In water gilding—a process little employed now—the metal objects (military buttons, &c.) to be gilded, after treatment with a flux, are brushed over with the mercury amalgam, and subsequently fired to drive off the mercury. Unless careful provision is made to carry away the vapour chronic poisoning cannot fail to occur. Even sweeps have been affected after cleaning the chimneys of water gilders’ workshops. In Great Britain, between 1899 and 1905, six cases were reported among water gilders.
In the manufacture of barometers and thermometers mercury poisoning is not infrequent. Between 1899 and 1905 sixteen such cases were reported in England; during the same period there were seventeen cases among those putting together electrical meters.
Risk of mercurial poisoning is constantly present in hatters’ furriers’ processes and in subsequent processes in felt hat factories. The risk from use of nitrate of mercury is considerable to those brushing the rabbit skins with the solution (carotting), and subsequently drying, brushing, cutting, locking, and packing them. According to Hencke in 100 kilos of the carotting liquid there are 20 kilos of mercury. In England, in the years 1899-1905, thirteen cases of mercurial poisoning were reported in hatters’ furriers’ processes. Among eighty-one persons so employed the medical inspector found twenty-seven with very defective teeth as the result of the employment, and seventeen with marked tremor.
In the manufacture of mercurial salts poisoning occurs chiefly when they are made by sublimation, as in the manufacture of vermilion, of corrosive sublimate (when mercurous sulphate is sublimed with salt), and in the preparation of calomel (when sublimate ground with mercury or mercurous sulphate mixed with mercury and salt is sublimed). Between 1899 and 1905 in England seven cases were reported from chemical works. As to occurrence of mercury poisoning from fulminate of mercury, see the chapter on Explosives.
ARSENIC
Chronic industrial arsenical poisoning, both as to origin and course, is markedly different from the acute form.
The chronic form arises mainly from inhalation of minute quantities of metallic arsenic or its compounds in recovery from the ore, or from the use of arsenic compounds in the manufacture of colours, in tanyards, and in glass making. Acute industrial arseniuretted hydrogen poisoning is especially likely to occur where metals and acids react on one another and either the metal or the acid contains arsenic in appreciable amount. Further, arseniuretted hydrogen may be contained in gases given off in smelting operations and in chemical processes.
Recovery of Arsenic and White Arsenic.—Pure arsenic is obtained from native cobalt and arsenical pyrites by volatilisation on roasting the ore in the absence of air. After the furnace has been charged sheet iron condensing tubes are affixed to the mouths of the retorts, which project out of the furnace, and to these again iron or earthenware prolongs. Arsenic condenses on the sides of the sheet metal tubes and amorphous arsenic, oxides, and sulphides in the prolongs. After sublimation has been completed the contents of the prolongs are removed and used for production of other arsenic compounds; the (generally) argentiferous residues in the retorts are removed and further treated in silver smelting works; finally, the crusts of crystalline arsenic (artificial fly powder) are knocked out from the carefully unrolled sheet iron tubes.
As can be readily understood from the description opportunity of poisoning from volatilisation of arsenic and of arsenic compounds is considerable. Metallic arsenic is used for making hard shot, and for increasing the brilliancy and hardness of metal alloys (type metal, &c.).
White arsenic (arsenic trioxide) is obtained by roasting with access of air in reverberatory furnaces arsenical ores and smelting residues. The vapours of white arsenic sublime and are condensed as a powder in long walled channels or in chambers, and are resublimed in iron cylinders. White arsenic is used in making colours, in glass (for decolourising purposes), as an insecticide in the stuffing of animals, &c.