Laboratory teaching, or, Progressive exercises in practical chemistry / by Charles Loudon Bloxam.
- Charles Bloxam
- Date:
- 1874
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Laboratory teaching, or, Progressive exercises in practical chemistry / by Charles Loudon Bloxam. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![white precipitate with excess of ammonia, and a black pre- cipitate, with a purplish shade, on addition of hydrosul- phuric acid. Common Compounds of Lead. Names. Composition. Litharge ) Massicot ) Lead, oxygen. Minium, or \ Red lead J Lead, oxygen. Peroxide of lead Lead, oxygen. Acetate of lead, or ) Sugar of lead ) I Ivwio r\T loan Q/)of]fi \u 'i T j> t* \_/aiuc ui ieau, ctcei/ic aoiu, water. Carbonate of lead, or ) White lead ) Oxide of lead, carbonic acid, water. Chroniate of lead, or ) Chrome yellow ) Oxide of lead, chromic acid. Nitrate of lead Chloride of lead Iodide of lead Oxychloride of lead Sulphate of lead Sulphide of lead, or ) Galena J Oxide of lead, nitric acid. Lead, chlorine. Lead, iodine. Lead, oxygen, chlorine. Oxide of lead, sulphuric acid. Lead, sulphur. Massicot, or Oxide of Lead, is a yellow powder, which is insoluble in water, and becomes white when boiled with hydrochloric acid, being converted into chloride of lead, which partly dissolves, and is deposited in needle-like crystals on cooling. Diluted nitric acid dissolves massicot when gently heated. Litharge is the same oxide of lead, which has been melted, and is sold in pinkish-brown or buff scales or powder. The action of water and acids upon it is similar to that upon massicot. Minium is a bright red powder, which is not affected by water, but evolves the smell of chlorine when boiled with hydrochloric acid, and is slowly converted into chloride of](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21497321_0041.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


