Fig. 410.—Bessemer’s process.

Bisulphide of Iron is iron pyrites, and is crystalline.

Chloride of Iron is dissolved from iron with hydrochloric acid. It is used in medicine.

Cyanide of Iron makes, with cyanide of potassium, the well-known prussiate of potash (ferro-cyanide of potassium), which, when heated, precipitates Prussian blue (cyanogen and iron).

The Sulphate of the Protoxide is known as copperas, or green vitriol, and is applied to the preparation of Prussian blue.


Manganese is found extensively, but not in any large quantities, in one place; iron ore contains it. It is very hard to fuse, and is easily oxidised. The binoxide is used to obtain oxygen, and when treated with potassium and diluted, it becomes the permanganate of potassium, and is used as “Condy’s fluid.” It readily oxides organic matters, and is thus a disinfectant. It crystallizes in long, deep, red needles, which are dissolved in water. It is a standard laboratory test. There are other compounds, but in these pages we need not detail them.


Cobalt and Nickel occur together. They are hard, brittle, and fusible. The salts of cobalt produce beautiful colours, and the chloride yields an “invisible” or sympathetic ink. The oxide of cobalt forms a blue pigment for staining glass which is called “smalt.” Nickel is chiefly used in the preparation of German silver and electro-plating. The salts of nickel are green. Nickel is difficult to melt, and always is one of the constituents of meteoric iron, which falls from the sky in aërolites. It is magnetic like cobalt, and is extracted from the ore called kupfer-nickel. A small United-States coin is termed a “nickel.”