Carbonite was one of the earliest and most successful coal-mining explosives. It is made from such ingredients as nitroglycerin, wood meal, and some nitrate as that of sodium; also nitrobenzene, sulfur, and diatomaceous earth. Carbonite was invented by Bichel of Schmidt and Bichel. The term Carbonite can refer to these things:
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| - Carbonite (explosive) (en)
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| - Carbonite was one of the earliest and most successful coal-mining explosives. It is made from such ingredients as nitroglycerin, wood meal, and some nitrate as that of sodium; also nitrobenzene, sulfur, and diatomaceous earth. Carbonite was invented by Bichel of Schmidt and Bichel. The term Carbonite can refer to these things: (en)
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| - Does this mean sulfonation? (en)
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| - Carbonite was one of the earliest and most successful coal-mining explosives. It is made from such ingredients as nitroglycerin, wood meal, and some nitrate as that of sodium; also nitrobenzene, sulfur, and diatomaceous earth. Carbonite was invented by Bichel of Schmidt and Bichel. The term Carbonite can refer to these things:
* least commonly, an early explosive from Schmidt and Bichel made of sulphuretted , , and sodium nitrate,
* dynamite made to the specific Carbonite recipe and sold by under that name, or
* an entire class of spin-offs of the original recipe (Arctic Carbonite, Ammonkarbonit, etc.); their common feature is that the percentage of combustible materials (wood meal or ) is so high that most of the carbon in the reaction is bound into carbon monoxide and the temperature of combustion is relatively low. Some are carbonites. (en)
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