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MATCH
*** Shopping-Tip: MATCH
:''This article refers to the implement used to create a
flame. The term '''match''' can also mean a
game, or series of games, played between two
sports teams.''
A '''match''' is a simple and convenient means of producing
fire under controlled circumstances on demand.
Historically, matches were lengths of
rope cord, or later
Cambric, impregnated with chemicals, and allowed to burn continuously. They were used to light fires and fire guns. These matches were characterised by their burning speed, such as '''quick match''' and '''slow match'''.
'''Quick matches''' (and '''slow matches''') are
Explosive material pyrotechnic items containing, or coated with,
black powder which provide controlled time delays. Quick match can be formulated to provide burning rates of between, typically, 0.01
seconds per linear
inch and 40 seconds per linear inch (see
Black match).
There are also '''Bengal matches''', which are a type of
firework producing a relatively long-burning, coloured flame (see
Firework#Pyrotechnic compounds Firework).
Image:Streichholz.JPG thumb|right|burning match
When matchsticks were developed, they eventually dominated the term match. Matchsticks consist of a short
wood wooden or
cardboard stick with a small head of flammable chemicals and a striking surface.
There are now two main types of matches: '''safety matches''' and '''strike anywhere matches'''.
Early match-type devices
A predecessor of the match, small sticks of pinewood impregnated with sulfur, was developed in
China in
577.
The first modern match was invented in
1805 by K. Chancel, assistant to Professor L. J. Thénard of
Paris. The head of the match consisted of a mixture of
potassium chlorate,
sulfur,
sugar, and
rubber. They were ignited by dipping the tip of the match in a small
asbestos bottle filled with
sulfuric acid. This kind of match was quite expensive and its usage was dangerous, so Chancel's matches never gained much popularity.
Friction matches
Image:Ignition_of_a_match.jpg thumb|right|Ignition of a match
The first '''friction match''' was invented by English chemist
John Walker (inventor) John Walker in
1827. Early work had been done by
Robert Boyle in the
1680s with
phosphorus and sulfur, but his efforts had not produced useful results. Walker discovered a mixture of
antimony oxidation number (III) sulfide,
potassium chlorate,
gum, and
starch could be ignited by striking against any rough surface. Walker called the matches ''congreves'', but the process was patented by Samuel Jones and the matches were sold as ''lucifers''. The early matches had a number of problems -- the flame was unsteady and the initial reaction was disconcertingly violent; additionally the odour produced by the burning match was unpleasant. The smell is described as a "firework" odour. Despite these problems, the new matches were responsible for a marked increase in the number of smokers. Lucifers reportedly could ignite explosively, sometimes throwing sparks at a considerable distance.
In
1831, Frenchman
Charles Sauria added
Phosphorus#Forms white phosphorus to remove the smell. These new matches had to be kept in an airtight box but were popular. Unfortunately, those involved in the manufacture of the new matches were afflicted with "
phossy-jaw" and other bone disorders, and there was enough white phosphorus in one pack to kill a person. There was a vociferous campaign to ban these matches once the dangers became known.
Noiseless matches
The '''match''' was invented in
1836 by the
Hungary Hungarian János Irinyi who was a student of chemistry. In 1836 an unsuccessful experiment by his professor, Meissner, gave Irinyi the idea to replace potassium chlorate with lead dioxide in the head of phosphorous match. He liquefied phosphorus in (warm) water and shook it in a glass foil, until it became granulated. He mixed the phosphorus with lead and
gummi arabicum, poured the paste-like mass into a jar, and dipped the pine sticks into the mixture and let them dry. When he tried them that evening, all of them lit evenly. Irinyi thus invented the "noiseless" safety match and sold the invention to István Rómer, a match manufacturer. Rómer, a rich Hungarian pharmacist living in
Vienna, bought the invention and production rights from Irinyi, the poor student, for 60 Forints. The production of matches was now fully underway. István Rómer became rich off Irinyi's invention, but Irinyi himself died poor and abandoned in Vértes.
Reformulation to remove white phosphorus
The early matches, including the "Noiseless match", were dangerous to both the users and the people making them. This was due to the use of white phosphorus.
The search for a replacement for white phosphorus lead to what was known as the '''safety match'''. However, this term is now confusing as it covers both the modern safety match and the modern strike anywhere match. These two different types of matches are discussed separately below.
Both of these types of matches were more expensive to make than white phosphorus-based matches. In many countries, including
Europe and the
United States, laws needed to be passed, prohibiting the use of white phosphorus in matches, before these safer types of matches came into widespread usage.
Safety matches
Image:Matches.jpg thumb|right|Household safety matches, including one burnt match
Image:Sianow.jpg thumb|right|A box of matches, some of which are greatly prized by phillumenists
The '''safety match''' was invented in
1844 by the Swede
Gustaf Erik Pasch and improved by
John Edvard Lundstrom Johan Edvard Lundström a decade later.
Their safety is due to the separation of the combustible ingredients between the match head and a special striking surface; and the replacement of white phosphorus with
Phosphorus#Forms red phosphorus. The striking surface is composed of powdered
glass and red phosphorus; and, the match head was composed of
antimony(III) sulfide and
potassium chlorate. The act of striking converts some of the red phosphorus to white by friction heat; the small amount of white phosphorus ignites and this starts the combustion of the match head.
The two Lundstrom brothers had obtained a sample of red phosphorus from
Albright and Wilson Arthur Albright at
The Great Exhibition, held at
The Crystal Palace in
1851 and made safety matches with it. They misplaced the matches and did not try them until just before the
Paris Exhibition of
1855 and found that they were still useable.
The Swedes long held a virtual world-wide
monopoly on safety matches, with the industry mainly situated in
Jönköping. They sold their French safety match
Patent to Coigent père & Fils of
Lyon, but Coigent contested the payment in the French courts, on the basis that the invention was known in Vienna before the Lundström brothers patented it. The British match manufacturer
Bryant and May visted Jönköping in
1858 to try and obtain a supply of safety matches but were unsuccessful. In
1862 they set up their own
Bryant and May Factory, Bow factory and bought the rights for the British safety match Patent from the Lundström brothers.
Strike-anywhere matches
Two
France French chemists, Savene and Cahen developed a safety match using
phosphorus sesquisulfide and proved that phosphorus sesquisulfide was not poisonous, it could be used in a "strike anywhere" match and the match heads were not explosive. They patented a safety match composition in
1898 based on phosphorus sesquisulfide and potassium chlorate.
Albright and Wilson developed a safe means of making commercial quantities of phosphorus sesquisulfide in
1899 and started selling it.
In
1901 Albright and Wilson starting making phosphorus sesquisulfide at their
Niagara Falls plant, in the
United States USA, but American manufacturers continued to use white phosphorus based matches. The Niagara Falls plant stopped making it until
1910, when the US government made the use of white phosphorus matches illegal and cancelled the US patent on phosphorus sesquisulfide based safety matches.
Matchbooks
Image:Smokey-the-bear-matchcover.png Smokey the bear.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|150px|right|A juvenile [[Smokey the bear warns about
forest fires .html" title="Meaning of 150px|right|A juvenile [[Smokey the bear">thumb|150px|right|A juvenile [[Smokey the bear warns about
forest fires ">150px|right|A juvenile [[Smokey the bear">thumb|150px|right|A juvenile [[Smokey the bear warns about
forest fires
The development of a specialised '''
matchbook''' with both matches and a striking surface did not occur until
1890s with the American
Joshua Pusey who later sold his patent to the
Diamond Match Company. The Diamond Match Company was later bought by Bryant and May.
The hobby of collecting match-related items, such as
matchcovers and matchbox labels is called
phillumenism.
Fires due to lit matches
*The
Cocoanut Grove was a
nightclub in
Boston, Massachusetts. On
November 28,
1942, the nightclub burned in what remains the deadliest nightclub fire in
United States history, killing 492 people and injuring hundreds more. An artificial
palm tree caught fire when 16-year-old busboy
Stanley Tomaszewski struck a match for illumination while changing a
incandescent light bulb light bulb.
*The
King's Cross fire was a devastating underground fire in
London on
November 18,
1987, which killed 31 people. It was caused by rubbish and grease beneath wooden
escalators being ignited, probably by a discarded match.
*Forest fires can be caused by carelessly discarded matches, campfires and through natural causes, such as lightning and lava flows.
See also
*
Black match
*
Ivar Kreuger
*
Lighter
*
Matchbook
*
Matchcover
*
phossy-jaw
External links
{{Commons|Match}}
* {{cite web
| url=http://chemistry.about.com/od/everydaychemistry/a/matches.htm
| title = History of Chemical Matches
| work = Chemistry.about.com
| accessdate = November 11 | accessyear = 2005
}}
* {{cite web
| url=http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blmatch.htm
| title = The History of Matches
| work = Inventors.about.com
| accessdate = November 11 | accessyear = 2005
}}
* {{cite web
| url=http://www.matchcovers.com/first100.htm
| title = History of matchbooks
| work = Matchcovers.com/first100.htm
| accessdate = January 21 | accessyear = 2006
}}
* {{cite web
| url=http://www.matchcover.org
| title = The Rathkamp Matchcover Society
| work = Matchcover.org
| accessdate = January 21 | accessyear = 2006
}}
Category:Collecting
Category:Chemical reactions
Category:Home appliances
Category:Hiking equipment
ca:Misto
da:Tændstik
de:Streichholz
eo:Alumeto
es:Cerilla
fi:Tulitikku
fr:Allumette
he:גפרור
io:Alumeto
it:Fiammifero
ja:マッ�
lb:Fixspoun
nl:Lucifer (vuur)
nn:Fyrstikk
no:Fyrstikk
pl:Zapałki
pt:Fósforo (objecto)
ru:Спичка
sv:Tändsticka
zh:�柴
see
Mothers Apart from Their Children
*** Shopping-Tip: MATCH