The Past
Discovering Chlorine
Karl Wilhelm Scheele, the seventh of eleven children, born December 9, 1742, to a Swedish couple in
Although Scheele isolated oxygen, discovered glycerine, prepared the first hydrogen sulfide, noted the action of light on silver compounds, and wrote papers on a host of chemical analyses, the single work that was the foundation for more discoveries than any of his others was a paper he authored on manganese in which he announced the existence of chlorine. It also led to the subsequent isolation of manganese and barium.
Scheele died May 21, 1786, but the research into the production of and use for chlorine has continued to this day. During the year prior to his death, Count Claude-Louis Berthollet, a French textile producer, prepared a bleaching agent by dissolving gaseous (non-electrolytic) chlorine in water. In 1789, he improved this bleaching agent by adding the chlorine to a caustic potash solution. This bleaching agent became known as ‘eau de Javelle', taking its name from Berthollet’s chemical plant in
As the popularity of the bleach solution spread throughout the Western world in the Nineteenth century, many names became attached to production technology. In the
In the
By 1924, the estimated yearly capacity of all commercial plants in the
Why the Chlorine Institute?
In his 1926 report on the Economics of Chlorine, D.A. Pritchard concludes “The [chlor-alkali] industry in North America has had to manufacture and sell cheaply, find markets and new uses, switch largely from bleaching powder to liquid chlorine, provide technical service, and adjust more or less imperfectly the economics of three distinct substances evolved in one major operation to a rapidly changing industrial structure, and do it all in about 16 years. A capacity bearing a reasonable relation to consumption, a decent return on its capital, and the continuance of research are essential to this key industry.”
In January 1924, when Eben C. Speiden was contacting chlorine producers in the
The four original CI committees established were: Uniform Accounting; Commercial Research; Electrolytic Chlorine Plants Operated by Consumers; and Transportation. The first three committees remained active through 1932, and CI’s Transportation Committee remains active to this day.
Two original research projects were recorded as:
- “Break-point” chlorination of water, which is a process that maximizes chlorine’s germicidal action while lessening residual taste and odor
- Development of a practical method of bleaching ‘kraft’ pulp, which makes possible the production of heavy-duty paper in white and pastel shades
Soon it became apparent that many such activities truly were the responsibility of the individual companies. Therefore, the Chlorine Institute’s efforts then focused on what today remains CI’s core mission: the safe production, distribution and use of chlorine.
CI's Original Members
The ten companies which paid the initiation fee of $250 and became the "Charter Members" of the Chlorine Institute in 1924 were:
Belle Alkali Company
Belle, West Virginia
Windsor, Ontario Great Western Electro-Chemical Company
San Francisco, California (Exec. and Sales Offices) Hooker Electrochemical Company
New York City Isco Chemical Company, Inc.
Niagara Falls, NY Monsanto Chemical Company
St. Louis, Missouri Niagara Alkai Company
New York, New York Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Co., Inc.
Philadelphia, PA The Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Company
NYC
Within the first year of organization, the by-laws were amended to admit, as Associate Members, companies not making or selling chlorine, but with an interest in the industry. Wallace & Tiernan Co., of Newark, New Jersey, was the first Associate Member.











