Reagents Required.—The reagents required for conducting the permanganate hide powder process are as follows:

1. Permanganate Solution.—Ten grams of pure potassium permanganate are dissolved in six liters of water. The solution is standardized with pure tannin. The moisture in the pure tannin is determined by drying at 100° to constant weight and then a quantity of the undried substance, representing two grams of the dried material, is dissolved in one liter of water. Ten cubic centimeters of this solution and double that quantity of the indigo solution to be described below, are mixed with three-quarters of a liter of water and the permanganate solution added from a burette with constant stirring until the liquid assumes a greenish color and then, drop by drop, until a pure yellow color with a pinkish rim is obtained. Fifty cubic centimeters of the pure tannin solution are digested, with frequent shaking, with three grams of hide powder which has been previously well moistened and dried in a press for eighteen or twenty hours, the contents of the flask thrown on a filter and ten cubic centimeters of the filtrate titrated with the permanganate solution as directed above. The difference between the amount of permanganate solution required for the first and second titrations represents the amount of pure tannin or oxidizable matter removed by the hide powder.

2. Indigo Solution.—The indicator which is used in the titrations is prepared by dissolving thirty grams of sodium sulfindigotate in three liters of dilute sulfuric acid made by adding one volume of the strong acid to three volumes of water. The solution is shaken for a few minutes, thrown upon a filter and the insoluble residue washed with sufficient water to make the volume of the filtrate six liters.

3. Hide Powder.—The hide powder used should be white, wooly in character and sufficiently well extracted with water to afford no other extract capable of oxidizing the permanganate solution.

The Process.—The reagents having been prepared and tested as above, the solution of the substance containing the tannin, prepared as described further on, is titrated first with the permanganate solution in the manner already given. Fifty cubic centimeters of the tannin solution are then shaken, from, time to time for eighteen hours, with three grams of hide powder, thrown upon a filter and ten cubic centimeters of the filtrate titrated with the potassium permanganate as above described. From the data obtained, the quantity of permanganate solution corresponding to the tannin removed by the hide powder is easily calculated. The value of the permanganate solution having been previously set with a pure tannin, renders easy of calculation the corresponding amount of pure tannin in the solution under examination.

595. Preparation of the Tannin Infusion.—A sample weighing about a kilogram should be secured, representing as nearly as possible the whole of the materials containing tannin in a given lot. The sample is reduced to a fine powder and passed through a sieve containing apertures about a millimeter in diameter. The quantity of the sample used for the extraction depends largely upon its content of tannin. Five grams of nutgalls, ten grams of sumach or twenty grams of oak bark represent about the quantities necessary for these classes of tannin-holding materials. The sample is boiled for half an hour with half a liter of water, filtered through a linen bag into a liter flask and washed and pressed with enough water to make the volume of the filtrate equal to one liter. The proper quantities of this solution are used for the analytical processes described above.

TOBACCO.

596. Fermented and Unfermented Tobacco.—Samples of tobacco may reach the analyst either in the fermented or unfermented state. As a basis for comparison, it is advisable in all cases to determine the constituents of the sample before fermentation sets in. The analysis, after fermentation is complete, will then show the changes of a chemical nature which it has undergone during the process of curing and sweating. Only tobacco which has undergone fermentation is found to be in a suitable condition for consumption. In addition to the natural constituents of tobacco, it may contain, in the manufactured state, flavoring ingredients such as licorice and sugar, coloring matters and in some instances, it is said, opium or other stimulating drugs. It is believed, however, that opium is not often found in manufactured tobacco, and it has never been found in this laboratory in cigarettes, although all the standard brands have been examined for it.[614]

In researches made at the Connecticut Station it is shown that fermentation produces but little change in the relative quantities of nitric acid, ammonia, fiber and starch in the leaves, while those of nicotin, albuminoids and amids are diminished. This is not in harmony with the generally accepted theory that starch is inverted and fermented during the process.[615]

The nature of the ferments which are active in producing the changes which tobacco undergoes in curing, is not definitely understood. Some of the organic constituents of the tobacco undergo a considerable change during the process. Any sugar which is found in the freshly cured leaves disappears wholly or in part. As products of fermentation may also be found succinic, fumaric, formic, acetic, propionic and butyric acids.