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What is IG Farben called now?

What is IG Farben called now?

IG Farben

IG Farben head office, Frankfurt, completed in 1931 and seized by the Allies in 1945 as the headquarters of the Supreme Allied Command. In 2001 it became part of the University of Frankfurt.
Fate Liquidated
Successors Agfa, BASF, Bayer, Hoechst (now Sanofi)
Headquarters Frankfurt am Main

What companies came out of IG Farben?

Today, three of the companies formed from the breakup of IG Farben remain: Agfa, BASF, and Bayer. Two of these companies, BASF and Bayer, were listed in C&EN’s most recent “Global Top Fifty.” In fact, BASF is the largest chemical producer in the world. 5…

What did IG Farben do?

During World War II, IG Farben established a synthetic oil and rubber plant at Auschwitz in order to take advantage of slave labour; the company also conducted drug experiments on live inmates.

Did BASF make Zyklon B?

It was the largest chemical factory of the world. IG Farben also achieved notoriety owing to its production of Zyklon-B, the lethal gas used to murder prisoners in German Nazi extermination camps during the Holocaust.

Who created Zyklon B?

Bayer
During World War II, Bayer was part of a consortium called IG Farben that made the Zyklon B pesticide used in Adolf Hitler’s gas chambers. Through a series of acquisitions over the years, Bayer has grown into a drug and chemicals behemoth and now employs some 100,000 people worldwide.

What color is Zyklon B?

Prussian blue
The color is also linked to the extermination of European Jewry in World War II: the pesticide employed by the Nazis in the gas chambers, Zyklon B, left traces on some of the walls when its lethal compound chemically mutated into Prussian blue residues.

Does Zyklon B have an odor?

Approximately 60 to 70% of the population can detect the bitter almond odor of hydrogen cyanide. The odor threshold for those sensitive to the odor is estimated to be 1 to 5 ppm in the air.

What is another name for Zyklon B?

Hydrogen cyanide is now rarely used as a pesticide but still has industrial applications. Firms in several countries continue to produce Zyklon B under alternative brand names, including Detia-Degesch, the successor to Degesch, who renamed the product Cyanosil in 1974.