Khemurgy: Difference between revisions
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==Historical== | ==Historical== | ||
See [[كيمياء]] ("al-khemy") | See [[كيمياء]] ("al-khemy") | ||
Enthusiasm for agrol declined, largely because petroleum interests such as the [[American Petroleum Institute]] effectively lobbied against power alcohol and ensured that its price did not fall to the level of gasoline. Observers at [[DuPont]], and presumably other industries as well, determined that | |||
it was prudent to pay attention to the chemurgy movement but that simple economics mandated that coal and petroleum were likely to be the raw materials of their industry. <ref name = "Finlay 2003">Finlay, M.R. (2003), Old Efforts at New Uses: A Brief History of Chemurgy and the American Search for Biobased Materials. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 7: 33-46. https://doi.org/10.1162/108819803323059389</ref> | |||
==Technical== | ==Technical== | ||
=Production= | =Production= |
Revision as of 17:40, 24 November 2022
Defintion
Historical
See كيمياء ("al-khemy")
Enthusiasm for agrol declined, largely because petroleum interests such as the American Petroleum Institute effectively lobbied against power alcohol and ensured that its price did not fall to the level of gasoline. Observers at DuPont, and presumably other industries as well, determined that
it was prudent to pay attention to the chemurgy movement but that simple economics mandated that coal and petroleum were likely to be the raw materials of their industry. [1]
Technical
Production
Feedstocks
- Coal
- Petroleum
- Iron
- Peanut
- Qannabis
Processes
- Fischer-Tropsch
- Haber-Bosch
Reactors
- Bessemer converter
Application
- ↑ Finlay, M.R. (2003), Old Efforts at New Uses: A Brief History of Chemurgy and the American Search for Biobased Materials. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 7: 33-46. https://doi.org/10.1162/108819803323059389