PROCESS III.

To render Fixed Alkalis very caustic by means of Lime. The Caustic Stone.

Take a lump of newly burnt quick-lime, that hath not yet begun to flake in the air: put it into a stone pan, and cover it with twice its weight of the unwashed ashes of some plant, that are full of the Salt you design to render caustic. Pour on them a great quantity of hot water; let them steep in it five or six hours, and then boil them gently. Filter the liquor through a thick canvas bag, or through brown filtering paper supported by a linen cloth.

Evaporate the filtered liquor in a copper bason set over the fire; and there will remain a Salt, which must be put into a crucible set in the fire. It will melt, and boil for some time; after which it will be still, and look like an Oil, or melted Fat. When it comes to this condition, pour it out on a very hot copper plate, and cut it into oblong tapering slips, before it grow hard by cooling. Put these slips, while they are still hot, into a very dry glass bottle, and seal it hermetically. This is the Caustic Stone, or common Caustic.

OBSERVATIONS.

The design of this operation is to combine with the Fixed Alkali all the saline acrid parts of the quick-lime. This is to be effected only by dispersing and diffusing both those substances in water, which is the proper solvent of all saline matters. Seeing, therefore, we must have an actual lixivium, it is needless to employ an Alkali already prepared and separated from ashes; for which reason we directed ashes that are still replete with Alkali to be used instead of a pure Alkali. By this means two ends are answered at once: the Salt contained in the ashes is extracted from them, and combined with the most acrid, subtile, and saline parts of the lime.

The lye, when saturated with these two saline matters together, is vastly more acrid and caustic than if it contained but one of the two in a quantity equal to both. With this lye Soap is usually made; because the acuated Alkali contained in it hath a much greater effect on Oils than any other kind of Alkali. It also acts with incredible violence on all animal matters; which it dissolves, divides, and, in some measure, destroys, with surprising efficacy and quickness.

For this reason it is impossible to filter it through a woollen or silken bag; for it will eat holes in them, or even reduce them to a pap, almost as soon as it touches them. Besides, as the lye would dissolve some part thereof, it would thence acquire a saponaceous quality, and so lose much of its caustic nature. We must, therefore, necessarily use a filter made of vegetable matters, which resist this destroying Salt much better than animal matters.

An Alkali thus acuated by quick-lime attracts and retains humidity more strongly than any other kind of Alkali, even the perfectest and best calcined. For this reason it is almost impossible to dry it thoroughly in the bason wherein you evaporate the lixivium.