Fig. 337.—Magnesium wire burning in oxygen.

A very pretty experiment may be made with a bladder full of hydrogen gas. If a tube be fitted to the bladder already provided with a stop-cock, and a basin of ordinary soap-suds be at hand, by dipping the end of the tube in the solution and gently expressing the gas, bubbles will be formed which are of exceeding lightness (fig. 341). They can also be fired with a taper.

Another experiment may be made with hydrogen as follows:—If we permit the gas to escape from the flask, and light it, as in the illustration, and put a glass over it, we shall obtain a musical note, higher or lower, according to the length, breadth, and thickness of the open glass-tube (fig. 342). If a number of different tubes be employed, we can obtain a musical instrument—a gas harmonium.

Fig. 338.—Extraction of oxygen from air.

Hydrogen burns with a blue flame, and is very inflammable. Even water sprinkled upon a fire will increase its fierceness, because the hydrogen burns with great heat, and the oxygen is liberated. Being very light, H can be transferred from one vessel to another if both be held upside down. Some mixtures of H and O are very explosive. The oxyhydrogen blow-pipe is used with a mixture of O and H, which is forcibly blown through a tube and then ignited. The flame thus produced has a most intense heating-power.

A very easy method of producing hydrogen is to put a piece of sodium into an inverted cylinder full of water, standing in a basin of water. The sodium liberates the hydrogen by removing the oxygen from the liquid.

WATER—SYMBOL H2O; ATOMIC WEIGHT 18.

At page 59 of this volume we said something about water, and remarked (as we have since perceived by experiment) that “water is composed of oxygen and hydrogen in proportions, by weight, of eight of the former to one of the latter gas; in volume, hydrogen is two to one”; and we saw that “volume and weight were very different things.” This we will do well to bear in mind, and that, to quote Professor Roscoe, “Water is always made up of sixteen parts of oxygen to two parts of hydrogen by weight”; sixteen and two being eighteen, the combining weight of water is eighteen.