EXPERIMENTS
UPON
MAGNESIA ALBA, QUICKLIME,
AND SOME OTHER
ALCALINE SUBSTANCES
By
Joseph black
PART I
Hoffman, in one of his observations,
gives the history of a powder called magnesia alba, which had long been
used and esteemed as a mild and tasteless purgative; but the method of preparing
it was not generally known before he made it public.
It was originally obtained from a
liquor called the mother of nitre, which is
produced in the following manner:
Salt-petre is separated from the brine
which first affords it, or from the water with which
it is washed out of nitrous earths, by the process
commonly used in crystallizing salts. In this
process the brine is gradually diminished, and at
length reduced to a small quantity of an unctuous
bitter saline liquor, affording no more salt-petre
by evaporation; but, if urged with a brisk fire, drying
up into a confused mass which attracts water strongly,
and becomes fluid again when exposed to the open air.
To this liquor the workmen have given
the name of the mother of nitre; and Hoffman,
finding it composed of the magnesia united to
an acid, obtained a separation of these, either by
exposing the compound to a strong fire in which the
acid was dissipated and the magnesia remained
behind, or by the addition of an alkali which attracted
the acid to itself: and this last method he recommends
as the best. He likewise makes an inquiry into
the nature and virtues of the powder thus prepared;
and observes, that it is an absorbent earth which joins
readily with all acids, and must necessarily destroy
any acidity it meets in the stomach; but that its
purgative power is uncertain, for sometimes it has
not the least effect of that kind. As it is a
mere insipid earth, he rationally concludes it to
be purgative only when converted into a sort of neutral
salt by an acid in the stomach, and that its effect
is therefore proportional to the quantity of this acid.
Altho’ magnesia appears
from this history of it to be a very innocent medicine,
yet having observed, that some hypochondriacs who used
it frequently, were subject to flatulencies and spasms,
he seems to have suspected it of some noxious quality.
The circumstances however which gave rise to his suspicion,
may very possibly have proceeded from the imprudence
of his patients, who, trusting too much to magnesia,
(which is properly a palliative in that disease,)
and neglecting the assistance of other remedies, allowed
their disorder to increase upon them. It may
indeed be alledged, that magnesia, as a purgative,
is not the most eligible medicine for such constitutions,
as they agree best with those that strengthen, stimulate
and warm; which the saline purges commonly used are
not observed to do. But there seems at least to
be no objection to its use when children are troubled
with an acid in their stomach; for gentle purging
in this case is very proper, and it is often more
conveniently procured by means of magnesia than
of any other medicine, on account of its being intirely
insipid.
The above-mentioned Author observing,
some time after, that a bitter saline liquor, similar
to that obtained from the brine of salt-petre, was
likewise produced by the evaporation of those waters
which contain common salt, had the curiosity to try
if this would also yield a magnesia. The
experiment succeeded: and he thus found out another
process for obtaining this powder, and at the same
time assured himself by experiments, that the product
from both was exactly the same.
My curiosity led me some time ago
to inquire more particularly into the nature of magnesia,
and especially to compare its properties with those
of the other absorbent earths, of which there plainly
appeared to me to be very different kinds, altho’
commonly confounded together under one name.
I was indeed led to this examination of the absorbent
earths, partly by the hope of discovering a new sort
of lime and lime-water, which might possibly be a
more powerful solvent of the stone than that commonly
used; but was disappointed in my expectations.
I have had no opportunity of seeing
Hoffman’s first magnesia or the
liquor from which it is prepared, and have therefore
been obliged to make my experiments upon the second.
In order to prepare it, I at first
employed the bitter saline liquor called bittern,
which remains in the pans after the evaporation of
sea water. But as that liquor is not always easily
procured, I afterwards made use of a salt called epsom-salt,
which is separated from the bittern by crystallization,
and is evidently composed of magnesia and the
vitriolic acid.
There is likewise a spurious kind
of Glauber salt, which yields plenty of magnesia,
and seems to be no other than the epsom salt of sea
water reduced to crystals of a larger size. And
common salt also affords a small quantity of this
powder; because being separated from the bittern by
one hasty crystallization only, it necessarily contains
a portion of that liquor.
Those who would prepare a magnesia
from epsom-salt, may use the following process.
Dissolve equal quantities of epsom-salt,
and of pearl ashes separately in a sufficient quantity
of water; purify each solution from its dregs, and
mix them accurately together by violent agitation:
then make them just to boil over a brisk fire.
Add now to the mixture three or four
times its quantity of hot water; after a little agitation,
allow the magnesia to settle to the bottom,
and decant off as much of the water as possible.
Pour on the same quantity of cold water; and, after
settling, decant it off in the same manner. Repeat
this washing with the cold water ten or twelve times:
or even oftner, if the magnesia be required
perfectly pure for chemical experiments.
When it is sufficiently washed, the
water may be strained and squeezed from it in a linen
cloth; for very little of the magnesia passes
thro’.
The alkali in the mixture uniting
with the acid, separates it from the magnesia;
which not being of itself soluble in water, must consequently
appear immediately under a solid form. But the
powder which thus appears is not intirely magnesia;
part of it is the neutral salt, formed from the union
of the acid and alkali. This neutral salt is
found, upon examination, to agree in all respects with
vitriolated tartar, and requires a large quantity
of hot water to dissolve it. As much of it is
therefore dissolved as the water can take up; the rest
is dispersed thro’ the mixture in the form of
a powder. Hence the necessity of washing the
magnesia with so much trouble; for the first
affusion of hot water is intended to dissolve the
whole of the salt, and the subsequent additions of
cold water to wash away this solution.
The caution given of boiling the mixture
is not unnecessary; if it be neglected, the whole
of the magnesia is not accurately separated
at once; and by allowing it to rest for some time,
that powder concretes into minute grains, which, when
viewed with the microscope, appear to be assemblages
of needles diverging from a point. This happens
more especially when the solutions of the epsom-salt
and of the alkali are diluted with too much water
before they are mixed together. Thus, if a dram
of epsom-salt and of salt of tartar be dissolved each
in four ounces of water, and be mixed, and then allowed
to rest three or four days, the whole of the magnesia
will be formed into these grains. Or if we filtrate
the mixture soon after it is made, and heat the clear
liquor which passes thro’; it will become turbid,
and deposite a magnesia.
I had the curiosity to satisfy myself
of the purgative power of magnesia, and of
Hoffman’s opinion concerning it, by the
following easy experiment. I made a neutral salt
of magnesia and distilled vinegar; choosing
this acid as being, like that in weak stomachs, the
product of fermentation. Six drams of this I dissolved
in water, and gave to a middle-aged man, desiring
him to take it by degrees. After having taken
about a third, he desisted, and purged four times in
an easy and gentle manner. A woman of a strong
constitution got the remainder as a brisk purgative,
and it operated ten times without causing any uneasiness.
The taste of this salt is not disagreeable, and it
appears to be rather of the cooling than of the acrid
kind.
Having thus given a short sketch of
the history and medical virtues of magnesia,
I now proceed to an account of its chemical properties.
By my first experiments, I intended to learn what
sort of neutral salts might be obtained by joining
it to each of the vulgar acids; and the result was
as follows.
Magnesia is quickly dissolved with
violent effervescence, or explosion of air, by the
acids of vitriol, nitre, and of common salt, and by
distilled vinegar; the neutral saline liquors thence
produced having each their peculiar properties.
That which is made with the vitriolic
acid, may be condensed into crystals similar in all
respects to epsom-salt.
That which is made with the nitrous
is of a yellow colour, and yields saline crystals,
which retain their form in a very dry air, but melt
in a moist one.
That which is produced by means of
spirit of salt, yields no crystals; and if evaporated
to dryness, soon melts again when exposed to the air.
That which is obtained from the union
of distilled vinegar with magnesia, affords
no crystals by evaporation, but is condensed into a
saline mass, which, while warm, is extremely tough
and viscid, very much resembling a strong glue both
in colour and consistence, and becomes brittle when
cold.
By these experiments magnesia
appears to be a substance very different from those
of the calcarious class; under which I would be understood
to comprehend all those that are converted into a
perfect quick-lime in a strong fire, such as lime-stone,
marble, chalk, those spars and
marles which effervesce with aqua fortis, all
animal shells and the bodies called lithophyta.
All of these, by being joined with acids, yield a
set of compounds which are very different from those
we have just now described. Thus, if a small
quantity of any calcarious matter be reduced to a
fine powder and thrown into spirit of vitriol, it is
attacked by this acid with a brisk effervescence; but
little or no dissolution ensues. It absorbs the
acid, and remains united with it in the form of a
white powder, at the bottom of the vessel, while the
liquor has hardly any taste, and shews only a very
light cloud upon the addition of alkali.
The same white powder is also formed
when spirit of vitriol is added to a calcarious earth
dissolved in any other acid; the vitriolic expelling
the other acid, and joining itself to the earth by
a stronger attraction; and upon this account the magnesia
of sea-water seems to be different from either of
those described by Hoffman. He says expressly,
that the solutions of each of his powders, or, what
is equivalent, that the liquors from which they are
obtained, formed a coagulum, and deposited a white
powder, when he added the vitriolic acid; which
experiment I have often tried with the marine bittern,
but without success. The coagulum thus formed
in the mother of nitre may be owing to a quantity
of quick-lime contained in it; for quick-lime is used
in extracting the salt-petre from its matrix.
But it is more difficult to account for the difference
between Hoffman’s bittern and ours, unless
we will be satisfied to refer it to this, that he got
his from the waters of salt springs, which may possibly
be different from those of the sea.
Magnesia is not less remarkably distinguished
from the calcarious earths, by joining it to the nitrous
and vegetable acids, than to the vitriolic. Those
earths, when combined with spirit of nitre, cannot
be reduced to a crystalline form, and if they are
dissolved in distilled vinegar, the mixture spontaneously
dries up into a friable salt.
Having thus found magnesia
to differ from the common alkaline earths, the object
of my next inquiry was its peculiar degree of attraction
for acids, or what was the place due to it in Mr.
Geoffroy’s table of elective attractions.
Three drams of magnesia in
fine powder, an ounce of salt ammoniac, and six ounces
of water were mixed together, and digested six days
in a retort joined to a receiver.
During the whole time, the neck of
the retort was pointed a little upwards, and the most
watery part of the vapour, which was condensed there,
fell back into its body. In the beginning of the
experiment, a volatile salt was therefore collected
in a dry form in the receiver, and afterwards dissolved
into spirit.
When all was cool, I found in the
retort a saline liquor, some undissolved magnesia,
and some salt ammoniac crystallized. The saline
liquor was separated from the other two, and then mixed
with the alkaline spirit. A coagulum was immediately
formed, and a magnesia precipitated from the
mixture.
The magnesia which had remained
in the retort, when well washed and dried, weighed
two scruples and fifteen grains.
We learn by the latter part of this
experiment, that the attraction of the volatile alkali
for acids is stronger than that of magnesia,
since it separated this powder from the acid to which
it was joined. But it also appears, that a gentle
heat is capable of overcoming this superiority of
attraction, and of gradually elevating the alkali,
while it leaves the less volatile acid with the magnesia.
Dissolve a dram of any calcarious
substance in the acid of nitre or of common salt,
taking care that the solution be rendered perfectly
neutral, or that no superfluous acid be added.
Mix with this solution a dram of magnesia in
fine powder, and digest it in the heat of boiling
water about twenty four hours; then dilute the mixture
with double its quantity of water, and filtrate.
The greatest part of the earth now left in the filtre
is calcarious, and the liquor which passed thro’,
if mixed with a dissolved alkali, yields a white powder,
the largest portion of which is a true magnesia.
From this experiment it appears, that
an acid quits a calcarious earth to join itself to
magnesia; but the exchange being performed slowly,
some of the magnesia is still undissolved, and
part of the calcarious earth remains yet joined to
the acid.
When a small quantity of magnesia
is thrown into a solution of the corrosive sublimate
of mercury, it soon separates part of the mercury in
the form of a dark red powder, and is itself dissolved.
Imagining that I perceived some resemblance
between the properties of magnesia and those
of alkalis, I was led to try what change this substance
would suffer from the addition of quick-lime, which
alters in such a peculiar manner the alkaline salts.
Twenty seven grains of magnesia
in fine powder were mixed with eighteen ounces of
lime-water in a flask, which was corked close and
shaken frequently for four days. During this time,
I frequently dipp’d into it little bits of paper,
which were coloured with the juice of violets; and
these became green as soon as they touched the water,
until the fourth day, when their colour did not seem
to be altered. The water being now poured off,
was intirely insipid, and agreed in every chemical
trial with pure water. The powder, after being
perfectly well dried, weighed thirty seven grains.
It did not dissolve intirely in spirit of vitriol;
but, after a brisk effervescence, part of it subsided
in the same manner as the calcarious earths, when mixed
with this acid.
When I first tried this experiment,
I was at the trouble of digesting the mixture in the
heat of boiling water, and did not then know that it
would succeed in the heat of the air. But Dr.
Alston, who has obliged the world with many
curious and useful discoveries on the subject of quick-lime,
having had occasion to repeat it, I learned from him
that heat is not necessary; and he has moreover added
an useful purpose to which this property of magnesia
may be applied; I mean the sweetening of water at
sea, with which lime may have been mixed to prevent
its putrefaction.
That part of the dried powder which
does not dissolve in spirit of vitriol, consists of
the lime separated from the water.
Quick-lime itself is also rendered
mild by magnesia, if these two are well rubbed
together and infused with a small quantity of water.
By the following experiments, I proposed
to know whether this substance could be reduced to
a quick-lime.
An ounce of magnesia was exposed
in a crucible for about an hour to such a heat as
is sufficient to melt copper. When taken out,
it weighed three drams and one scruple, or had lost
7/12 of its former weight.
I repeated, with the magnesia
prepared in this manner, most of those experiments
I had already made upon it before calcination, and
the result was as follows.
It dissolves in all the acids, and
with these composes salts exactly similar to those
described in the first set of experiments: but
what is particularly to be remarked, it is dissolved
without any the least degree of effervescence.
It slowly precipitates the corrosive
sublimate of mercury in the form of a black powder.
It separates the volatile alkali in
salt ammoniac from the acid, when it is mixed with
a warm solution of that salt. But it does not
separate an acid from a calcarious earth, nor does
it induce the least change upon lime-water.
Lastly, when a dram of it is digested
with an ounce of water in a bottle for some hours,
it does not make any the least change in the water.
The magnesia, when dried, is found to have
gained ten grains; but it neither effervesces with
acids, nor does it sensibly affect lime-water.
Observing magnesia to lose
such a remarkable proportion of its weight in the
fire, my next attempts were directed to the investigation
of this volatile part, and, among other experiments,
the following seemed to throw some light upon it.
Three ounces of magnesia were
distilled in a glass retort and receiver, the fire
being gradually increased until the magnesia
was obscurely red hot. When all was cool, I found
only five drams of a whitish water in the receiver,
which had a faint smell of the spirit of hartshorn,
gave a green colour to the juice of violets, and rendered
the solutions of corrosive sublimate and of silver
very slightly turbid. But it did not sensibly
effervesce with acids.
The magnesia, when taken out
of the retort, weighed an ounce, three drams, and
thirty grains, or had lost more than the half of its
weight. It still effervesced pretty briskly with
acids, tho’ not so strongly as before this operation.
The fire should have been raised here
to the degree requisite for the perfect calcination
of magnesia. But even from this imperfect
experiment, it is evident, that of the volatile parts
contained in that powder, a small proportion only
is water; the rest cannot, it seems, be retained in
vessels, under a visible form. Chemists have often
observed, in their distillations, that part of a body
has vanished from their senses, notwithstanding the
utmost care to retain it; and they have always found,
upon further inquiry, that subtile part to be air,
which having been imprisoned in the body, under a
solid form, was set free and rendered fluid and elastic
by the fire. We may therefore safely conclude,
that the volatile matter, lost in the calcination of
magnesia, is mostly air; and hence the calcined
magnesia does not emit air, or make an effervescence,
when mixed with acids.
The water, from its properties, seems
to contain a small portion of volatile alkali, which
was probably formed from the earth, air, and water,
or from some of these combined together; and perhaps
also from a small quantity of inflammable matter which
adhered accidentally to the magnesia.
Whenever Chemists meet with this salt, they are inclined
to ascribe its origin to some animal, or putrid vegetable,
substance; and this they have always done, when they
obtained it from the calcarious earths, all of which
afford a small quantity of it. There is, however,
no doubt that it can sometimes be produced independently
of any such mixture, since many fresh vegetables and
tartar afford a considerable quantity of it.
And how can it, in the present instance, be supposed,
that any animal or vegetable matter adhered to the
magnesia, while it was dissolved by an acid,
separated from this by an alkali, and washed with
so much water?
Two drams of magnesia were
calcined in a crucible, in the manner described above,
and thus reduced to two scruples and twelve grains.
This calcined magnesia was dissolved in a sufficient
quantity of spirit of vitriol, and then again separated
from the acid by the addition of an alkali, of which
a large quantity is necessary for this purpose.
The magnesia being very well washed and dryed,
weighed one dram and fifty grains. It effervesced
violently, or emitted a large quantity of air, when
thrown into acids, formed a red powder when mixed
with a solution of sublimate, separated the calcarious
earths from an acid, and sweetened lime-water:
and had thus recovered all those properties which
it had but just now lost by calcination: nor had
it only recovered its original properties, but acquired
besides an addition of weight nearly equal to what
had been lost in the fire; and, as it is found to
effervesce with acids, part of the addition must certainly
be air.
This air seems to have been furnished
by the alkali from which it was separated by the acid;
for Dr. Hales has clearly proved, that alkaline
salts contain a large quantity of fixed air, which
they emit in great abundance when joined to a pure
acid. In the present case, the alkali is really
joined to an acid, but without any visible emission
of air; and yet the air is not retained in it:
for the neutral salt, into which it is converted,
is the same in quantity, and in every other respect,
as if the acid employed had not been previously saturated
with magnesia, but offered to the alkali in
its pure state, and had driven the air out of it in
their conflict. It seems therefore evident, that
the air was forced from the alkali by the acid, and
lodged itself in the magnesia.
These considerations led me to try
a few experiments, whereby I might know what quantity
of air is expelled from an alkali, or from magnesia,
by acids.
Two drams of a pure fixed alkaline
salt, and an ounce of water, were put into a Florentine
flask, which, together with its contents, weighed two
ounces and two drams. Some oil of vitriol diluted
with water was dropt in, until the salt was exactly
saturated; which it was found to be, when two drams,
two scruples, and three grains of this acid had been
added. The vial with its contents now weighed
two ounces, four drams, and fifteen grains. One
scruple, therefore, and eight grains were lost during
the ebullition, of which a trifling portion may be
water, or something of the same kind. The rest
is air.
The celebrated Homberg has
attempted to estimate the quantity of solid salt contained
in a determined portion of the several acids.
He saturated equal quantities of an alkali with each
of them; and, observing the weight which the alkali
had gained, after being perfectly dryed, took this
for the quantity of solid salt contained in that share
of the acid which performed the saturation. But
we learn from the above experiment, that his estimate
was not accurate, because the alkali loses weight
as well as gains it.
Two drams of magnesia, treated
exactly as the alkali in the last experiment, were
just dissolved by four drams, one scruple, and seven
grains of the same acid liquor, and lost one scruple
and sixteen grains by the ebullition.
Two drams of magnesia were
reduced, by the action of a violent fire, to two scruples
and twelve grains, with which the same process was
repeated, as in the two last experiments; four drams,
one scruple, and two grains of the same acid were
required to compleat the solution, and no weight was
lost in the experiment.
As in the separation of the volatile
from the fixed parts of bodies, by means of heat,
a small quantity of the latter is generally raised
with the former; so the air and water, originally
contained in the magnesia, and afterwards dissipated
by the fire, seem to have carried off a small part
of the fixed earth of this substance. This is
probably the reason, why calcined magnesia
is saturated with a quantity of acid, somewhat less
than what is required to dissolve it before calcination:
and the same may be assigned as one cause which hinders
us from restoring the whole of its original weight,
by solution and precipitation.
I took care to dilute the vitriolic
acid, in order to avoid the heat and ebullition which
it would otherwise have excited in the water; and I
chose a Florentine flask, on account of its lightness,
capacity, and shape, which is peculiarly adapted to
the experiment; for the vapours raised by the ebullition
circulated for a short time, thro’ the wide
cavity of the vial, but were soon collected upon its
sides, like dew, and none of them seemed to reach
the neck, which continued perfectly dry to the end
of the experiment.
We now perceive the reason, why crude
and calcined magnesia, which differ in many
respects from one another, agree however in composing
the same kind of salt, when dissolved in any particular
acid; for the crude magnesia seems to differ
from the calcined chiefly by containing a considerable
quantity of air, which air is unavoidably dissipated
and lost during the dissolution.
From our experiments, it seems probable,
that the increase of weight which some metals acquire,
by being first dissolved in acids, and then separated
from them again by alkalis, proceeds from air furnished
by the alkalis. And that in the aurum fulminans,
which is prepared by the same means, this air adheres
to the gold in such a peculiar manner, that, in a
moderate degree of heat, the whole of it recovers its
elasticity in the same instant of time; and thus, by
the violent shock which it gives to the air around,
produces the loud crack or fulmination of this powder.
Those who will imagine the explosion of such a minute
portion of fixed air, as can reside in the aurum
fulminans, to be insufficient for the excessive
loudness of the noise, will consider, that it is not
a large quantity of motion communicated to the air,
but rather a smart stroke which produces sound, and
that the explosion of but a few particles of fixed
air may be capable of causing a loud noise, provided
they all recover their spring suddenly, and in the
same instant.
The above experiments lead us also
to conclude, that volatile alkalis, and the common
absorbent earths, which lose their air by being joined
to acids, but shew evident signs of their having recovered
it, when separated from them by alkalis, received
it from these alkalis which lost it in the instant
of their joining with the acid.
The following are a few experiments
upon three of the absorbent earths, made in order
to compare them with one another, and with magnesia.
Suspecting that magnesia might
possibly be no other than a common calcarious earth,
which had changed its nature, by having been previously
combined with an acid, I saturated a small quantity
of chalk with the muriatic acid, separated the acid
from it again by means of a fixed alkali, and carefully
washed away the whole of the salt.
The chalk when dryed was not found
to have suffered any alteration; for it effervesced
with the vitriolic acid, but did not dissolve in it;
and when exposed to a violent fire, was converted
into a quick-lime, in all respects similar to that
obtained from common chalk.
In another experiment of the same
kind, I used the vitriolic acid with the same event.
Any calcarious matter reduced to a
fine powder, and thrown into a warm solution of alum,
immediately raises a brisk effervescence. But
the powder is not dissolved; it is rather increased
in bulk: and if the addition be repeated until
it is no longer accompanied with effervescence, the
liquor loses all taste of the alum, and yields only
a very light cloud upon the admixture of an alkali.
From this experiment we learn, that
acids attract the calcarious earths more strongly
than they do the earth of alum; and as the acid in
this salt is exactly the same with the vitriolic,
it composes with the calcarious earth a neutral substance,
which is very difficultly soluble in water, and therefore
falls down to the bottom of the vessel along with
the earth of alum which is deprived of its acid.
The light cloud formed by the alkali proceeds from
the minute portion of the calcarious compound which
saturates the water.
The earth of animal bones, when reduced
to a fine powder and thrown into a diluted vitriolic
acid, gradually absorbs the acid in the same manner
as the calcarious earths, but without any remarkable
effervescence. When it is added to the nitrous
or to the muriatic acid, it is slowly dissolved.
The compound liquor thence produced is extremely acrid,
and still changes the colour of the juice of violets
to a red, even after it is fully saturated with the
absorbent. Distilled vinegar has little or no
effect upon this earth; for after a long digestion
it still retains its sour taste, and gives only a
light cloud upon the addition of an alkali.
By dropping a dissolved fixed alkali
into a warm solution of alum, I obtained the earth
of this salt, which, after being well washed and dried,
was found to have the following properties.
It is dissolved in every acid but
very slowly, unless assisted by heat. The several
solutions, when thoroughly saturated, are all astringent
with a slight degree of an acid taste, and they also
agree with a solution of alum in this, that they give
a red colour to the infusion of turnsol.
Neither this earth, nor that of animal
bones, can be converted into quick-lime by the strongest
fire, nor do they suffer any change worth notice.
Both of them seem to attract acids but weakly, and
to alter their properties less when united to them
than the other absorbents.
PART II
In reflecting afterwards upon these
experiments, an explication of the nature of lime
offered itself, which seemed to account, in an easy
manner, for most of the properties of that substance.
It is sufficiently clear, that the
calcarious earths in their native state, and that
the alkalis and magnesia in their ordinary condition,
contain a large quantity of fixed air, and this air
certainly adheres to them with considerable force,
since a strong fire is necessary to separate it from
magnesia, and the strongest is not sufficient to expel
it entirely from fixed alkalis, or take away their
power of effervescing with acid salts.
These considerations led me to conclude,
that the relations between fixed air and alkaline
substances was somewhat similar to the relation between
these and acids; that as the calcarious earths and
alkalis attract acids strongly and can be saturated
with them, so they also attract fixed air, and are
in their ordinary state saturated with it: and
when we mix an acid with an alkali or with an absorbent
earth, that the air is then set at liberty, and breaks
out with violence; because the alkaline body attracts
it more weakly than it does the acid, and because
the acid and air cannot both be joined to the same
body at the same time.
I also imagined, that, when the calcarious
earths are exposed to the action of a violent fire,
and are thereby converted into quick-lime, they suffer
no other change in their composition than the loss
of a small quantity of water and of their fixed air.
The remarkable acrimony which we perceive in them
after this process, was not supposed to proceed from
any additional matter received in the fire, but seemed
to be an essential property of the pure earth, depending
on an attraction for those several substances which
it then became capable of corroding or dissolving,
which attraction had been insensible as long as the
air adhered to the earth, but discovered itself upon
the separation.
This supposition was founded upon
an observation of the most frequent consequences of
combining bodies in chemistry. Commonly when we
join two bodies together, their acrimony or attraction
for other substances becomes immediately either less
perceivable or entirely insensible; altho’ it
was sufficiently strong and remarkable before their
union, and may be rendered evident again by disjoining
them. A neutral salt, which is composed of an
acid and alkali, does not possess the acrimony of
either of its constituent parts. It can easily
be separated from water, has little or no effect upon
metals, is incapable of being joined to inflammable
bodies, and of corroding and dissolving animals and
vegetables; so that the attraction both of the acid
and alkali for these several substances seems to be
suspended till they are again separated from one another.
Crude lime was therefore considered
as a peculiar acrid earth rendered mild by its union
with fixed air: and quick-lime as the same earth,
in which, by having separated the air, we discover
that acrimony or attraction for water, for animal,
vegetable, and for inflammable substances.
That the calcarious earths really
lose a large quantity of air when they are burnt to
quick-lime, seems sufficiently proved by an experiment
of Mr. Margraaf, an exceedingly accurate
and judicious Chemist. He subjected eight ounces
of osteocolla to distillation in an earthen
retort, finishing his process with the most violent
fire of a reverberatory, and caught in the receiver
only two drams of water, which by its smell and properties
shewed itself to be slightly alkaline. He does
not tell us the weight of the osteocolla remaining
in the retort, and only says, that it was converted
into quick-lime; but as no calcarious earth can be
converted into quick-lime, or bear the heat which
he applied without losing above a third of its weight,
we may safely conclude, that the loss in his experiment
was proportional, and proceeded chiefly from the dissipation
of fixed air.
According to our theory, the relation
of the calcarious earth to air and water appeared
to agree with the relation of the same earth to the
vitriolic and vegetable acids. As chalk for instance
has a stronger attraction for the vitriolic than for
the vegetable acid, and is dissolved with more difficulty
when combined with the first, than when joined to
the second: so it also attracts air more strongly
than water, and is dissolved with more difficulty
when saturated with air than when compounded with
water only.
A calcarious earth deprived of its
air, or in the state of quick-lime, greedily absorbs
a considerable quantity of water, becomes soluble in
that fluid, and is then said to be slaked; but as soon
as it meets with fixed air, it is supposed to quit
the water and join itself to the air, for which it
has a superior attraction, and is therefore restored
to its first state of mildness and insolubility in
water.
When slaked lime is mixed with water,
the fixed air in the water is attracted by the lime,
and saturates a small portion of it, which then becomes
again incapable of dissolution, but part of the remaining
slaked lime is dissolved and composes lime-water.
If this fluid be exposed to the open
air, the particles of quick-lime which are nearest
the surface gradually attract the particles of fixed
air which float in the atmosphere. But at the
same time that a particle of lime is thus saturated
with air, it is also restored to its native state
of mildness and insolubility; and as the whole of this
change must happen at the surface, the whole of the
lime is successively collected there under its original
form of an insipid calcarious earth, called the cream
or crusts of lime-water.
When quick-lime itself is exposed
to the open air, it absorbs the particles of water
and of fixed air which come within its sphere of attraction,
as it meets with the first of these in greatest plenty,
the greatest part of it assumes the form of slaked
lime; the rest is restored to its original state;
and if it be exposed for a sufficient length of time,
the whole of it is gradually saturated with air, to
which the water as gradually yields its place.
We have already shown by experiment,
that magnesia alba is a compound of a peculiar earth
and fixed air. When this substance is mixed with
lime-water, the lime shews a stronger attraction for
fixed air than that of the earth of magnesia; the
air leaves this powder to join itself to the lime.
And as neither the lime when saturated with air, nor
the magnesia when deprived of it, are soluble in water,
the lime-water becomes perfectly pure and insipid,
the lime which it contained being mixed with the magnesia.
But if the magnesia be deprived of air by calcination
before it is mixed with the lime-water, this fluid
suffers no alteration.
If quick-lime be mixed with a dissolved
alkali, it likeways shews an attraction for fixed
air superior to that of the alkali. It robs this
salt of its air, and thereby becomes mild itself, while
the alkali is consequently rendered more corrosive,
or discovers its natural degree of acrimony or strong
attraction for water, and for bodies of the inflammable,
and of the animal and vegetable kind; which attraction
was less perceivable as long as it was saturated with
air. And the volatile alkali when deprived of
its air, besides this attraction for various bodies,
discovers likeways its natural degree of volatility,
which was formerly somewhat repressed by the air adhering
to it, in the same manner as it is repressed by the
addition of an acid.
This account of lime and alkalis recommended
itself by its simplicity, and by affording an easy
solution of many phaenomena, but appeared upon
a nearer view to be attended with consequences that
were so very new and extraordinary, as to render suspicious
the principles from which they were drawn.
I resolved however to examine, in
a particular manner, such of these consequences as
were the most unavoidable, and found the greatest number
of them might be reduced to the following propositions:
I. If we only separate a quantity of
air from lime and alkalis, when we render them
caustic they will be found to lose part of their
weight in the operation, but will saturate the same
quantity of acid as before, and the saturation
will be performed without effervescence.
II. If quick-lime be no other
than a calcarious earth deprived of its air,
and whose attraction for fixed air is stronger than
that of alkalis, it follows, that, by adding
to it a sufficient quantity of alkali saturated
with air, the lime will recover the whole of its
air, and be entirely restored to its original weight
and condition: and it also follows, that
the earth separated from lime-water by an alkali,
is the lime which was dissolved in the water
now restored to its original mild and insoluble state.
III. If it be supposed that slaked
lime does not contain any parts which are more firey, active or subtile than others, and by which
chiefly it communicates its virtues to water;
but that it is an uniform compound of lime and
water: it follows, that, as part of it can
be dissolved in water, the whole of it is also capable
of being dissolved.
IV. If the acrimony of the caustic
alkali does not depend on any part of the lime
adhering to it, a caustic or soap-ley will consequently
be found to contain no lime, unless the quantity of
lime employed in making it were greater than what
is just sufficient to extract the whole air of
the alkali; for then as much of the superfluous
quick-lime might possibly be dissolved by the ley
as would be dissolved by pure water, or the ley would
contain as much lime as lime-water does.
V. We have shewn in the former experiments,
that absorbent earths lose their air when they
are joined to an acid; but recover it, if separated
again from that acid, by means of an ordinary alkali:
the air passing from the alkali to the earth,
at the same time that the acid passes from the
earth to the alkali.
If the caustic alkali therefore be
destitute of air, it will separate magnesia from an
acid under the form of a magnesia free of air, or which
will not effervesce with acids; and the same caustic
alkali will also separate a calcarious earth from
acids under the form of a calcarious earth destitute
of air, but saturated with water, or under the form
of slaked lime.
These were all necessary conclusions
from the above suppositions. Many of them appeared
too improbable to deserve any further attention:
some however, I found upon reflection, were already
seconded by experience. Thus Hoffman has
observed, that quick-lime does not effervesce with
spirit of vitriol; and it is well known that the
caustic spirit of urine, or of salt ammoniac, does
not emit air, when mixed with acids. This consideration
excited my curiosity, and determined me to inquire
into the truth of them all by way of experiment.
I therefore engaged myself in a set of trials; the
history of which is here subjoined. Some new
facts are likeways occasionally mentioned; and here
it will be proper to inform the reader, that I have
never mentioned any without satisfying myself of their
truth by experiment, tho’ I have sometimes taken
the liberty to neglect describing the experiments when
they seemed sufficiently obvious.
Desiring to know how much of an acid
a calcarious earth will absorb, and what quantity
of air is expelled during the dissolution, I saturated
two drams of chalk with diluted spirit of salt, and
used the Florentine flask, as related in a similar
experiment upon magnesia. Seven drams and one
grain of the acid finished the dissolution, and the
chalk lost two scruples and eight grains of air.
This experiment was necessary before
the following, by which I proposed to inquire into
the truth of the first proposition so far as it relates
to quick-lime.
Two drams of chalk were converted
into a perfect quick-lime, and lost two scruples and
twelve grains in the fire. This quick-lime was
slaked or reduced to a milky liquor with an ounce
of water, and then dissolved in the same manner, and
with the same acid, as the two drams of chalk in the
preceding experiment. Six drams, two scruples
and fourteen grains of the acid finished the saturation
without any sensible effervescence or loss of weight.
It therefore appears from these experiments,
that no air is separated from quick-lime by an acid,
and that chalk saturates nearly the same quantity
of acid after it is converted into quick-lime as before.
With respect to the second proposition,
I tried the following experiments.
A piece of perfect quick-lime made
from two drams of chalk, and which weighed one dram
and eight grains, was reduced to a very fine powder,
and thrown into a filtrated mixture of an ounce of
a fixed alkaline salt and two ounces of water.
After a slight digestion, the powder being well washed
and dried, weighed one dram and fifty eight grains.
It was similar in every trial to a fine powder of
ordinary chalk, and was therefore saturated with air
which must have been furnished by the alkali.
A dram of pure salt of tartar was
dissolved in fourteen pounds of lime-water, and the
powder thereby precipitated, being carefully collected
and dried, weighed one and fifty grains. When
exposed to a violent fire, it was converted into a
true quick-lime, and had every other quality of a
calcarious earth.
This experiment was repeated with
the volatile alkali, and also with the fossil or alkali
of sea-salt, and exactly with the same event.
The third proposition had less appearance
of probability than the foregoing; but, as an accurate
experiment was the only test of its truth, I reduced
eight grains of perfect quick-lime made of chalk, to
an exceedingly subtile powder, by slaking it in two
drams of distilled water boiling hot, and immediately
threw the mixture into eighteen ounces of distilled
water in a flask. After shaking it, a light sediment,
which floated thro’ the liquor, was allowed to
subside and this, when collected with the greatest
care, and dryed, weighed, as nearly as I could guess,
one third of a grain. The water tasted strongly
of the lime, had all the qualities of lime-water, and
yielded twelve grains of precipitate, upon the addition
of salt of tartar. In repeating this experiment,
the quantity of sediment was sometimes less than the
above, and sometimes amounted to half a grain.
It consisted partly of an earth which effervesced
violently with aqua fortis, and partly of an
ochry powder, which would not dissolve in that acid.
The ochry powder, as it usually appears in chalk to
the eye, in the form of veins running thro’
its substance, must be considered only as an accidental
or foreign admixture; and, with respect to the minute
portion of alkaline earth which composed the remainder
of the sediment, it cannot be supposed to have been
originally different from the rest, and incapable,
from its nature, of being converted into quick-lime,
or of being dissolved in water; it seems rather to
have consisted of a small part of the chalk in its
mild state, or saturated with air, which had either
remained, for want of a sufficient fire to drive it
out entirely, or had been furnished by the distilled
water.
I indeed expected to see a much larger
quantity of sediment produced from the lime, on account
of the air which water constantly contains, and with
a view to know whether water retains its air when fully
saturated with lime, a lime-water was made as strong
as possible; four ounces of which were placed under
the receiver of an air-pump, together with four ounces
of common water in a vial of the same size; and, upon
exhausting the receiver, without heating the vials,
the air arose from each in nearly the same quantity:
from whence it is evident, that the air, which quick-lime
attracts, is of a different kind from that which is
mixed with water. And that it is also different
from common elastic air, is sufficiently proved by
daily experience; for lime-water, which soon attracts
air, and forms a crust when exposed in open and shallow
vessels, may be preserved, for any time, in bottles
which are but slightly corked, or closed in such a
manner as would allow free access to elastic air,
were a vacuum formed in the bottle. Quick-lime
therefore does not attract air when in its most ordinary
form, but is capable of being joined to one particular
species only, which is dispersed thro’ the atmosphere,
either in the shape of an exceedingly subtile powder,
or more probably in that of an elastic fluid.
To this I have given the name of fixed air, and perhaps
very improperly; but I thought it better to use a
word already familiar in philosophy, than to invent
a new name, before we be more fully acquainted with
the nature and properties of this substance, which
will probably be the subject of my further inquiry.
It is, perhaps, needless to mention
here, that the calcarious substances used in making
the above experiments should be of the purest kind,
and burnt with the utmost violence of heat, if we
would be sure of converting them into perfect quick-lime.
I therefore made use of chalk burnt in a small covered
crucible with the fiercest fire of a Black-smith’s
forge, for half an hour, and found it necessary to
employ, for this purpose, a crucible of the Austrian
kind, which resemble black lead; for if any calcarious
substance be heated to such a degree in an ordinary
or Hessian crucible, the whole of it is melted
down, together with part of the vessel, into glass.
I now prepared to inquire into the
properties of the caustic alkali; in order to which,
I made a caustic or soap ley in the following manner.
Twenty six ounces of very strong quick-lime
made of chalk, were slaked or reduced to a sort of
fluid paste, with eleven pounds of boiling water,
and then mixed in a glass vessel with eighteen ounces
of a pure fixed alkaline salt, which had been first
dissolved in two pounds and a half of water.
This mixture was shaken frequently for two hours, when
the action of the lime upon the alkali was supposed
to be over, and nothing remained but to separate them
again from one another. I therefore added 12
pounds of water, stirred up the lime, and, after allowing
it to settle again, poured off as much of the clear
ley as possible.
The lime and alkali were mixed together
under the form of a very thick milky liquor or fluid
paste; because they are thus kept in perpetual contact
and equal mixture until they have acted sufficiently
upon one another: whereas in the common way of
using a larger quantity of water, the lime lies for
the most part at bottom, and, tho’ stirred up
ever so often, cannot exert its influence so fully
upon the alkali, which is uniformly diffused thro’
every part of the liquor.
The above ley was found upon trial
to be saturated by acids without the least effervescence
or diminution of weight.
It was now proper to examine whether
the alkali suffered any loss in becoming caustic,
which I proposed to attempt by ascertaining the strength
of the ley, or the quantity of salt which a given portion
of it contained; from which by computation some imperfect
knowledge might be obtained of the quantity of caustic
produced from the eighteen ounces of mild salt.
I therefore evaporated some of my
ley, but soon perceived that no certain judgment could
be formed of its strength in this way, because it
always absorbed a considerable quantity of air during
the evaporation, and the dried salt made a pretty
brisk effervescence with acids, so that the ley appeared
stronger than it really was; and yet, upon proceeding
in the estimate from this rude and unfair trial, it
appeared that the salt had lost above a sixth in becoming
caustic, and the quantity of acid saturated by two
drams of it was to the quantity of acid saturated
by two drams of salt of tartar, nearly as six to five.
These experiments are therefore agreeable
to that part of the second proposition which relates
to the caustic alkali.
Upon farther examining what changes
the alkali had undergone, I found that the ley gave
only an exceeding faint milky hue to lime-water; because
the caustic alkali wants that air by which salt of
tartar precipitates the lime. When a few ounces
of it were exposed in an open shallow vessel for four
and twenty hours, it imbibed a small quantity of air,
and made a slight effervescence with acids. After
a fortnight’s exposure in the same manner, it
became entirely mild, effervesced as violently with
acids, and had the same effect upon lime-water as a
solution of an ordinary alkali. It likeways agrees
with lime-water in this respect, that it may be kept
in close vessels, or even in bottles which are but
slightly covered, for a considerable time, without
absorbing a sensible quantity of air.
In order to know how much lime it
contained, I evaporated ten ounces in a small silver
dish over a lamp, and melted the salt, after having
dissipated the water.
The caustic thus produced was dissolved
again in a small quantity of water, and deposited
a trifling portion of sediment, which I imagined at
first to be lime; but finding that it could easily
be dissolved in a little more water, concluded it
to be a vitriolated tartar, which always accompanies
the fixed alkali of vegetables.
I then saturated the solution of the
caustic salt with spirit of vitriol, expecting thus
to detect the lime; because that acid precipitates
a calcarious earth from its ordinary solutions.
During the saturation, a large quantity of white powder
was formed; but this likeways turned out to be a vitriolated
tartar, which had appeared in the form of a powder,
because there was not enough of water in the mixture
to dissolve it.
Lastly, I exposed a few ounces of
the ley in an open shallow vessel so long, that the
alkali lost the whole of its causticity, and seemed
entirely restored to the state of an ordinary fixed
alkali; but it did not however deposite a single atom
of lime. And to assure myself that my caustic
ley was not of a singular kind, I repeated the same
experiments with an ordinary soap-ley, and with one
made by mixing one part of a pure fixed alkaline salt
with three parts of common stone lime fresh slaked
and sifted; nor could I discover any lime in either.
The first of these contained a small quantity of brimstone,
and was far from being perfectly caustic, for it made
a pretty brisk effervescence with acids; but the last
was so entirely deprived of its air, that it did not
diminish in the least the transparency of lime-water.
These experiments seem therefore to
support the fourth proposition, and to shew that the
caustic alkali does not contain any lime.
As it seems probable, from the quickness
and ease wherewith the alkali was rendered caustic,
that more lime had been employed than what was just
sufficient to extract the whole of its air, we are
surprised to find that little or none of the superfluous
quick-lime was dissolved by the water. But this
phaenomenon will become less surprizing, by
comparing it with some similar instances in chemistry.
Water may be made to deposite a salt, by the admixture
of a substance which it attracts more strongly than
it does that salt; such as spirit of wine; and quick-lime
itself may be separated from water upon the same principle;
for if that spirit is added to an equal quantity of
lime-water, the mixture becomes turbid and deposites
a sediment, which, when separated and dissolved again
in distilled water, composes lime-water. We may
therefore refer the above phaenomenon, with
respect to the ley, to the same cause with these,
and say, that the water did not dissolve the lime,
because it already contained a caustic alkali, for
which it has a superior attraction.
I also rendered the volatile alkali
caustic, in order to examine what change it suffered
in the operation, and obtained an exceedingly volatile
and acrid spirit, which neither effervesced with acids,
nor altered in the least the transparency of lime-water;
and, altho’ very strong, was lighter than water,
and floated upon it like spirit of wine.
I next inquired into the truth of
the fifth proposition, in the following manner.
Two drams of epsom-salt were dissolved
in a small quantity of water, and thrown into two
ounces of the caustic-ley; the mixture instantly became
thick, like a decoction of starch or barley, by the
magnesia, which was precipitated. I then added
spirit of vitriol by degrees, until the mixture became
perfectly clear, or the whole of the magnesia was again
dissolved; which happened without any effervescence
or emission of air.
Half an ounce of chalk was dissolved
in spirit of salt, the quantity of which was so adjusted,
that the mixture was not acid in the least degree;
and the solution was thrown into twelve ounces of the
caustic ley; which quantity I found, by experiment,
to be sufficient for precipitating almost the whole
of the chalk. I now filtrated this turbid liquor,
and laid the powder remaining in the paper upon a chalk-stone,
in order to draw as much of the water from it as possible,
and thereby reduce it to the form of a more dense
and heavy powder, that it might subside the more perfectly
in the following part of the experiment. I then
mixed it with about twenty ounces of pure water in
a flask, and, after allowing the powder to subside,
poured off the water, which had all the qualities
of lime-water. And I successively converted eight
waters more into lime-water, seven of these in the
same quantity, and with the same management, as the
first. The eighth was likeways in the same quantity;
but I allowed it to remain with the chalk, and shook
it frequently, for two days. This, after being
filtrated, formed a cream or crust upon its surface
when exposed to the air; changed the colour of the
juice of violets into green; separated an orange-coloured
powder from a solution of corrosive sublimate; became
turbid upon the addition of an alkali; was entirely
sweetened by magnesia; and appeared so strong to the
taste, that I could not have distinguished it from
ordinary lime-water. And when I threw some salt
ammoniac into the lime which remained, the vapour
of the volatile alkali immediately arose from the
mixture.
In this experiment therefore the air
is first driven out of the chalk by an acid, and then,
in order to separate this acid from it, we add an
alkali which has been previously deprived of its air;
by which means, the chalk itself is also obtained
free of air, and in an acrid form, or in the form
of slaked lime.
We have also several processes for
obtaining the volatile alkali in a caustic form, which
seem to be only so many methods of obtaining it in
its pure state, and free of fixed air. The first
of these is the separation of the alkali from an acid,
merely by heat; an instance of which we have from
Mr. Margraaf. He prepared from urine an
ammoniacal salt, the acid of which is the basis of
the phosphorus, and is of such a peculiar nature,
that it endures a red heat without being dissipated.
Sixteen ounces of the neutral salt were subjected by
him to distillation. The acid remained in the
retort, and he found in the receiver eight ounces
of an alkaline spirit, which, he tells us, was extremely
volatile, very much resembling the spirit of salt ammoniac
distilled with quick-lime; and no crystals were formed
in it, when exposed to the cold air.
A caustic volatile alkali may also
be obtained, by mixing salt ammoniac with half its
weight of a caustic fixed alkali, or of magnesia which
has been previously deprived of its air by fire; and
then submitting these mixtures to distillation:
Or merely by adding any ordinary volatile alkali to
a proper quantity of a caustic ley; for in this case
the air passes from the volatile to the fixed alkali,
by a superior attraction for the last, and, by a gentle
heat, the compound yields a spirit similar to that
prepared from salt ammoniac and quick-lime.
It is therefore probable, that, had
we also a method of separating the fixed alkali from
an acid, without, at the same time, saturating it with
air, we should then obtain it in a caustic form; but
I am not acquainted with an instance of this separation
in chemistry. There are two indeed which, at
first sight, appear to be of this kind; these are the
separation of the fixed alkali from the nitrous acid
by means of inflamed charcoal, in the process for
making nitrum fixatum, and of the same alkali,
from vegetable acids merely by heat; but, upon examining
the product of each process, we find the alkali either
fully or nearly saturated with air. In the first,
either the charcoal or the acid, or both together,
are almost wholly converted into air; a part of which
is probably joined to the alkali. In the second,
the acid is not properly separated, but rather destroyed
by the fire: a considerable portion of it is
converted into an inflammable substance and we learn
from Dr. Hales, that the bodies of this class
contain a large quantity of fixed air.
When we consider that the attraction
of alkalis for fixed air is weaker than that of the
calcarious earths, and reflect upon the effects of
heat in chemistry, we are led to imagine, that alkalis
might be entirely deprived of their air, or rendered
perfectly caustic, by a fire somewhat weaker than
that which is sufficient to produce the same change
upon lime; but this opinion does not seem agreeable
to experience.
The alkalis do, however, acquire some
degree of causticity in a strong fire, as appears
from their being more easily united with spirit of
wine after having been kept in fusion for some time.
For that fluid, which cannot be tinctured by a mild
salt of tartar, will soon take a very deep colour
from a few drops of a strong caustic ley. The
circumstances which hinder us from rendering these
salts perfectly caustic by heat, are their propensity
to dissipation in the utmost violence of the fire,
their extreme acrimony, and the imperfection of our
common vessels. For before the heat becomes very
intense, the alkalis either evaporate, or dissolve
a part of the crucibles in which they are contained,
and often escape thro’ their pores; which happens,
especially as soon as they have already acquired some
degree of additional acrimony, by the loss of part
of their air.
The fusion also, which they so readily
undergo, is well known by Chemists, as a strong obstacle
to the separation of the volatile from the fixed parts
of a compound by fire; accordingly, in several processes,
we are directed to add to the fusible compound some
porous substance which is incapable of fusion, and
will retain the whole in a spongy form, thereby to
facilitate the dissipation of the volatile parts.
In order to know whether an alkali
would lose a part of its air, and acquire a degree
of causticity, when exposed, with this precaution,
to the action of a strong fire, I mixed an ounce and
a half of salt of tartar with three ounces of black-lead,
a substance of any the most unchangeable by chemical
operations. This mixture I exposed, for several
hours, in a covered crucible, to a fire somewhat stronger
than what is necessary to keep salt of tartar in fusion.
When allowed to cool, I found it still in the form
of a loose powder; and taking out one half, I diluted
it with water, and by filtration obtained a ley, which,
when poured into a solution of white marble in aqua
fortis, precipitated the marble under the form
of a weak quick-lime: for the turbid mixture
gave a green colour to the juice of violets, and threw
up a crust like that of lime-water; and the precipitated
powder collected and mixed with salt ammoniac immediately
yielded the scent of the volatile alkali.
Lest it should here be suspected,
that the alkaline qualities of this mixture, and of
the precipitated marble, were not owing to a lime into
which the marble was converted, but to the alkali itself
which was added, it is proper to observe, that I mixed
so small a proportion of the ley with the solution
of marble as made me sure, from certain experiments,
that the whole of the alkali was spent in performing
the precipitation, and was consequently converted
into a neutral salt by attracting the acid. The
properties therefore of the mixture can only be referred
to a lime, as is indeed sufficiently evident from the
crust which is peculiar to lime-water.
I was therefore assured by this experiment,
that an alkali does really lose a part of its air,
and acquire a degree of causticity, by the proper
application of heat; but finding by several trials,
that the degree of causticity which it had thus acquired
was but weak, and that the quick-lime produced in
this experiment was exhausted and rendered mild by
a small quantity of water, I exposed the crucible together
with that half of the alkali which remained in it
to a stronger fire, in order to expel a larger quantity
of air, and render it more remarkably caustic; but
the whole of it was dissipated by the force of the
heat, and the black lead, which still retained the
form of a loose and subtile powder, yielded little
or nothing to water.
We learn then from the above experiment
the reason why the alkali newly obtained from the
ashes of vegetables is generally of the more acrid
kinds of that salt. It never appears until the
subject be converted into ashes, and is supposed to
be formed by the fire, and to be the result of a particular
combination of some of the principles of the vegetable;
one of which principles is air, which is contained
in large quantity in all vegetable matters whatever.
But as soon as the smallest part of a vegetable is
converted into ashes, and an alkali is thus formed,
this salt necessarily suffers a calcination, during
which it is kept in a spongy form by the ashes, and
shews a very considerable degree of acrimony if immediately
applied to the body of an animal but if the ashes
are for any time exposed to the air, or if we separate
the alkali from them by the addition of a large quantity
of water and subsequent evaporation, the salt imbibes
fixed air from the atmosphere, and becomes nearly
saturated with it: tho’ even in this condition
it is generally more acrid than salt of tartar, when
this is prepared with a gentle heat.
Borax has sometimes been referred
to the class of alkalis, on account of some resemblance
it bears to those salts: but it has been demonstrated
by accurate experiments, that we should rather consider
it as a neutral salt; that it is composed of an alkali
and of a particular saline substance called the sedative
salt, which adheres to the alkali in the same manner
as an acid, but can be separated by the addition of
any acid whatever, the added acid joining itself to
the alkali in the place of the sedative salt.
As this conjunction of an acid with the alkali of
borax happens without the least effervescence, our
principles lay us under a necessity of allowing that
alkali to be perfectly free of air, which must proceed
from its being incapable of union with fixed air and
with the sedative salt at the same time: whence
it follows, that, were we to mix the sedative salt
with an alkali saturated with air, the air would immediately
be expelled, or the two salts in joining would produce
an effervescence. This I found to be really the
case upon making the trial, by mixing a small quantity
of the sedative salt with an equal quantity of each
of the three alkalis, rubbing the mixtures well in
a mortar, and adding a little water. It is however
proper in this place to observe, that, if the experiments
be made in a different manner, they are attended with
a singular circumstance. If a small quantity of
the sedative salt be thrown into a large proportion
of a dissolved fixed alkali, the sedative salt gradually
disappears, and is united to the alkali without any
effervescence; but if the addition be repeated several
times, it will at last be accompanied with a brisk
effervescence, which will become more and more remarkable,
until the alkali be entirely saturated with the sedative
salt.
This phaenomenon may be explained
by considering the fixed alkalis as not perfectly
saturated with air: and the supposition will appear
very reasonable, when we recollect, that those salts
are never produced without a considerable degree of
heat, which may easily be imagined to dissipate a
small portion of so volatile a body as air. Now,
if a small quantity of the sedative salt be thrown
into an alkaline liquor, as it is very slowly dissolved
by water, its particles are very gradually mixed with
the atoms of the alkali. They are most strongly
attracted by such of these atoms as are destitute
of air, and therefore join with them without producing
an effervescence; or, if they expel a small quantity
of air from some of the salt, this air is at the same
time absorbed by such of the contiguous particles
as are destitute of it, and no effervescence appears
until that part of the alkali, which was in a caustic
form or destitute of air, be nearly saturated with
the sedative salt. But if, on the other hand,
a large proportion of the sedative salt be perfectly
and suddenly mixed with the alkali, the whole, or a
large part, of the air is as suddenly expelled.
In the same manner may we also explain
a similar phaenomenon, which often presents
itself in saturating an alkali with the different acids:
the effervescence is less considerable in the first
additions of acid, and becomes more violent as the
mixture approaches the point of saturation. This
appears most evidently in making the sal diureticus
or regenerated tartar: The particles of the vegetable
acid here employed being always diffused thro’
a large quantity of water, are more gradually applied
to those of the alkali, and during the first additions
are chiefly united to those that are freest of air.
That the fixed alkali, in its ordinary
state, is seldom entirely saturated with air, seems
to be confirmed by the following experiment.
I exposed a small quantity of a pure
vegetable fixed alkali to the air, in a broad and
shallow vessel, for the space of two months; after
which I found a number of solid crystals, which resembled
a neutral salt so much as to retain their form pretty
well in the air, and to produce a considerable degree
of cold when dissolved in water. Their taste was
much milder than that of ordinary salt of tartar; and
yet they seemed to be composed only of the alkali,
and of a larger quantity of air than is usually contained
in that salt, and which had been attracted from the
atmosphere: for they still joined very readily
with any acid, but with a more violent effervescence
than ordinary; and they could not be mixed with the
smallest portion of vinegar, or of the sedative salt,
without emitting a sensible quantity of air.
As it now appeared that several alkaline
substances have an attraction for fixed air, I tried
a few experiments to learn the relative strength of
their several attractions.
Twenty four grains of magnesia in
fine powder were mixed with five ounces of the caustic
ley in a small vial, which was immediately corked
and shaken frequently for four hours. The ley
was then poured off, and the magnesia washed with
repeated affusions of water, and dried. It
had lost about the half of its weight, and when reduced
to a fine powder was readily dissolved by acids with
an effervescence which was hardly perceivable:
the alkali had therefore extracted its air. I
also threw some fresh magnesia into the ley which
had been poured off, and thereby rendered it perfectly
mild and similar to a solution of salt of tartar;
so that it effervesced briskly with acids.
With an ounce of the mild spirit of
salt ammoniac, I mixed a dram of magnesia in very
fine powder which had been previously deprived of its
air by fire; and observing that the magnesia had a
tendency to concrete into a solid mass, I shook the
vial very frequently. After some days the powder
was increased to more than double its former bulk;
and when the vial was opened, the alkaline spirit
emitted a most intolerably pungent smell. It
likewise floated upon water, but was not perfectly
caustic; for it still yielded some air when mixed
with acids, and also rendered lime-water turbid:
neither of which would probably have happened if I
had used a greater quantity of magnesia, or had allowed
the mixture to remain a longer time in the vial.
I now washed out the whole of the mixture into a bowl,
and dryed the magnesia until it lost all smell of
the alkali. It weighed a dram and fifty eight
grains, effervesced violently with acids, and therefore
contained a large quantity of air, which had been
drawn from the alkali by a stronger attraction.
Having formerly shewn, that magnesia
saturated with air separates an acid from a calcarious
earth, which it is not able to do after being deprived
of its air by fire; I now suspected that the air was
the cause of this separation, because I found that
it was joined to the calcarious earth at the same
time that the acid was joined to the earth of magnesia;
and imagined that a pure calcarious earth might possibly
have a stronger attraction for acids than a earth
of magnesia.
I therefore dissolved two drams of
magnesia in the marine acid, and thus obtained a compound
of an acid and of the pure earth of this substance;
for the air which was at first attached to it, was
expelled during the dissolution. I then added
thirty grains of strong quick-lime in exceeding fine
powder, shook the mixture well, and filtrated it.
The powder remaining in the paper, after being well
washed, was found to be a magnesia, which, as I expected,
was destitute of air; for it was dissolved by the
vitriolic acid without effervescence. And the
filtrated liquor contained the lime united to the
acid; for upon dropping spirit of vitriol into it,
a white powder was immediately formed.
We must therefore acknowledge a stronger
attraction between the calcarious earths and acids
than between these and magnesia: but how does
it then happen, that, if magnesia saturated with air
be mixed with a compound of acid and calcarious earth,
these two last, which attract one another the most
strongly, do not remain united; but the acid is joined
to the magnesia, and the calcarious earth to the air
which it attracts much more weakly than it does the
acid? Is it because the sum of the forces which
tend to join the magnesia to the acid and the calcarious
earth to the air, is greater than the sum of the forces
which tend to join the calcarious earth to the acid,
and the magnesia to the air: and because there
is a repulsion between the acid and air, and between
the two earths; or they are somehow kept asunder in
such a manner as hinders any three of them from being
united together?
The first part of this supposition
is favoured by our experiments, which seem to shew
a greater difference between the forces wherewith the
calcarious earth and magnesia attract fixed air, than
between those which dispose them to unite with the
acid. The repulsions however hinted in the second
are perhaps more doubtful, tho’ they are suggested
in many other instances of decomposition; but the
bounds of my present purpose will not allow me to
enter upon this subject, which is one of the most
extensive in chemistry.
We meet also with a difficulty with
respect to the volatile alkali similar to the above.
Thus a calcarious earth that is pure or free of air
has a much stronger attraction for acids than a pure
volatile alkali, as is evident when we mix quick-lime
with salt ammoniac; for the alkali is then immediately
detached from the acid: and agreeably to this
I found, upon trial, that a pure or caustic volatile
alkali does not separate a calcarious earth from an
acid. Yet, if we mix a mild volatile alkali,
which is a compound of alkali and air, with a compound
of acid and calcarious earth, these two last, which
attract one another most strongly, do not remain united;
but the acid is joined to the alkali and the earth
to the air, as happens in the precipitation of a calcarious
earth from an acid, by means of the common or mild
volatile alkali.
I remember likewise a parallel instance
with regard to quick-silver. This metal has an
attraction for the vitriolic acid, and when joined
to it appears under the form of turbith mineral:
but this attraction is weaker than that of the fixed
alkali for the same acid; for if we mix a dissolved
salt of tartar with turbith mineral, the turbith
is converted into a brown powder, and the alkali into
vitriolated tartar; which change happens the sooner,
if the pure or caustic alkali is used. Yet, if
to a compound of quick-silver and the nitrous acid,
we add a compound of the fixed alkali and the vitriolic
acid, or a vitriolated tartar, and digest the mixture
with a strong heat, the vitriolic acid does not remain
with the alkali, but is joined to the quick-silver
which it attracts more weakly, composing with it a
turbith mineral; while the alkali is joined to
the nitrous acid which it likeways attracts more weakly
than it does the vitriolic, and is converted into salt-petre.
From some of the above experiments,
it appears, that a few alterations may be made in
the column of acids in Mr. Geoffroy’s
table of elective attractions, and that a new column
may be added to that table, according to the following
scheme, where the alkaline substances are all considered
as in their pure state and free of fixed air.
Acids. Fixed air.
------------------------------ -----------------
Fixed alkali, Calcarious earth.
Calcarious earth, Fixed alkali.
Volatile alkali and magnesia. Magnesia.
Volatile alkali.
---------------------- ---------------
At the foot of the first column several
of the metals might follow, and after these the earth
of alum; but as I don’t know what number of the
metals should precede that earth, I have left it to
be determined by further experience.
The volatile alkali and magnesia are
placed in the same line of this column; because their
force of attraction seems pretty equal. When we
commit a mixture of magnesia and salt ammoniac to distillation,
the alkali arises and leaves the acid with the magnesia;
because this earth, by attracting the acid, represses
its volatility, and it seems also to diminish the
cohesion of the acid and alkali, and to render them
separable by a gentle heat. If the magnesia be
saturated with air, this likewise, on account of its
volatile nature and attraction for the alkali, is
driven up along with it, and makes it appear under
a mild form, and in the same manner do the alkali
and air arise from a mixture of salt ammoniac and
of a crude calcarious earth.