The English philosopher and
alchemistRoger Baconis thought by modern historians to be the first European to have
come acrossgunpowder. In 1248 a
missionarybrought him a Chinese device known as a "
firecracker" that was used in celebrations.
Intrigued, Bacon took it apart and analyzed the contents to discover why it exploded rather than merely burned. He soon worked out that the black substance, which was to become known as gunpowder, was a mixture of
saltpetreand other chemicals. Bacon also apparently realised the huge danger that this
innocuous-lookingpowder presented, and in his report he
encipheredthe
formula- an attempt to keep it a secret for as long as possible. To find the true origins of gunpowder, however, we must travel a few hundred years backward in time, and a few thousand miles to the East.
Although the early history of gunpowder is
murky, it is believed to have been invented in China at about 900AD.
Taoistalchemists had been searching for the
elixir of immortality, and were testing
compoundssuch as saltpetre. Around this time it was discovered that the addition of two common substances -
charcoaland
sulphur- improves the rapid burning of saltpetre into an explosion. Sulphur is long known to science, and by 200AD was being produced by roasting
iron sulphide.
The scientific principle behind explosives is simple enough. A mixture of solids must burn vigorously to produce a large volume of gas, which rapidly expands from the heat of the reaction. The saltpetre is an
oxidant, and allows the charcoal to burn far quicker than if it only had access to oxygen in the air.
2KNO3(s) + 3C(s) + S(s) -----> N2(g) + 3CO2(g) + K2S(s)
The Chinese used this reaction for
noisemakersand
signallingrockets at first. The earliest mention of gunpowder being employed for warfare dates to 1046. The first
recognisable cannonor
firearmwith an enclosed
blast chamberdidn't arise until 1288.
Despite Bacon's best efforts, Europeans discovered the formula and applied it to killing each other with great zeal. Weapon designs developed rapidly, and gunpowder formulas were perfected. In 1429, two
Czechalchemists devised
granulatedgunpowder, which is much more powerful and consistent, and less vulnerable to moisture. Gunpowder revolutionised warfare during the 16th century, as ancient
fortresseswere suddenly vulnerable to cannons, and guns became small enough to be wielded effectively by
infantry. It is acutely ironic that one of the most destructive inventions in history was originally developed from research into achieving immortality.
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note:
alchemist: 煉金術(shù)士
Roger Bacon: 羅杰·培根
come across: 偶遇,碰到
missionary: 傳教士
firecracker: 爆竹,鞭炮
saltpetre: 硝石, 硝酸鈉
innocuous-looking: 看似無害的
encipher: 把…譯成密碼
formula: 配方
murky: 模糊的,不清楚的
Taoist: 道教的
elixir of immortality: 長生不老藥
compound: 化合物
charcoal: 木炭
sulphur: 硫磺
iron sulphide: 黃鐵礦
oxidant: 氧化劑
noisemaker: 發(fā)出噪音的東西
signal: 發(fā)射
recognisable: 公認(rèn)的
cannon: 大炮
firearm: 火器,槍炮
blast chamber: 燃燒室
Czech: 捷克的
granulated: 顆粒狀的
fortress: 堡壘,要塞
infantry: 步兵
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