Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/442

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1857
of Gold (and other Metals) to Light.
427

particles first appeared, and then a blue deposit of larger particles; whilst the side and bottom of the glass became covered by an adhering film of finer particles, presenting the perfect ruby tint of gold.

Ether added to a weak solution of gold gradually reduced it; the fluid was brown by reflected light, fine blue by transmitted light, and gave a good cone by the sun's rays and lens. The blue colour was not deep, though all the gold had been separated from solution; the preparation closely resembled that made with protosulphate of iron and a little acid.

A weak solution of gold, mingled with a little sugar, being heated, yielded a very characteristic decomposition. The gold was reduced into diffused particles, which rendered the fluid of a ruby-amethystine colour, and which, upon standing for twenty-four hours, gave signs of separation by settling as on former occasions. A little glycerin with solution of gold reduces it at common temperatures, producing a fluid, brown by reflexion, blue by transmission, giving a fine cone of rays by its suspended particles. Heat quickens the action, and causes a blue deposit.

Organic tissues often reduce solutions of gold, light if present assisting the action; and they afford valuable evidence in aid of the solution of the question relative to the condition of the metal in the divided state. If the skin be touched with a solution of gold, it soon becomes stained of a dull purple colour. If a piece of the large gut of an ox be soaked first in water, then in a solution of gold, and be afterwards taken out and allowed to dry, either exposed to light or not, the inner membrane will become so stained, that though of a dull purple colour by common observation, a transmitted ray will show it to be generally a very fine ruby, equal to that of ruby-coloured glass, or the gold fluids already described, though perhaps in places of a beautiful violet hue. The character of the particles which are here located and not allowed to diffuse and aggregate, as in the fluids, will be resumed when dealing with the whole question of the metallic nature of the particles of the variously divided gold.

Chloride of gold is reducible by heat alone. If a drop of solution of chloride of gold be evaporated in a watch-glass, or on a plate of rock-crystal, and then heated over a spirit-lamp