Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/446

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1857.]
of Gold (and other Metals) to Light.
431

of division, were retained in that state for the time by their adhesion to the glass. Of course chemical change was free to occur, but not a change dependent upon their mutual aggregation; yet they were not held by any special chemical attraction to, or combination with, the glass; for a touch with a card, a feather, or the finger, was sufficient to remove them at once; and if rubbed off with a point of wood, they coated it with brilliant metallic gold.

Again, though these particles are so finely divided that they pass easily through ordinary filters, still a close filter catches some; and if a ruby fluid be passed through again and again, the paper at last becomes of a rosy hue, because of the gold which adheres to it; being then well-washed, and, if needful, dried, the gold is again ready for experiment. Such gold paper, placed across the middle of the dark tube and examined by transmitted light, was of the same ruby tint as when looked through in the open air. It was unaffected by salt or brine, though these, added to the rosy fluid which had passed the filter, instantly changed it to violet-blue. Portions of the paper were put into separate glasses with brine, solutions of hydrochloric, nitric and sulphuric acids, ammonia, potassa, soda and sulphuretted hydrogen, but no change occurred with any of them in two days. On the other hand, a very dilute solution of chlorine immediately turned the ruby to blue, and then gradually dissolved the gold. A piece of the ruby paper immersed in a strong solution of cyanide of potassium suffered a very slow action, if any, and remained unaltered in colour; being brought out into the air, the gold very gradually dissolved, becoming first blue. A portion of' the ruby paper was dried and heated in oil until the oil and the paper began to change their hue; the gold had not altered in its colour or character. Another portion was heated in the vapour of alcohol and also of' ether until the paper began to alter; the gold remained unaltered. A blue fluid being passed often times through a filter gave a blue paper, which, being washed and tried in the same manner, was found to contain particles unchanged by the simple acids or alkalies, or by heat or vapours, but dissolving, as gold would do, in chlorine or nitromuriatic acid. These tests are, I think, sufficient to prove the metallic nature and permanence of the gold as it