The production of ammonia involves the Haber-Bosch process, which was first developed in 1908 by Fritz Haber and industrialized in 1910 by Carl Bosch. This process involves the direct combination of nitrogen and hydrogen gases at high pressures and temperatures over a catalyst to produce ammonia. Modern ammonia plants first produce hydrogen from methane and then combine the hydrogen with nitrogen in the ammonia synthesis loop to produce liquid ammonia. The multi-step modern process removes impurities and achieves the necessary pressure and temperature conditions for the ammonia synthesis reaction.