The earliest military, industrial, and agricultural applications of nitrogen compounds used saltpeter (sodium nitrate or potassium nitrate), most notably in gunpowder, and later as fertiliser. In 1910, Lord Rayleigh discovered that an electrical discharge in nitrogen gas produced “active nitrogen“, a monatomic allotrope of nitrogen. The “whirling cloud of brilliant yellow light“ produced by his apparatus reacted with mercury to produce explosive mercury nitride.
For a long time, sources of nitrogen compounds were limited. Natural sources originated either from biology or deposits of nitrates produced by atmospheric reactions. Nitrogen fixation by industrial processes like the Frank–Caro process (1895–1899) and Haber–Bosch process (1908–1913) eased this shortage of nitrogen compounds, to the extent that half of global food production (see Applications) now relies on synthetic nitrogen fertilisers.
37,828 views
365
87
6 days ago 00:00:08 59
来自LPG-массаж Калининград / Студия идеального тела的视频
2 weeks ago 00:00:09 2
来自IDEAL PRO | Ярославль | Лазерная эпиляция, LPG的视频
2 weeks ago 00:13:50 14.3K
Идеальный гревел день. Безумная красота на разведке нового маршрута
3 weeks ago 00:51:39 12
[LilGasmask] Can You Beat Borderlands 2 With ONLY Cars?