PYROTOL
'Pyrotol' was an explosive available for a time after World War I. It was reprocessed from military surplus cordite and smokeless powder. Usually used in combination with dynamite, it created an incendiary blast. Since it was very inexpensive, it was often used by farmers to remove tree stumps and clear ditches. Production of pyrotol dwindled in the 1920s after the Bath School disaster where the substance was used to blow up an elementary school and kill 45 people, mostly children. It is likely that production would have dwindled soon anyway, as supplies of military surplus powders ran out.
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'Pyrotol' is also the trademarked name of a catalyst used in the industrial production of benzene through a process known as pyrolysis. It is a proprietary chromium-alumina catalyst manufactured by the Houdry Group of Sud-Chemie Inc. in Louisville, Kentucky and licensed exclusively to ABB Lummus Global. It is completely unrelated to the explosive pyrotol.
★ Houdry Group Catalysts overview
★ ABB Industrial usage of pyrotol
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'Pyrotol' is also the trademarked name of a catalyst used in the industrial production of benzene through a process known as pyrolysis. It is a proprietary chromium-alumina catalyst manufactured by the Houdry Group of Sud-Chemie Inc. in Louisville, Kentucky and licensed exclusively to ABB Lummus Global. It is completely unrelated to the explosive pyrotol.
| Contents |
| External links |
External links
★ Houdry Group Catalysts overview
★ ABB Industrial usage of pyrotol
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