Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/205

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190
On Sulphuric Acid and Napthaline.
[1826.

were those of ammoniacal salts. When its solutions, though previously rendered alkaline, were evaporated to dryness at common temperatures, and exposed to air, the salt became strongly acid to litmus paper. This however is a property common to all soluble ammoniacal salts, I believe, without exception.

Baryta.—It is easy by rubbing carbonate of baryta with solution of the impure acid, to obtain a perfectly neutral solution, in which the salt of baryta, containing the acid already described, is very nearly pure. There is in all cases an undissolved portion, which being washed repeatedly in small quantities of hot water, yields to the first portions a salt, the same as that in the solution. As the washings proceed, it is found that the salt obtained does not burn with so much flame on platina foil, as that at first separated; and the fifth or sixth washing will perhaps separate only a little of a salt, which, when heated in the air in small quantities, burns without Raine in the manner of tinder. Hence it is evident that there are two compounds of baryta, which as they are both soluble in water, both neutral, and both combustible, leaving sulphate of baryta, differ probably only in the quantity of combustible matter present, or its mode of combination in the acid.

It is this circumstance, of the formation of a second salt in small but variable quantities with the first, which must be guarded against, as before mentioned, in the preparation of salts from the impure acid. It varies in quantity according to the proportions of materials, and the heat employed; and I have thought that when the naphtha line has been in large quantity, and the temperature low, the smallest quantity is produced. When the impure acid is used for the preparation of the salts now under description, a small portion of it should be examined by carbonate of baryta as above, and rejected if it furnish an important quantity of the Hameless salt.

These bodies may be distinguished from each other provisionally, as the flaming and the glowing salts of baryta, from their appearances when heated in the air. The latter is more distinctly crystalline than the former, and much less soluble, which enabled me by careful and repeated crystallizations to obtain both in their pure states.

The, flaming salt (that corresponding to the acid now under