Figure 8. Electric Vacuum Drying Oven.

18. Electric Drying-Bath.—The heat of an electric current can be conveniently used for drying in a partial vacuum by means of the simple device illustrated in [Fig. 8]. In ordering a heater of this kind the voltage of the current should be stated. The current in use in this laboratory has a voltage of about 120, and is installed on the three wire principle. It is well to use a rheostat with the heater in order to control the temperature within the bell jar. The ground rim of the bell jar rests on a rubber disk placed on a thick ground glass or a metal plate, making an air-tight connection. A disk of asbestos serves to separate the heater from the dish containing the sample, in order to avoid too high a temperature.

19. Steam Coil Apparatus.—For drying at the temperature of superheated steam, it is convenient to use an apparatus furnished with layers or coils of steam pipes. The drying may be accomplished either in the air or in a vacuum. In this laboratory a large drying oven, having three shelves of brass steam-tubes and sides of non-conducting material, is employed with great advantage. The series of heating pipes is so arranged as to be used one at a time or collectively. Each series is furnished with a separate steam valve, and is provided with a trap to control the escape of the condensed vapors. In the bottom of the apparatus are apertures through which air can enter, which after passing through the interior of the oven escapes through a ventilator at the top. With a pressure of forty pounds of steam to the square inch and a free circulation of air, the temperature on the first shelf of the apparatus is about 98°; on the second from 103° to 104°, and on the third about 100°. The vessels containing the bodies to be dried are not placed directly on the brass steam pipes, but the latter are first covered with thick perforated paper or asbestos. For drying large numbers of samples, or large quantities of one sample, such an apparatus is almost indispensable to an agricultural laboratory.

Figure 9. Steam Coil Drying Oven.

A smaller apparatus is shown in [Fig. 9]. The heating part G is made of a small brass tube arranged near the bottom in a horizontal coil and continued about the sides in a perpendicular coil. Bodies placed on the horizontal shelf are thus entirely surrounded by the heating surfaces except at the top.[6] The steam pipe S is connected with the supply by the usual method, and the escape of the condensation is controlled either by a valve or trap in the usual way. The whole apparatus is covered by a bell jar B, resting on a heavy cast-iron plate P, through which also the ends of the brass coil pass. The upper surface of the iron plate may be planed, or a planed groove may be cut into it, to secure the edge of the bell jar. When the air is to be exhausted from the apparatus, a rubber washer should be placed under the rim of the bell jar. The latter piece of apparatus may either be closed, as shown in the [figure], by a rubber stopper, or it is better, though not shown, to have a stopper with three holes. One tube passes just through the stopper and is connected with the vacuum; the second passes to the bottom of the apparatus and serves to introduce a slow stream of dry air or of an inert gas during the desiccation. The third hole is for a thermometer. When no movement of the residual gas in the apparatus is secured, a dish containing strong sulfuric acid S’ is placed on the iron plate and under the horizontal coil, as is shown in the [figure]. The sulfuric acid so placed does not reach the boiling-point of water, and serves to absorb the aqueous vapors from the residual air in the bell jar. By controlling the steam supply the desiccation of a sample can be secured in the apparatus at any desired temperature within the limit of the temperature of steam at the pressure used. Where no steam service is at hand a strong glass flask may be used as a boiler, in which case the trap end of the coil must be left open. The vacuum may be supplied by an air or bunsen pump. When a vacuum is not used an atmosphere of dry hydrogen may be supplied through H.

Figure 10. Carr’s Vacuum Drying Oven.

Figure 10. (Bis) Vacuum Oven Open.