Dashboard

Featured nodes

Roots

  • Public root

Templates

  • Test template
  • iCorps template
  • Guanyu's Latex template
  • Ivar's latex template
  • Family Tree template
  • Latex template
  • Router template

Trees

  • Public trees

Orphans

  • Browse orphan nodes
Related nodes

Parents2

  • [SCI] Classical Thermodynamics
  • [SCI] Statistical Mechanics

Siblings12
  • Sort by title
  • Sort by date

  • [SCI] Statistical Mechanics
  • [SCI] Blackbody Radiation & Planck's Law
  • [TECH] Steam Engine & Heat Engines
  • [TECH] Chemical Industry
  • [SCI] Theory of Metals
  • [SCI] Information Theory
  • [TECH] Rocket & Space Launch
  • [SCI] Machine Learning Theory
  • [SCI] Cryogenics
  • [SCI] Electrochemistry
  • [ALT] Phlogiston Theory
  • [ALT] Analog Computing

Children9
  • Sort by title
  • Sort by date

  • [TECH] Petroleum Refining
  • [SCI] Semiconductor Physics
  • [TECH] Solar Cells (Photovoltaics)
  • [SCI] Molecular Biology & Biochemistry
  • [SCI] Cryogenics
  • [SCI] Electrochemistry
  • [TECH] Battery Technology
  • [TECH-Idea] Direct Air Carbon Capture (DAC)
  • [ALT] Phlogiston Theory
Knowenβ
  • Help
    • Welcome to Knowen!
    • Edit test node (no login required)
    • Create new test node (no login required)
  • Not logged in
    • Sign in
    • Sign up

History & Comments

Back

Restructure: USD fix + updated descendants

Description:Replace dollar signs with USD; correct descendants section
# [TECH] Chemical Industry

**The Chemical Industry** converts raw materials into chemicals, plastics, pharmaceuticals, fertilisers, and materials — enabled by thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, and later quantum chemistry.

## Overview

The 19th-century chemical industry began with Leblanc (1791) and Solvay (1861) processes for soda ash, coal-tar dyes (Perkin, 1856), and explosives (Nobel, dynamite 1867). The Haber–Bosch process (1909) for nitrogen fixation — described as the most important chemical reaction in history — enabled synthetic fertilisers that now feed roughly half the global population. Petrochemical cracking (early 20th century) created plastics, synthetic rubber, and fuels.

Thermodynamic free energy calculations and later quantum chemistry computations enable rational process design.

## Key Actors

- **Companies**: BASF (1865), Bayer (1863), DuPont (1802/1912 for chemicals), Dow Chemical (1897), Shell, ExxonMobil
- **Inventors**: Fritz Haber (1868–1934), Carl Bosch (1874–1940), Alfred Nobel (1833–1896)

## Key Patents

- Haber, F. & Bosch, C. DE Patent 235,421 (1910) — ammonia synthesis
- Nobel, A. SE Patent (1867) — dynamite

## Economic Value

Global chemical industry: **\$USD 5.7 trillion/year** revenue (2023, ICIS). Enabled value (pharmaceuticals, agriculture, materials): \$USD 30T+/year.

## Notes

Chemical industry revenue: ICIS World Chemical Industry Report 2023. Haber–Bosch feeds ~3.5 billion people (Erisman et al., *Nature Geoscience* 2008). Pharmaceuticals alone: \$USD 1.5T/year (IQVIA 2023).

## What This Enables

- **[TECH] Petroleum Refining** — Chemical engineering underpins catalytic cracking, fractional distillation, and reforming in refineriesprocesses.
- **[SCI] Semiconductor Physics** — Ultra-pure semiconductor crystals require advanced chemical vapour deposition and controlled dopant chemistry.
- **[TECH] Solar Cells (Photovoltaics)** — Thin-film PV cells use advanced materials chemistry (manufacturing uses silicon purification, perovskite synthesis, and antireflection coatings)coating chemistry.
- **[SCI] Electrochemistry** — Industrial electrochemistry — chlor-alkali, electroplating, aluminium smelting — is a core part of the chemical industry.
- **[TECH] Battery Technology** — Electrode materials (LiCoO₂, graphite), electrolytes, and binders are chemical industry products.
- **[SCI] Molecular Biology & Biochemistry** — Biochemistry grew directly from organic chemistry; enzyme kinetics and metabolic pathways are chemical engineering problems.
- **[SCI] Cryogenics** — Industrial gas liquefaction (Linde process, 1895) is applied chemical engineering thermodynamics.

# Parents

* [SCI] Classical Thermodynamics
* [SCI] Classical Thermodynamics
* [SCI] Statistical Mechanics
Sign in to add a new comment

Contact us or leave feedback

© KTree Inc. 2026