The same remarks as to cleanliness, &c., apply in the manufacture of felt, lamp-black, and briquettes, with use of tar. Saturation of felt, and manufacture of tar plaster should be done in closed apparatus. In the production of lamp-black, even with a great number of soot chambers, there is escape of soot causing nuisance to workers and the neighbourhood. Complete avoidance of this seems to be difficult, so that measures for personal hygiene must be assured. In briquette factories it has been found useful to heat the tar by means of steam instead of by direct fire, which renders possible the use of a closed apparatus and mechanical stirring.

In the distillation of tar, during the first distillation period (first runnings) unpleasant and injurious gases containing ammonia and sulphur escape from the stills. These should (according to Leymann) be carried away through closed pipes branching off from the lower end of the running-off pipe, either into the furnace (in doing which a possible back flash of flame is to be guarded against) or be subjected to purification by lime or oxide of iron (similar to that in the case of illuminating gas) with a view to recovery of ammonia and sulphur. The lower end of the distillation pipes should be U-shaped so as to form a liquid seal—the pipes for the drawing off of the gases branching off before the curve. In the later stages of distillation risk can be checked by careful cooling and imperviousness of the apparatus.

Very unpleasant yellow fumes develop in great quantity when pitch is run off from the hot still. Hence hot pitch should not be run off into open pitch receptacles, but be cooled first in closed receptacles.

The crude products obtained by distillation (light oil, creosote oil) are subjected to purification consisting in treatment on the one hand with alkali and on the other with acid and followed by fractional distillation. In these processes injurious fumes may develop, therefore they must—as already mentioned—be carried on in closed vessels provided with means of escape for fumes and appliances for mechanical stirring; the fumes drawn off must be led into the chimney stack.

In the distillation of brown coal, of tar, and of resin, it is necessary, as in the distillation of coal tar, to insist above all on careful cooling and condensation, and thorough absorption of uncondensed gases in washing towers. Special precautionary rules are necessary to guard against the danger of entering tar stills for cleaning purposes. Such directions were approved in Great Britain in 1904 in view of accidents which occurred in this way:

Tar Distilling

The following directions[I] are approved by the Home Office and are applicable to factories in which is carried on the distillation of tar for the production of naphtha, light oil, creosote oil, and pitch.

1. During the process of cleaning, every tar still should be completely isolated from adjoining tar stills either by disconnecting the pipe leading from the swan neck to the condenser worm, or by disconnecting the waste gas pipe fixed to the worm end or receiver. Blank flanges should be inserted between the disconnections. In addition, the pit discharge pipe or cock at the bottom of the still should be disconnected.

2. Every tar still should be ventilated and allowed to cool before persons are allowed to enter.

3. Every tar still should be inspected by the foreman or other responsible person before any workman is allowed to enter.