Used to "GAS" the enemy
Chlorine gas was first used as a chemical weapon in World War I by German forces in 1915 during the Second Battle of Ypres. It caused suffocation, burning sensations, and respiratory difficulties in soldiers on the battlefield.
Invented by French chemist Claude Berthollet, chlorine gas was first used as a weapon by the military during the first World War in 1914. Chlorine gas was first used as a disarming weapon, and later as a fatal poison.
The 22nd of April 1915 in the second battle of Ypres.
Chlorine was first used as a chemical weapon during World War I by the German Army. It was deployed in 1915 during the Second Battle of Ypres, causing widespread casualties and marking the start of chemical warfare in modern conflicts.
Yes. In vapor form it can displace oxygen and that's why it was used in WW1 as a weapon.
It was used as a weapon during WW1. The gas was packed into artillery shells and shot into the enemy trenches.
Chlorine was first used as a chemical weapon in World War I by the German army on April 22, 1915, during the Second Battle of Ypres. This marked the first large-scale use of chemical warfare in the conflict, leading to devastating effects on soldiers and prompting a shift in warfare tactics. The introduction of chlorine gas signaled the beginning of a brutal era of chemical warfare that would continue throughout the war.
used in world war 1 and killed lots of people some interesting facts about chlorine is that chlorine is extremely important for the production of ice cream. Chlorine is also used to purify water and is used in bleaches.
Poison Gas
Chlorine gas was used as a weapon during World War I. Salt is Sodium chloride.
April 1915 was the first time chlorine gas was fired off and gas masks were used.
In October 1914 the German Army began firing shrapnel shells in which the steel balls had been treated with a chemical irritant. The Germans first used chlorinegas cylinders in April 1915 when it was employed against the French Army at Ypres. Chlorine gas destroyed the respiratory organs of its victims and this led to a slow death by asphyxiation.