Gun-cotton.—An explosive prepared by the action of nitric acid on cotton. Selected cotton waste suitably opened up is immersed in a mixture of three parts of nitric acid by weight (1·50 sp. gr.) and one part of sulphuric acid by weight (1·85 sp. gr.) and submitted to a number of processes by which the nitration is properly effected so as to produce a nitro-cellulose of uniform composition. The material is washed, reduced to pulp, and moulded into various forms.

Hemi-Cellulose.—The constituents of plant tissues are extremely varied in character. Many plants contain substances which resemble true cellulose, but differing from it in being easily converted by hydrolysis, and by the action of dilute acids, into carbohydrates. Plants which contain a large proportion of such constituents are termed hemi-celluloses. In some cases certain crystallisable sugars can be obtained by hydrolysis under suitable conditions.

Hydral-Cellulose (Bumcke).—A compound of merely scientific interest, resulting from the treatment of cellulose with hydrogen peroxide. When acted upon by alkali it is decomposed into cellulose and acid cellulose, the latter a derivative of unstable composition.

Hydro-Cellulose.—This product, a white, non-structureless, friable powder, is obtained by treating cellulose with hydrochloric or sulphuric acid of moderate strength. The substance itself has no commercial value, but the reaction is useful in separating cotton from animal fabrics. If a woollen cloth containing cotton is soaked in dilute sulphuric acid, washed, and dried at a gentle heat, the cotton is acted upon, and can be beaten out of the fabric, the wool resisting the acid treatment.

Lignin.—The complex mixture of substances which is associated with cellulose in wood, jute, and other ligno-celluloses. The conversion of wood into chemical pulp effects the removal of this material more or less completely. The well-known “phloroglucine” test for mechanical wood in papers is based upon the presence of lignin in the wood.

Ligno-Cellulose.—Wood and jute are typical bodies consisting of cellulose and complex non-cellulose, generally described as lignin, associated together in the plant tissue. The chemistry of the non-cellulose portion of wood is a matter still under investigation, its importance from a commercial point of view being obvious from the fact that the removal of the lignin during the conversion of the wood into wood-cellulose results in a loss of 50 per cent. of the weight of wood.

Lustra-Cellulose.—Synonymous with and suggested as a more appropriate name for the material usually described as artificial silk.

Mercerised Cotton.—When cotton is immersed in strong solutions of caustic soda a remarkable change sets in. The physical structure of the fibre is entirely altered from the long flattened tube having a large central canal to a shorter cylindrical tube in which the canal almost disappears. Hydration of the cellulose takes place, and these changes are taken advantage of in the production of mercerised cloth (so named from the discoverer of the reaction, Mercer). Cotton goods, particularly those made of long stapled cotton, when mercerised, exhibit a beautiful lustre, and some magnificent crêpon effects are obtained by the process.

Methoxyl.—A constituent of the complex compound known as ligno-cellulose, which is present in wood and similar fibres. The amount of methoxyl in lignified tissue can be accurately determined, and it has been suggested that the proportion of methoxyl found in a cheap printing paper could be used as a measure of mechanical wood pulp present.