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Making Soda Ash by the Leblanc Process — The Chemical That Made Soap and Glass Affordable
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Charlie

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Charlie

23. mai 2026DE
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Making Soda Ash by the Leblanc Process — The Chemical That Made Soap and Glass Affordable

Soda ash (sodium carbonate, Na₂CO₃) was for centuries one of the most expensive and scarce industrial chemicals. It was essential for making glass, soap, paper, and textiles — yet the only sources were the ashes of coastal plants (barilla in Spain, kelp in Scotland) or natural deposits like Egyptian natron. The price kept glass and soap as luxuries. In 1791, Nicolas Leblanc, a French surgeon turned chemist, patented an ingenious process to manufacture soda ash from common table salt — breaking the bottleneck that had constrained European industry for centuries.

The Leblanc Process has three stages. First, salt is reacted with sulfuric acid to produce sodium sulfate ('salt cake') and hydrochloric acid gas. Second, the salt cake is mixed with charcoal (carbon) and crushed limestone (calcium carbonate) and heated to around 900 °C in a furnace. The carbon reduces the sodium sulfate to sodium sulfide, which immediately reacts with the limestone to form sodium carbonate and calcium sulfide. The resulting sintered mass — called 'black ash' — contains the soda ash mixed with insoluble calcium sulfide. Third, the black ash is leached with hot water: sodium carbonate dissolves while calcium sulfide remains behind. The solution is evaporated to crystallise pure soda ash.

Leblanc's process transformed the chemical industry but destroyed its inventor. The French Revolution seized his factory, and Leblanc died impoverished in 1806. His process, however, dominated world soda ash production for a century until the Solvay Process (1861) gradually displaced it. The Leblanc Process was also one of history's great polluters — the hydrochloric acid gas corroded everything downwind, and mountains of calcium sulfide waste (tank waste) poisoned the landscape around every alkali works.

SAFETY WARNING: Concentrated sulfuric acid causes severe burns on contact. Hydrochloric acid gas is acutely toxic and corrosive — it will corrode metal fittings, damage lungs, and etch glass. The furnace step requires temperatures above 900 °C. Work ONLY in a fume hood or outdoors with full PPE. Never add water to concentrated sulfuric acid — always add acid to salt.

Expert
6–8 hours (plus overnight cooling)

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