Water saturated with fixed air dissolves iron, and makes a pleasant chalybeat.

The calx of iron gives a green colour to glass.

Iron readily combines with sulphur. When they are found combined by nature, the substance is called pyrites.

The union of phosphoric acid with iron makes it brittle when cold, commonly called cold short; and the union of arsenic makes it brittle when hot, thence called red short.

Iron unites with gold, silver, and platina, and plunged in a white heat into mercury, it becomes coated with it; and if the process be frequently repeated, it will become brittle, which shews that there is some mutual action between them.

Iron readily unites with tin; and by dipping thin plates of iron into melted tin, they get a complete coating of it, and make the tinned plates in common use.

When crude iron comes from the smelting furnace it is brittle; and when it is white within, it is extremely hard; but when it has a black grain, owing to its having more phlogiston, it is softer, and may be filed and bored.

Cast iron becomes malleable by being exposed to a blast of air when nearly melting; the consequence of which is a discharge of inflammable air, and the separation of a liquid substance, which, when concreted, is called finery cinder. The iron generally loses one fourth of its weight in the process. Crude iron contains much plumbago, and the access of pure air probably assists in discharging it, by converting it into air, chiefly inflammable.

Malleable iron, exposed to a red heat in contact with charcoal, called cementation, converts it into steel, which has the properties of becoming much harder than iron, and very elastic, by being first made very hot, and then suddenly cooled, by plunging it in cold water. By first making it very hard, and then giving different degrees of heat, and cooling it in those different degrees, it is capable of a great variety of tempers, proper for different uses. Of the degrees of heat workmen judge by the change of colour on its surface. Steel, like crude iron, is capable of being melted without losing its properties. It is then called cast steel, and is of a more uniform texture. Iron acquires some little weight by being converted into steel; and when dissolved in acid, it yields more plumbago. Steel has something less specific gravity than iron. If the cementation be continued too long, the steel acquires a darkish fracture, it is more fusible, and incapable of welding. Steel heated in contact with earthy matters, is reduced to iron.

Iron is the only substance capable of magnetism; and hardened steel alone is capable of retaining magnetism. The loadstone is an ore of iron.