Gas! Gas! Quick, Boys: How Chemistry Changed the First World War
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Gas! GAS! Quick, boys! reveals for the first time the true extent of how chemistry rather than military strategy determined the shape, duration and outcome of the First World War. Chemistry was not only a destructive instrument of war but also protected troops, and healed the sick and wounded. From bombs to bullets, poison gas to anaesthetics, khaki to cordite, chemistry was truly the alchemy of the First World War. Michael Freemantle explores its dangers and its healing potential, revealing how the arms race was also a race for chemistry to the extent that Germany's thirst for the chemicals needed to make explosives deprived the nation of fertilizers and nearly starved the nation. He answers question such as: What is guncotton? What is lyddite? What is mustard gas? What is phosgene? What is gunmetal? This is a true picture of the horrors of the 'Chemists' War'.
Michael Freemantle
Michael Freemantle is a science writer and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). After a post-doctoral research fellowship at Oxford University (1967-1969), he worked in the chemical industry for two years. From 1971 to 1985, he taught chemistry at various levels both in the UK and abroad. In 1985, he was appointed Information Officer for IUPAC (International Union of Pure & Applied Chemistry). His duties included editing the IUPAC news magazine Chemistry International. From 1994 to 2007 he was European Science Editor/Senior Correspondent for Chemical & Engineering News - the weekly news magazine of the American Chemical Society. He was then appointed Science Writer in Residence, a part-time post, at Queen's University Belfast and Queens University Ionic Liquid Laboratories for three years until 2010. Freemantle has written numerous news reports and articles on chemistry, the history of chemistry, and related topics. He is the author, co-author, or editor of more than ten books on chemistry and related subjects including Chemistry and the Environment - the IUPAC Programme (editor), IUPAC, 1990; An Introduction to Ionic Liquids, RSC Publishing, 2009; and Gas! GAS! Quick, boys! How Chemistry Changed the First World War, The History Press, 2012.
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Reviews for Gas! Gas! Quick, Boys
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The First World War has sometimes been described as the chemists' war. This moderately interesting little book (214 pages) explores this theme with considerable breadth but only moderate depth. The title suggests a book on poison gases, and they're certainly covered; but so is the chemistry of high explosives, the metallurgy of weapons, the use of pharmaceuticals, and even dyes for uniforms.Franz Haber, who both invented a process for fixing atmospheric nitrogen as ammonium (and thereby kept Imperial Germany in the war) and planned and personally directed the first gas attacks using chlorine. For the former, he won a Nobel Prize; for the latter, he was widely vilified. The chemistry is not terribly deep. The author uses descriptions like "phosgene, a compound whose molecules consist of an atom of carbon, an atom of oxygen, and an atom of chlorine" when "phosgene (Cl2CO)" would be a lot more succinct. There is not a structural formula in the book, nor a balanced reaction. Rather odd for a book with so much chemistry. Still, he describes the industrial processes for producing various compounds in a reasonably interesting way.Surprises? Platinum was used to catalyze production of sulfuric acid during the First World War; vanadium oxide was not used until after the war. This produced a great patriotic drive to eschew platinum jewelry so that platinum could be used in the war effort. Chemical weapons were among the least lethal of any weapons used during the war, with just 7% fatalities among gas casualties. Cyanide was almost completely ineffective, because it dispersed almost at once. Mustard was the most effective chemical agent to see actual use, and nearly won the war for the Germans. Lewisite was not produced in time for combat use, which is a mercy, since the American Army Air Corps wanted to drop it on German cities ("the dew of death"). It was a thoroughly nasty war, except when compared with the next one.Black powder was still being used in shells early in the war. This was replaced with proper high explosives such as picric acid or TNT. However, by its end, ammonal was being widely used, because everyone was running out of toluene for TNT and ammonal was mostly cheap ammonium nitrate.Khaki uniforms were introduced by the British on the Northeast Frontier (between British India and Afghanistan) well before the war in Europe because Tommy discovered that white desert uniforms made one altogether too visible a target. Early versions were dyed with coffee or camel dung. No, really. The British industrialist who invented a color fast khaki dye based on ferrous and chromium salts made a fairly sizable fortune.The trench fighting in France was on ground that had been well fertilized with dung for generations. Ergo, practically every wound rapidly became infected. This being the days before antibiotics or even sulfa drugs, heavy use was made of debridement and antiseptics. Unfortunately, most antiseptics were counterproductive in deep wounds. Anaesthesia was available, in principle, but sometimes ran low; there is an anecdote of an officer with a groin wound being held down by four men while the surgeon extracted the metal, because the chloroform had run out. Incidentally, chloroform in air exposed to UV light produces phosgene, one of the more lethal poison gases used in the war. Picric acid was both as a high explosive and an antiseptic. Freemantle does not miss the opportunity to revel in the irony. Some of the antiseptics and disinfectants were pretty harsh stuff, including things like mercuric chloride.Trench nephritis has never been adequately explained, but may have been a mild form of Hantavirus. Theories at the time included speculation that it was a result of constantly drinking chlorinated water. Which beat the alternative; there is an anecdote of thirsty, exhausted soldiers continuing to drink out of a stream even after discovering that it ran over several German corpses.Chaim Weizmann, future first President of Israel, invented a process for producing acetone, needed for cordite manufacture, by fermentation of starch. Grain being in short supply, schoolchildren were recruited to gather chestnuts as a carbohydrate source.Lots of other anecdotes. A little breezy in places, but I think most of you will find it quite interesting, and it's an easy read.