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Making Bakelite — The First Fully Synthetic Plastic That Launched the Age of Polymers
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Charlie

सिर्जनाकर्ता

Charlie

23. मे 2026DE
१३

Making Bakelite — The First Fully Synthetic Plastic That Launched the Age of Polymers

Celluloid, the first plastic (1869), was made from modified natural cellulose — a semi-synthetic material. The next leap came in 1907, when Leo Baekeland, a Belgian-born chemist working in Yonkers, New York, created the first entirely synthetic plastic: a material whose polymer chains were built from scratch from simple chemical feedstocks, with no natural polymer as a starting point.

Baekeland reacted phenol (C₆H₅OH) with formaldehyde (HCHO) under heat and pressure in a steam-heated autoclave he called the 'Bakelizer'. The reaction is a condensation polymerisation: each phenol molecule has three reactive positions on its aromatic ring (ortho and para to the hydroxyl group) where formaldehyde can form methylene bridges (-CH₂-) linking adjacent phenol rings together. Unlike celluloid, which is a thermoplastic (can be remelted), the phenol-formaldehyde network is a thermoset — once the cross-linking is complete, the material cannot be melted, dissolved, or reshaped. It is permanently, irreversibly hard.

Bakelite's properties were extraordinary: electrically insulating, heat-resistant, chemically stable, dimensionally stable, and mouldable into complex shapes before curing. It became the material of the electrical age — every telephone, radio, distributor cap, plug, and switch from 1910 to 1950 was made of Bakelite or a phenolic resin. It was also the first material to prove that chemists could design new materials with properties unavailable in nature.

This lab-scale demonstration follows Baekeland's core chemistry: reacting phenol with formaldehyde using an acid catalyst to produce a phenol-formaldehyde resin (novolac), then curing it with heat and a hardener (hexamethylenetetramine) to produce the cross-linked thermoset.

SAFETY WARNING: Phenol is a severe skin poison — it causes painless white burns that can be fatal if a large area is exposed. Formaldehyde is a known carcinogen, toxic by inhalation, and a severe eye irritant. This experiment MUST be performed in a fume hood with full protective equipment. Never handle phenol with bare hands — it penetrates nitrile gloves over time, so double-glove and change gloves every 15 minutes.

विशेषज्ञ
4–6 hours (plus overnight curing)

Hazardous content

यो ब्लुप्रिन्टमा खतरनाक प्रक्रियाहरू छन्। चरणबद्ध निर्देशनहरू हेर्न लग इन गर्नुहोस् र तपाईंको खाता सेटिङहरूमा खतरनाक सामग्री सक्षम गर्नुहोस्।

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यी ब्लुप्रिन्टहरूले ज्ञान साझा गर्छन् — प्रविधि, सामग्री वा सिद्धान्त

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यो ब्लुप्रिन्ट CC0 अन्तर्गत जारी गरिएको छ। तपाईं अनुमति नसोधी प्रतिलिपि, परिमार्जन, वितरण र प्रयोग गर्न सक्नुहुन्छ।

ब्लुप्रिन्ट मार्फत उत्पादनहरू किनेर सिर्जनाकर्तालाई सहयोग गर्नुहोस् सिर्जनाकर्ता कमिसन विक्रेताले तोकेको, वा यो ब्लुप्रिन्टको नयाँ संस्करण बनाउनुहोस् र आम्दानी बाँड्न आफ्नो ब्लुप्रिन्टमा जडानको रूपमा समावेश गर्नुहोस्।

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