Experiment 62.—Put 20 cc. of H2O in a receiver. With the forceps take a piece of Na, not larger than half a pea, from the naphtha in which it is kept, drop it into the H2O, and at once cover the receiver loosely with paper or cardboard. Watch the action, as the Na decomposes H2O. HOH + Na = NaOH + H. If the water be hot the action is so rapid that enough heat is produced to set the H on fire. That the gas is H can be shown by putting the Na under the mouth of a small inverted t.t., filled with cold water, in a water-pan. Na rises to the top, and the t.t. fills with H, which can be tested. NaOH dissolves in the water.102. Properties.
Experiment 63.—(1) Test with red litmus paper the solutions obtained in the last two experiments. (2) To 5cc.of alum solution, K2A12(SO4)4, add 2cc.of the liquid, and notice the color and form of the ppt.
POTASSIUM HYDRATE.
103. KOH is made in the Same Way as NaOH.
Describe the process in full (Experiment 61), and give the equation.
Experiment 64.—Drop a small piece of K into a receiver of H2O, as in Experiment 62. The K must be very small, and the experiment should not be watched at too close a range. The receiver should not be covered with glass, but with paper. The H burns, uniting with O of the air. The purple color is imparted by the burning, or oxidation of small particles of K. Write the equation for the combustion of each.
H2O might be considered the symbol of an acid, since it is the union of H and a negative element; or, if written HOH, it might be called a base, since it has a positive element and the (OH) radical. It is neutral to litmus, and on this account might be called a salt. It is better, however, to call it simply an oxide.
Potassium hydrate, caustic potash, is employed for the manufacture of soft soap. As a chemical reagent its action is almost precisely like that of caustic soda, though it is usually considered a stronger base, as K is a more electro-positive element than Na.
CALCIUM HYDRATE.
104. Calcium Hydrate, the Most Common of the Bases, is nearly as important to them as H2SO4 is to acids. Since it is used to make the other bases, it might be called the strongest base; as H2SO4 is often called the strongest acid. The strength of an acid or base, however,depends on the substance to which it is applied, as well as on itself, and for most purposes this one is classified as a weaker base than the three previously described.