Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/70

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1821.]
On a new Compound of Chlorine and Carbon.
55

however underwent no change, but on cooling crystallized as at first. It was also exposed in the same gas to sunlight for many days, but no change took place.

When raised in vapour over hot mercury, and detonated with excess of oxygen, a quantity of carbonic acid gas and chloride of mercury were produced. There was no change in the volume of gas used; and lime-water being passed into it absorbed the carbonic gas, became turbid, and left a residuum of pure oxygen. Acetic acid being then added, to dissolve the carbonate of lime, the solution was tested for chlorine, which was readily found in it. When detonated with oxygen, the substance being in excess, there was expansion of volume, carbonic oxide, carbonic acid and chloride of mercury being formed.


When phosphorus, iron, tin, &c. were heated to redness in its vapour over mercury, it was decomposed, chlorides of those substances being formed, and charcoal deposited; and M. J ulin has shown that the same effect is produced by potassium.

Three grains of this substance were passed in vapour over pure peroxide of copper, heated to redness in a green glass tube: a very small portion passed undecomposed. The gas received over mercury equalled 5.7 cubic inches; it was carbonic acid gas. A small part of the oxide of copper was reduced, and portions of a crystalline body appeared within the tube, which, on examination, proved to be chloride of copper. Some of this was used in making experiments on its nature; but when that was ascertained, the remaining contents of the tube were dissolved in nitric acid, and precipitated by nitrate of silver: 6.1 grains of chloride of silver were obtained.

Two grains were passed over pure quick-lime, raised to a red heat in a green glass tube. The moment the vapour came in contact with the hot lime, ignition took place, and the earth burned as long as the vapour passed over it. When cold, the tube was examined, and much charcoal found deposited at the spot where the ignition occurred. The contents of the tube were dissolved in nitric acid, and the filtered solution precipitated by nitrate of silver: 5.9 grains of chloride of silver were obtained.

These results afford us sufficient data from which to deduce the nature and composition of this body. All the experiments of decomposition indicate it to contain chlorine and carbon, and