Scientific American Supplement, No. 288, July 9, 1881 - Various

Scientific American Supplement, No. 288, July 9, 1881

FIG. 1.--FIRST DISTILLATORY APPARATUS.
FIG. 2.--SECOND DISTILLATORY APPARATUS.
Mr. Müntz's method of procedure is as follows: He submits to distillation three or four gallons of snow, rain, or sea water in an apparatus such as shown in Fig. 1. The part which serves as a boiler, and which holds the liquid to be distilled, is a milk-can, B. The vapors given off through the action of the heat circulate through a leaden tube some thirty-three feet in length, and then traverse a tube inclosed within a refrigerating cylinder, T, which is kept constantly cold by a current of water. They are finally condensed in a glass flask, R, which forms the receiver. When 100 or 150 cubic centimeters of condensed liquid (which contains all the alcohol) are collected in the receiver, the operations are suspended. The liquid thus obtained is distilled anew in a second apparatus, which is analogous to the preceding but much smaller (Fig. 2). The liquid is heated in the flask, B, and its vapor, after traversing a glass worm, is condensed in the tube, T. The operation is suspended as soon as five or six cubic centimeters of the condensed liquid have been collected in the test-tube, R. The latter is now removed, and to its liquid contents, there is added a small quantity of iodine and carbonate of soda. The mixture is slightly heated, and soon there are seen forming, through precipitation, small crystals of iodoform. Under such circumstances, iodoform could only have been formed through the presence of an alcohol in the liquid. These analytical operations are verified by Mr. Müntz as follows: He distills in the same apparatus three to four gallons of chemically pure distilled water, and ascertains positively that under these conditions iodine and carbonate of soda give absolutely no reaction. Finally, to complete the demonstration and to ascertain the approximate quantity of alcohol contained in natural waters, he undertakes the double fractional distillation of a certain quantity of pure water to which he has previously added a one-millionth part of alcohol. Under these circumstances the iodine and carbonate of soda give a precipitate of iodoform exactly similar to that obtained by treating natural waters.

Various
Содержание

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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 288


NEW YORK, JULY 9, 1881


ALCOHOL IN NATURE--ITS PRESENCE IN THE EARTH, WATER, AND ATMOSPHERE.


DETECTION OF ALCOHOL IN TRANSPARENT SOAPS.


ON THE CALORIFIC POWER OF FUEL, AND ON THOMPSON'S CALORIMETER.


EXPLOSION AS AN UNKNOWN FIRE HAZARD.


CARBON.--SYMBOL C.--COMBINING WEIGHT 12.


SEYFFERTH'S PYROMETER.


APPLICATION OF THE PYROMETER IN BONE BLACK FURNACES.


APPLICATION OF THE APPARATUS TO BRICK FURNACES AND IN THE MANUFACTURE OF CHEMICAL PRODUCTS.


MANUFACTURERS' SOAPS AND THEIR PRODUCTION.


THE PREPARATION OF PERFUME POMADES.


ORGANIC MATTER IN SEA-WATER.


BACTERIA LIFE.


ON THE COMPOSITION OF ELEPHANTS' MILK.


THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF RICE, MAIZE, AND BARLEY.


PETROLEUM OILS.


COMPOSITION OF THE PETROLEUM OF THE CAUCASUS.


NOTES ON CANANGA OIL OR ILANG-ILANG OIL.


CHIAN TURPENTINE.


ON THE CHANGE OF VOLUME WHICH ACCOMPANIES THE GALVANIC DEPOSITION OF A METAL.


ANALYSES OF RICE SOILS FROM BURMAH.


DRY AIR REFRIGERATING MACHINE.


THOMAS'S IMPROVED STEAM WHEEL.


THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS.


ADDRESS OF THE PRESIDENT, JAMES BICHENO FRANCIS, AT THE THIRTEENTH ANNUAL CONVENTION OF THE SOCIETY AT MONTREAL, JUNE 15, 1881.


WATER POWER.


ANCHOR ICE.


A PAIR OF COTTAGES.


DELICATE SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS.


THE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES.


RATE OF PRODUCTION OF HEAT, CALCULATED IN THE SHAPE OF HORSE-POWER.


RESEARCHES ON THE RADIANT MATTER OF CROOKES AND THE MECHANICAL THEORY OF ELECTRICITY.


ECONOMY OF THE ELECTRIC LIGHT.


ON THE SPACE PROTECTED BY A LIGHTNING-CONDUCTOR.


PHOTO-ELECTRICITY OF FLUOR-SPAR CRYSTALS.


THE AURORA BOREALIS AND TELEGRAPH CABLES.


THE PHOTOGRAPHIC IMAGE: WHAT IT IS.


GELATINE TRANSPARENCIES FOR THE LANTERN.


AN INTEGRATING MACHINE.


UPON A MODIFICATION OF WHEATSTONE'S MICROPHONE AND ITS APPLICABILITY TO RADIOPHONIC RESEARCHES.


THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT.


PUBLISHED WEEKLY.

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Английский

Год издания

2005-06-01

Темы

Science -- Periodicals

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