Introduction to the study of inorganic chemistry / by William Allen Miller.
- Miller, William Allen, 1817-1870.
- Date:
- 1871
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Introduction to the study of inorganic chemistry / by William Allen Miller. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![Ct'P Cupreous oxide, 263 Cupric chloride, 264 — oxide, 263 — sulphate, 145 — sulphide, 156, 264 Cyanogen, 188 — preparation of, 188 — properties of, 188 — us property of com- bining with the metaU, i38, 189 — --- and with hydrogen, iSS, 189 DAW’S safety lamp, i8o, 181 Decomposition, 3 Destructive distillation,Sy Dialysis, 170 I )iamond, 84 Didymium, 229 I )ihydric sodic phosphat«;, 1O4, 165 Dimorphous bodies, 103, Di'ixidc of barium, 217 Dipt»lassic sulphate, or normal sulphate, 151 — sulphide, 156 Distjdic hydrit: phosphate, formation of, 264 — sulphite, 146 Distillation, 134 — tlcsiruclive, 89 Disidphates, 251 Disulphide of iron, 242 I hlhionic acid, 144 l)olomite, 230 Ductility of metals, 201 Dutch liquid, 178 l)yads, or bivalent ele- ments, 72, 73 t;arthknwark, J ^ basis of, 224, 228, — manufacture of, 228 Kficrvcscent waters, 55 Klemcnts, chemical, 6 — combination, i — mode of occurrence, 4 — number of, 4 — division into metals and non-metals, 5 — list of, with their sym- bols and atomic weights, 6 Kmcrrdd, 229 Kmcry, 224 Kpsom salts, 230, 232 I'.rljiuin, 229 I'-thylsulphuric acid, 178 Kudiometer, the, 65 c;oL I:j'ELSPAK, or adii- laria, 227 — varieties of, 227 Fermentation, carbonic anhydride formed by, 77 — mode of checking, 146 Ferric oxide, 33, 147, 241, 242 Ferrous carbonate, 237, 243 . — chloride, 21, 243 — oxide, 33, 241 — salts, 243, 244 — sulphide, 243 Filter, paper, how to make a, 90 — for water, 91 Fire-bricks, 171 — clay, 171 — damp of mines, 179 Flame, structure and pro- perties of, 181, 182 — the blowpipe, 184 “ the reducing ami the oxidising flames, 184 Flint, 169 Fluorides, 13S Fluorine, 138 — compound of, with hy- drogen, 140 Fluorspar, 138 Foil, of metals, 201 Freezing point, 45 Fur inside a boiler, 53 ' Al.KNA, 141, 265 J Gas coke, 185 Gases, 12 — experiments with, 20 — measurement of, 29 Gaseous compounds of the different elements, 72, — 73 German silver, 201, 236 Geysers of Iceland, sili«a dissolved in the, 170 Glass, action of hydro- fluoric acid on, T39 — manufacture of, 170, 171 — window glass, or crown glass, 171 — plate glass, 172 — bottle glass, 172 — Hc»hemian glas>, T72 — flint glass, 172 — properties of, 172, 173 — annealing, 173 Glaze for stoneware, 22S Glucinum, 229 Gneiss, 227 Gold, 278 HYD Gold—cont. — properties of, 27S, 279 — alloy of, 279 — oxides of, 279 Clranitc, 227 Graphite, 85 Guano, phosphorus in, 160 Gun-metal, 201, 250 Gunpowder, 209 (iy])sum, 221 HriCMATlTE, red, 237 — brown, 237 Ha;matite aubydralc, brown, 242 Halogens, 140 — compounds of the, 140 compared with each other, 140 Harrogate water, 155 Hartshorn, 114 Hornblende, 230 Hydrates, 57 Hydric disodic arseniate, 257 — disodic phosphate, 165 — nitrate, 105 — polassic sulphate, or disulphatc, 151 — potassic sulphide, 156 — potassic sulphite, 14O Hydride of phosphorus, 166 Hydrides, 73 Hydriodic acid, 137, 140 — properties of, 137 Hydrobromic acid, 140 Hydrocarbons, 177 Hydrochloric acid, 120, 123, 140, 167, 175 — properties of, 124 — analysis of, 125 — solution of, 126 Hydrocyanic acid, iS3, 189 — properties of, 189 — test of, 189 — sometimes ohtaimd from kernels and Icaw'., 190 I! ydrofliioric aciil, 138, 140 — its action on glass, 1 ;S, 139 Hydrogen, 58 — mode of jircparing, 5 > — projicnics of, 60, 61 — union of hy'drogen an ! oxygen, 63 — diflusion of, 69 — its atomic weight and](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28099631_0323.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)