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Conclave: how do the cardinals produce their white and black smoke?

May 9, 2025 · Comment icon 66 comments
The Vatican.
The heart of Vatican City. Image Credit: CC BY 2.0 Alex Proimos
The famous smoke rising from a chimney atop the Sistine Chapel has long marked the new pope's selection process.
Mark Lorch: Earlier this week, 133 cardinals gathered in the Vatican to elect a new leader of the Catholic church. During their deliberations, the only indications of their progress were the regular plumes of smoke wafting from a freshly installed chimney perched on the roof of the Sistine Chapel.

Tradition holds that black smoke indicates the cardinals have not yet agreed on a new leader, while white smoke signals that a new Pope has been elected. But what kind of smoke is it exactly? Let's take a look at the science.

The tradition of cardinals burning their ballot papers to maintain secrecy dates back to at least the 15th century.

However, it wasn't until the 18th century - when a chimney was installed in the Sistine Chapel to protect Michelangelo's frescoes from soot - that the resulting smoke became visible to anyone outside the chapel.

At the time, the smoke was not intended as a public signal, but once it was visible, onlookers began interpreting it as an indicator of the voting outcome.

By the 19th century, it had become customary to use smoke deliberately: if smoke was seen, it meant no Pope had been elected, whereas no smoke indicated a successful election. This of course lacked clarity and often caused confusion.

The Vatican eventually sought to clarify matters by formalising the practice of fumata nera (black smoke) and fumata bianca (white smoke). Initially, damp straw and tar were added to the burning ballots.

As anyone who has tried to light a damp bonfire knows, wet oily fuel can be difficult to ignite, but once it gets going, it produces plenty of dark smoke.

This is the result of incomplete combustion: the energy from the flames is initially used to evaporate the water, which keeps the fire's temperature low. As a result, many of the larger molecules in the tar do not fully combust, leading to the production of soot and dark smoke.

However, once the moisture is driven off, the fire burns more efficiently, producing mainly steam and carbon dioxide. At that stage, the smoke diminishes and becomes much lighter.

This fluctuating fumata - combined with the subjective interpretation of its colour - caused considerable confusion, particularly during the 1939 and 1958 conclaves. It wasn't clear whether grey smoke was closer to black or white, for example. By the 1970s, the straw method had been abandoned in favour of more controllable chemical mixtures. This has since evolved into an unambiguous method for generating the required smoke signals.
Current recipe

In 2013, the Vatican confirmed that their fumata recipes now consist of a clear black smoke recipe: potassium perchlorate, an "oxidising substance" that provides oxygen to the reaction; anthracene, a hydrocarbon derived from coal tar that serves as a heavy smoke-producing fuel; and sulphur, added to adjust the burn rate and temperature.

The result is a deliberately inefficient combustion reaction, producing a high volume of unburnt carbon particles. This abundance of carbon (soot) makes the smoke thick and black - akin to the smoke you might see from burning oil or rubber, which is rich in carbon-based particles.

Meanwhile, white smoke is produced using a much cleaner fuel mix and a more powerful oxidiser. Potassium chlorate - even more reactive than perchlorate - ensures a hot, vigorous burn. Lactose acts as the fuel, burning quickly and cleanly into water vapour and carbon dioxide.

The rapid combustion of sugar yields large amounts of gaseous output (steam and CO2), generating a voluminous white cloud. The final ingredient, pine rosin, produces thick white smoke when heated - releasing tiny droplets and light-coloured ash that appear whitish. It also contains terpenes that burn to yield a pale, visible smoke.

When combined, the oxidising power of potassium chlorate allows the lactose and rosin to burn hot and fast, yielding mostly clean combustion products along with a cloud of vapour and resin particles.

Rather than soot, the smoke contains microscopic droplets and fine solids that are transparent or white. The result is a mixture of steam and white or light gray smoke that contrasts sharply with the dark, carbon-rich black smoke.

Over the years, the papal conclave smoke signal has evolved from an incidental byproduct of burning ballots into a carefully engineered communication tool.

Today, thanks to modern chemistry, the smoke is unmistakable - thick black billows for inconclusive votes, or a bright white plume when a new pope is elected.

Mark Lorch, Professor of Science Communication and Chemistry, University of Hull

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (66)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #57 Posted by Portre 4 days ago
You are not Catholic. You don't know what you are taking about.
Comment icon #58 Posted by Portre 4 days ago
Most religions don't teach about Christ.
Comment icon #59 Posted by joc 4 days ago
Yeah we all know what they say it means...and we all know it's ****** Smoke!  If the Catholic Church is so inclusive maybe they should have sent up puffs of black smoke, brown smoke, and rainbow colored smoke.  Good god man!  The whole ________ world would have got down on their ________ knees and worshiped the son_____!!  But you know how the ****** Smoke Club is.  White to the end!  How come there aren't any black Popes?  Woman Popes?  LGBTQ+ Popes?   Because they are racist that's why.   
Comment icon #60 Posted by Bendy Demon 4 days ago
Forgive my idiocy and being insanely dense but are you being sarcastic or genuine. I do not mean it as a reflection on you but I really don't know anymore.
Comment icon #61 Posted by itsnotoutthere 4 days ago
Yes, he's as thick as mince and this guy is our foreign secretary. This is the calibre of politician now running the UK. God help us. 
Comment icon #62 Posted by joc 4 days ago
I was being sarcastic. I could care less about the Pope or Cath church. But the whole idea of racism is such a joke? 
Comment icon #63 Posted by seasmith 4 days ago
  What's the difference ?
Comment icon #64 Posted by Noteverythingisaconspiracy 4 days ago
I believe that @seasmith is implying that universities are all, in his own words, "infiltrated by Lefty-lib influences". One has to be pretty far right in order to consider the catholic church as left wing though. Interestingly the catholic church was literally the right wing when left and right wing politics was introduced during the French revolution.      
Comment icon #65 Posted by susieice 3 days ago
The Catholic Church is still a strong Republican voting base. They may be more moderate than extreme.
Comment icon #66 Posted by seasmith 3 days ago
We were talking here about the papacy here, not the Roman Catholic Church of North America. The two having been lately growing apart. The church is nearly broke, so the Pope in now chosen with the task  of increasing collection$, congregations and political clout; not just atonement and redemption.  Big business ...


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