78    Business View - October 2015
        
        
          Deepwater Chemicals, Inc.
        
        
          
            Leading manufacturer of iodine-based specialty chemicals
          
        
        
          Anyone of a certain age will likely associate the word “io-
        
        
          dine” with the orange-red liquid in the small, glass bottle
        
        
          often found in medicine cabinets and survival kits that
        
        
          was used to disinfect wounds. It was often the antisep-
        
        
          tic of choice that doting parents brushed onto cuts and
        
        
          bruises before telling their wayward children to be more
        
        
          careful next time. “Iodine has been used in antiseptics
        
        
          for a very long time. And that will probably continue; it’s
        
        
          very effective,” says Steve Wachnowsky, Vice President
        
        
          and General Manager of Deepwater Chemicals (DWC),
        
        
          an Oklahoma-based company that manufactures spe-
        
        
          cialized organic and inorganic iodine derivatives.
        
        
          Wachnowsky is correct when he mentions iodine’s pal-
        
        
          liative uses. But in addition to its storied, therapeutic
        
        
          qualities, this chemical element of the halogen family
        
        
          with an atomic number of 53 is, actually, a very multifari-
        
        
          ous substance with a wide variety of applications. Iodide
        
        
          salts were first employed, medically, in the early 1900s
        
        
          as a treatment for a host of conditions, including metal
        
        
          poisoning,  asthma, aneurisms, gout, syphilis, nephritis,
        
        
          and bronchitis. Tincture of iodine was used as a pre-op-
        
        
          erative, skin sterilization before surgery.
        
        
          Iodine was first isolated by the French chemist, Bernard
        
        
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