EXAMPLE.
0.1048 grm. nitroglycerine taken gave 32.5 c.c. NO. Barometer, 761 mm. Temperature, 15 deg. C.
Therefore,
(3.25 x 100 x 761 x .6272)/(801.78 x.1048) = 18.46 per cent. N. Theory = 18.50 per cent.
Professor Lunge has devised another form of nitrometer (Fig. 42), very useful in the nitrogen determination in explosives. It consists of a measuring tube, which is widened out in the middle to a bulb, and is graduated above and below into 1/10 c.c. The capacity of the whole apparatus is 130 c.c.; that of each portion of the tube being 30 c.c., and of the bulb 70 c.c. The upper portion of the graduated tube serves to measure small volumes of gas, whilst larger volumes are read off on the lower part.
[Illustration: FIG. 42. FIG. 43. SOME NEW FORMS OF NITROMETER.]
F.M. Horn (Zeitschrift fuer angewandte Chemie, 1892, p. 358) has devised a form of nitrometer (Fig. 43) which he has found especially useful in the examination of smokeless powders. The tap H is provided with a wide bore through which a weighed quantity of the powder is dropped bodily into the bulb K. From 4 to 5 c.c. of sulphuric acid which has been heated to 30 deg. C. are then added through the funnel T, the tap H being immediately closed. When the powder has dissolved—a process which may be hastened by warming the bulb very carefully—the thick solution is drawn into the nitrometer tube N, and the bulb rinsed several times with fresh acid, after which operation the analysis is proceeded with in the usual way.
Dr Lunge’s method of using a separate nitrometer in which to measure the NO gas evolved to the one in which the reaction has taken place, the gas being transferred from the one to the other by joining them by means of indiarubber tubing, and then driving the gas over by raising the pressure tube of the one containing the gas, the taps being open, I have found to be a great improvement.
1 c.c. NO gas at 0 deg. and 760 mm.
Equals 0.6272 milligrammes (N) nitrogen.
" 1.343 " nitric oxide.
" 2.820 " (HNO_{3}) nitric
acid.
" 3.805 " (NaNO_{3}) sodium
nitrate.
" 4.523 " (KNO_{3}) potassium
nitrate.
Champion and Pellet’s Method.—This method is now very little used. It is based upon the fact that when nitro-cellulose is boiled with ferrous chloride and hydrochloric acid, all the nitrogen is disengaged as nitric oxide (NO). It is performed as follows:—A vacuum is made in a flask, fitted with a funnel tube, with a glass stopper on the tube; a delivery tube that can also be closed, and which dips under a solution of caustic soda contained in a trough, and the end placed under a graduated tube, also full of caustic soda. From 0.12 to 0.16 grm. cotton dissolved in 5 to 6 c.c. of sulphuric acid is allowed to flow into the flask, which contains the ferrous chloride and hydrochloric acid, and in


