guncotton

explosive
Also known as: nitrocotton

Learn about this topic in these articles:

contribution by Schönbein

  • In Christian Friedrich Schönbein

    …was the first to describe guncotton (nitrocellulose). His teaching posts included one at Epsom, England, before he joined the faculty at the University of Basel, Switzerland (1828), where he was appointed professor of chemistry and physics in 1835.

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description and uses

  • Nitrocellulose
    In nitrocellulose: Composition, properties, and manufacture of nitrocellulose

    …known variously as pyrocellulose and guncotton. Guncotton is unstable to heat, and even carefully prepared samples will ignite on a brief heating to temperatures in excess of 150 °C (300 °F). Guncotton is employed in gunpowders, solid rocket propellants, and explosives. Moderately nitrated cellulose (containing approximately 10.5 to 12.5 percent…

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  • coal miner loading a drill hole with an explosive
    In explosive: Nitrocellulosic explosives

    (guncotton) in 1845 by dipping cotton in a mixture of nitric and sulfuric acids and then removing the acids by washing with water, he hoped to obtain a propellant for military weapons. It proved, however, to be too fast and violent. About 1860 Major E.…

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development of bullet

  • In bullet

    …the introduction of nitrocellulose, or guncotton, in place of black powder as the propellant charge provided the final element for the modern bullet.

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place in gunpowder development

  • powder horn and gunpowder
    In gunpowder

    …for use in firearms by guncotton and other, more stable forms of nitrocellulose. Unlike black powder, which burns by the chemical reactions of its constituent ingredients, nitrocellulose is an inherently unstable compound that burns by decomposing rapidly, forming hot gases. In contrast to black powder, it produces almost all gas…

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