anthony S. Travis is with the Edelstein Center for the History and Philosophy of Science, Technology and Medicine, at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research into the history of technology mainly concerns the chemical industry in the 19th and 20th centuries. Publications include The Rainbow Makers: The Origins of the Synthetic Dyestuffs Industry in Western Europe (1993), and Nitrogen Capture: The Growth of an International Industry (1900-1940) (2018). Travis is recipient of four awards, including from the history of chemistry division of the American Chemical Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry.