SECTION 16.
CARBURETS.
On the supposition that metals combine with charcoal, the appropriate names for the compounds would be carburets of the respective metals. This combination, if it exist at all, seems very rare, that with iron being the only one generally acknowledged. No combinations of carbone with the earths and alkalies, have, as far as I know, been noticed; and those with the elements oxygen, hydrogen, sulphur and phosphorus have been described in the former volume. Since that was printed an ingenious experimental essay on the “Sulphuret of carbon or alcohol of sulphur,” has been published by Berzelius and Dr. Marcet. Some account of this compound, under the name carburetted sulphur, has been given (Vol. 1. page 462); but the additional information is of sufficient importance to require notice here. The pure liquid is of sp. gr. 1.272; and the elasticity of its vapour at 66° is equal to 10.76 inches. It burns with a blue flame and sulphureous odour, without sensibly depositing water on cold glass exposed to the fumes. It has an acrid, pungent taste, and a nauseous smell, differing from sulphuretted hydrogen. By various experiments it was found to consist of sulphur and carbone in the ratio of 85 to 15 nearly; that is, 2 atoms of sulphur to 1 of carbone. From other experiments it did not appear to contain any hydrogen.
From some experiments I made in June 1818, on the combustion of the vapour of carburet of sulphur in oxygen gas, I was led to suspect at least, that an atom of hydrogen attaches to the two of sulphur and one of carbone in its constitution. But not having an opportunity to pursue the subject, I merely make the observation for future experience to determine upon the question.
1. Carburets of iron.
There are three distinct substances which are now commonly believed to be constituted of carbone and iron, known by the names of Plumbago, or black lead, Cast Iron and Steel.
Plumbago is a natural production, found in greatest perfection in the Borrowdale mine, near Keswick, Cumberland. It is chiefly used in making pencils.—It seems to be constituted of carbone and iron by the concurrent experience of all who have examined it: but the proportions are not uniform, some having found 10 and others only 5 per cent. of iron in it. From this circumstance it would seem doubtful whether iron is an essential element. As carbone is known to be exhibited in various forms of aggregation, it is not improbable that plumbago may be one of those forms; it is evidently not a mere mixture of common charcoal and iron, or its oxide.
Cast iron or crude iron is the metal when first extracted from the ore; it usually contains carbone, oxygen, phosphorus and silica, in small proportions, with perhaps other earths occasionally. It cannot be considered as having these elements united in definite proportions; for they vary much, and probably give to crude iron its several modifications. Cast iron contains about 80 per cent. of its weight of iron in a state capable of solution in dilute sulphuric acid, and yielding a corresponding quantity of hydrogen gas. The residue, in a specimen I examined, was nearly as magnetic as iron itself. When treated with boiling muriatic acid, the insoluble part was reduced to 2½ per cent. upon the original weight of the iron, and some hydrogen gas given out. It was then about as magnetic as the common black oxide of iron; when heated it assumed a glowing red and lost nearly ½ grain; it was still magnetic, and boiling muriatic acid extracted more iron from it.
The hydrogen gas from dilute sulphuric acid and cast iron contains no carbonic acid in my experience; neither does it yield any when exploded with pure oxygen gas.
The small residuum after treating cast iron with acids was found by Bergman and others to resemble plumbago, being constituted chiefly of carbone and iron.
From the above it would seem that cast iron consists chiefly of pure iron, with the addition of very small proportions of oxygen and carbone; the oxygen may be about 1 per cent. and the carbone about 2. These proportions, though sufficient to modify the properties of iron to a certain extent, can scarcely be considered as constituting cast iron a homogeneous mass.