Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/437

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422
On the Experimental Relations
[1857.

produce the change, but show no tendency to dissolve the gold. Nitric acid acts in the same manner, but not so strongly: it often causes re-solution of the gold after some time, because of the hydrochloric acid which remains in the fluid.

Amongst the alkalies, potash produces a similar action in a weak degree. So also does soda. Lime-water produces a change in the same direction, but the gold quickly precipitates associated with the lime.

Ammonia causes the ruby fluid to assume a violet tint; the deposit is slow of formation and often ruby in colour; the alkali apparently retards the action of common salt. Chlorine or nitromuriatic acid turns the ruby fluid blue or violet-blue before they dissolve the gold.

Solution of sulphuretted hydrogen changes the ruby slowly to purple, and finally to deep blue. Ether, alcohol, camphine, sulphide of carbon, gum, sugar and glycerin cause little or no change in the fluids; but glycerin added to the dense deposits causes serious condensation and alteration of them, so that it could not be employed as a medium for the suspension of particles in the microscope.

All endeavours to convert the violet gold back into ruby were either failures, or very imperfect in their results. A violet fluid will, upon long standing, yield a deposit and a supernatant ruby fluid, but this I believe to be a partial separation of a mixture of violet and ruby gold, by the settlement of the blue or violet gold from ruby gold, which remains longer in suspension. Mucus, which often forms in portions of these fluids that have been exposed to the air, appears sometimes to render a fluid more ruby, but this it does by gathering up the larger violet particles; it often becomes dark blue or even black by the particles of gold adhering to it, many of which may be shaken out by agitation in water; but I never saw it become ruby coloured as a filter can, and I think that in these cases it is the gathering out of the blue or violet particles which makes the fluid left appear more ruby in tint. I have treated blue or violet fluid with phosphorus in various ways, but saw no appearance of a return in any degree towards ruby. Sometimes the fluids possess a tendency to re-solution of the gold, a condition which may often be given by addition of a very little nitric acid, but in these cases the gold does not become ruby before solution.