INTRODUCTION CLASSIFICATION OF SYNTHETIC TANNINS PART I SECTION I THE SYNTHESIS OF VEGETABLE TANNINS 1. TANNIN SECTION II SYNTHESIS OF TANNING MATTERS 1. AROMATIC SULPHONIC ACIDS SECTION III TANNING EFFECTS OF MIXTURES AND NATURAL PRODUCTS SECTION IV METHODS OF EXAMINING TANNING MATTERS PART II SYNTHETIC TANNINS: THEIR INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND APPLICATION Title: Synthetic Tannins Author: Georg Grasser Edition: 10 Language: English Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Thomas Hutchinson, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. SYNTHETIC TANNINSTHEIR SYNTHESIS, INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND APPLICATIONby AUTHOR'S PREFACEWhilst the synthesis of the natural tannins has been successfully outlined by Emil Fischer, it has been left to the Chemical Industry, notably the Badische Anilin und Soda-fabrik in Ludwigshafen-on-the-Rhine, to discover the means of making possible the production of the synthetic tannins. The scientific results of Fischer's researches are to-day common knowledge, and these, together with questions arising therefrom, will only be lightly touched upon in the book herewith presented. Even an attempt at enumerating the present synthetic tannins has so far not been published, and I have therefore availed myself of the opportunity of making a brief summary of them. My work at the B.A.S.F. deepened my insight in this new field; ample opportunity of applying these synthetic products in practice was given me when, as a result of the war, I was appointed technical consultant to the Austrian Hide and Leather Commission, and in this capacity was called upon to act as general adviser to the trade. The ultimate object of my scientific researches was then to investigate the chemistry of this particular field, and this has led me to present a picture, complete as far as it goes, of this branch of chemical technology. The intention of the present volume is to communicate to the reader what has so far been scientifically evolved and practically applied in this field. First of all, however, it may illustrate the extreme importance and the universal applicability of the synthetic tannins in the making of leather. The modern leather industry cannot, to-day, be without these important products, but also in those tanneries, where the synthetic tannins have not so far been regarded as indispensable, their use is strongly recommended. Just as in the case of the coal-tar dyes, the synthetic tannins will make us independent of foreign supplies, and thus keep within our own borders the vast sum of money required in former days for the purchase of foreign tanning materials. May this book prove the means of providing an incentive for a still wider application of the synthetic tannins. GRASSER.GRAZ, August 1920. |