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Bessemers interest in steel came from an idea he had during the
Crimean War to make a new type of artillery. Existing cannons were not
strong enough, so he thought to improve the cannons by strengthening
the steel. In doing so, he created the idea for the Bessemer converter,
which allowed unskilled workers to make vast quantities of quality steel
cheaply. An egg-shaped vat held molten iron, and cold air was blown
into perforations in the bottom to remove the carbon and other impurities
in the iron. The process only took 20 minutes and raised annual steel
production enormously while reducing cost dramatically. Vital in propelling
the Industrial Revolution, the Bessemer converter ceased being used
in the mid-1900s. |
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