Potash

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Howard I. Smith
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
30
File Size:
1246 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

POTASH is of prime importance as a plant food and is also widely used in industry. The term "potash was applied to a crude pearlash obtained by evaporating, in iron pots, solutions leached from plant ashes. Later it included caustic potash obtained by treating pot ashes with lime, and now it is applied generally to various compounds of potassium used by agriculture and industry. Herein it applies to the theoretical equivalent in potassium oxide (K20)--a compound never found in nature or manufactured in commerce but generally used as a common denominator for comparison of all potassium compounds. Potash was made from plant ashes at an early date, but potassium in mineral form was not noted until 1797, when it was identified in leucite.3 The importance to plant life of potash in the soil was first recognized by von Liebig3 and his published reference thereto appeared in 1840. In 1843, potash was discovered in the brine of a well drilled for salt near Stassfurt. HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN POTASH INDUSTRY Among the colonists reaching Virginia in 1608 were men from Poland skilled in making potash from wood ashes19 and records show that the production of potash was begun in other colonies also, soon after their establishment. The American product entered the trade in 1635, and at various times since that date the production of potash for industry has been subsidized by the Government or protected by tariffs. The production of potash from wood ashes reached its peak in 1825. Beginning in 1823, a cheaper product, sodium carbonate, made by the Leblanc process, was substituted for much of the potash used in industry. Production rapidly declined after the Civil War, when the forests most productive of potash had become depleted and labor had become
Citation

APA: Howard I. Smith  (1949)  Potash

MLA: Howard I. Smith Potash. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.

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