Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 132 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 132 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891.

[lambda] = 744 very feeble. | [lambda] = 685.5 feeble
           740 " | 683.5 "
           734 " | 677 strong
           714 feeble. | 640.5 "
           704 " | 634 "
           691 " | 623 "
           687.5 " |

At a temperature of -95 deg. at ordinary atmospheric pressure, fluorine remains gaseous, no sign of liquefaction having been observed.

METHODS OF EXPERIMENTING WITH FLUORINE.

When it is desired to determine the action of fluorine upon a solid substance, the following method of procedure is adopted.  A preliminary experiment is first made, in order to obtain some idea as to the degree of energy of the reaction, by bringing a little of the solid, placed upon the lid of a platinum crucible held in a pair of tongs, near the mouth of the delivery tube of the preparation apparatus.  If a gaseous or liquid product results, and it is desirable to collect it for examination, small fragments of the solid are placed in a platinum tube connected to the delivery tube by flexible platinum tubing or by a screw joint, and the resulting gas may be collected over water or mercury, or the liquid condensed in a cooled cylinder of platinum.  In this manner the action of fluorine upon sulphur and iodine has been studied.  If the solid, phosphorus for instance, attacks platinum, or the temperature of the reaction is sufficiently high to determine the combination of platinum and fluorine (toward 500 deg.), a tube of fluorspar is substituted for the platinum tube.  The fluorspar tubes employed by M. Moissan for the study of the action of phosphorus were about twelve to fourteen centimeters long, and were terminated by platinum ends furnished with flanges and screw threads in order to be able to connect them with the preparation apparatus.  If it is required to heat the fluorspar tubes, they are surrounded by a closely wound copper spiral, which may be heated by a Bunsen flame.

In experimenting upon liquids, great care is necessary, as the reaction frequently occurs with explosive violence.  A preliminary experiment is therefore always made, by allowing the fluorine delivery tube to dip just beneath the surface of the liquid contained in a small glass cylinder.  When the liquid contains water, or when hydrofluoric acid is a product of the reaction, cylinders of platinum or of fluorspar are employed.  If it is required to collect and examine the product, the liquid is placed along the bottom of a horizontal tube of platinum or fluorspar, as in case of solids, connected directly with the preparation apparatus, and the product is collected over water or mercury if a gas, or in a cooled platinum receiver if a liquid.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.