Iodine is another relative of chlorine. It is found in seaweed, which by burning is reduced to kelp. When iodine is heated a beautiful violet vapour comes off, and this characteristic has given it its name (“iodes,” violet). Iodine was discovered by Courtois, of Paris, and in 1813, Gay Lussac made it a special study. It is solid at ordinary temperatures, and assumes crystallized forms in plates of metallic lustre. It is an excellent remedy in “goitre” and such affections. (Symbol I. Atomic weight 127.)
Fluorine is very difficult to prepare. Fluor spar is a compound of fluorine and calcium. This element is gaseous, and combines so rapidly that it is very difficult to obtain in a free state. Etching on glass is accomplished by means of hydrofluoric acid, for fluorine has a great affinity for silicic acid, which is contained in glass. The glass is covered with wax, and the design is traced with a needle. The acid attacks the glass and leaves the wax, so the design is eaten in. (Symbol F. Atomic weight 19.)
Fig. 363.—Apparatus for obtaining dry chlorine gas.
Chlorine, fluorine, bromine, and iodine are termed “Halogens” (producers of salts). They appear, as we have seen, in a gaseous, liquid, and solid form respectively.
Carbon is the most, or one of the most, largely diffused elements in nature, and claims more than a passing notice at our hands, though even that must be brief. We may put down carbon next to oxygen as the most important element in the world. The forms assumed by carbon are very variable, and pervade nature in all its phases. We have carbon in crystals, in the animal and vegetable kingdoms, and amongst the chief minerals a solid, odourless, tasteless, infusible, and almost insoluble body. In various combinations carbon meets us at every turn; united with oxygen it forms carbonic acid, which we exhale for the plants to imbibe. We have it in coal, with hydrogen and oxygen. We have it building up animal tissues, and it is never absent in two out of the three great divisions of nature—the plants and the animals (Symbol C; Atomic W. 12).
Fig. 364.—Facets of a brilliant.
Fig. 365.—Facets of a rose diamond.