| 1826 - 404 pages
...property, and that most noticable for our present purpose, is the degree of inflammability it possesses. When heated in the air, it takes fire, and burns with a white flame and great heat In some of the gasses it is inflamed spontaneously and consumes readily.... | |
| William Lincoln, Christopher Columbus Baldwin - 1826 - 906 pages
...property, and that most noticable for our present purpose, is the degree of inflammability it possesses. When heated in the air, it takes fire, and burns with a white flame and great heat. In some of the gasses it is inflamed spontaneously and consumes readily.... | |
| Thomas Tredgold - 1827 - 540 pages
...briskly and distils at from 110° to 116° depending on its purity. When heated to about 680" or 700° in the air it takes fire and burns with a blue flame. It is scarcely soluble in water. It appears to be a compound of Sulphur 84-21 Carbon ---'--- 15-79... | |
| William Francis, Henry Croft - 1853 - 500 pages
...H" BaO1, N« 0« requires 23-9. The silver salt exactly resembles the baryta salt in its appearance. When heated in the air, it takes fire and burns with a greenish flame, leaving a residuum of pure silver. 0-119gr. of this salt left 0-040 gr. of silver,... | |
| 1846 - 586 pages
...Nitraniline is fusible at 230° F., and distils without decomposition at a temperature above 540° F. When heated in the air, it takes fire and burns with a smoky (lame. In very many other respects, the properties of the new substance resemble those of aniline.... | |
| 1851 - 562 pages
...when pressed together between the fingers, forms a dense mass having the metallic lustre. (Pelouze.) When heated in the air it takes fire and burns with a glimmering light, producing 103'6 parts of yellow oxide, according to Boussingault; and from 103'6... | |
| Leopold Gmelin - 1851 - 614 pages
...when pressed together between the fingers, forms a dense mass having the metallic lustre. (Pelouze.) When heated in the air it takes fire and burns with a glimmering light, producing 103'6 parts of yellow oxide, according to Boussingault; and from 103'6... | |
| Charles William Eliot, Frank Humphreys Storer - 1868 - 688 pages
...lead, and is volatile at a full red heat, the vapor being of a yellow colour, like that of selenium. When heated in the air, it takes fire, and burns with a greenish-blue flame, copious fumes of tellurous acid, Te0 2, being at the same time evolved. 256. The... | |
| Charles William Eliot - 1869 - 702 pages
...lead, and is volatile at a full red heat, the vapor heing of a yellow colour, like that of selenium. When heated in the air, it takes fire, and burns with a greenish-blue flame, copious fumes of tellurous acid, TeOa, being at the same time evolved. 256. The... | |
| George Frederick Barker - 1870 - 610 pages
...500°, volatilizes at a white heat, and may be distilled. Its vapor is greenish-yellow like chlorine. When heated in the air it takes fire and burns with a blue flame tinged with green, evolving white fumes of tellurous oxide. Indeed in all its physical properties it... | |
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