Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/417

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402
On the Experimental Relations
[1857.

compare with air; but the general effects, the colours produced, and the order of the colours, were precisely the same in all the cases. These deposits were insoluble in nitric acid and in hydrochloric acid, but in the mixed acids or in chlorine solution were soluble, exactly in the manner of gold. There is no reason to doubt that they consisted of metallic gold in a state of extreme division.

Now as to the effects on light, i. e. as to the coloured rays reflected or transmitted by these deposited particles, and first, of those in the line of the discharge where the wire had been. Here the mica was found abraded much, the glass less, and the rock-crystal and topaz least. Where abraded, the gold adhered; in all the other parts it could be removed with the slightest touch. The gold deposited in this central place was metallic and golden by reflected light, and of a fine ruby colour by transmitted light. On each side of this line the deposit had a dark colour, but when particularly examined gave a strong golden metallic reflexion, and by transmission a fine violet colour, partaking of green and ruby in different parts, and sometimes passing altogether into green. Beyond this, on each side, where the tints became paler and where the particles appeared to be finer, the transmitted tint became ruby or violet-ruby, and this tint was especially seen when the deposit was caught on a card. As to the reflected light, even at these faintest parts it is golden and metallic. This is easily observed by wiping off a sharp line across the deposit on glass in the very faintest part, and then causing the sun's rays collected in the focus of a small lens to travel to and fro across that edge; the presence of the metallic gold on the unwiped part is at once evident by the high illumination produced there. It is evident that all the colours described ave produced by one and the same substance, namely gold, the only apparent difference being the state of division and different degrees of the application of heat. The thickest parts of these deposits are so discontinuous, that they cannot conduct the electricity of a battery of two or three pairs of plates, i. e. of a battery unable to produce a spark among the particles.

When any of these deposits of divided gold are heated to dull redness, a remarkable change occurs. The portions which before were violet, blue, or green by transmitted light, now