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Definition of Haber-Bosch process
1. Noun. An industrial process for producing ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen by combining them under high pressure in the presence of an iron catalyst.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Haber-Bosch Process
Literary usage of Haber-Bosch process
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Muscle Shoals: Hearings Before the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry by United States Congress. Senate. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry (1922)
"On basis of 1-mill power Haber-Bosch process could reduce price of nitrogen by
$30.85 or 11 per cent. With 3-mill power reduction would be $17.25 or (Î per ..."
2. Organic Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets, and Policies by OECD (2003)
"In 1913, the discovery of the Haber-Bosch process converting inert nitrogen gas
and hydrogen to ammonia, a reactive form of nitrogen that plants can use ..."
3. Muscle Shoals: Hearings Before the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and by United States, Senate, Congress (1922)
"It could hardly live if power cost nothing. The Haber-Bosch process with 1-mill
power could produce ammonium sulphate at a cost of ..."
4. Tariff ... Hearing[s] ... on H.R. 7456 by United States Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance (1921)
"The plants making ammonia by what is known as the Haber Bosch process put upon
the market entirely new nitrogen products which are said to combine ..."
5. Report on the Fixation and Utilization of Nitrogen by United States Army. Ordnance Dept, United States Dept. of Agriculture (1922)
"1, using the Haber-Bosch process^ and the installation of an electrolytic hydrogen
generating plant for trial of the Haber electrolytic process, ..."