How to Do Chemical Tricks: Containing Over One Hundred Highly Amusing and Instructive Tricks With Chemicals
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Excerpt:
"Combustion.
It is necessary to distinguish between burning and the mere appearance of it. A gas flame is gas in a state of combustion, whereas the electric light is no example of it, although the wire within the glassen cylinder is red hot, and to all appearance burning. Combustion generally takes place through the strong affinity of some element, such as carbon in a substance for the oxygen in the atmosphere. In coal gas, for instance, the carbon contained in it unites with the oxygen in the air to form a colorless substance called carbonic acid gas. The latter is unable to support life, and may be called, therefore, poisonous. It is the presence of this gas which makes it unhealthy to burn many jets without proper ventilation."
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How to Do Chemical Tricks - A. active 1894-1902 Anderson
A. active 1894-1902 Anderson
How to Do Chemical Tricks
Containing Over One Hundred Highly Amusing and Instructive Tricks With Chemicals
Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4057664606488
Table of Contents
Chemical Affinity.
Sympathetic Inks.
Alum Baskets.
Easy Crystallizations.
To Make a Piece of Charcoal Appear as Though it were Coated with Gold.
To Give a Piece of Charcoal a Rich Coat of Silver.
Combustion.
Chemistry of The Air.
Amateur Air Pump.
Asphyxia.
Balloon in Vacuum.
Boiling Cold Water.
A Sucking Tube.
Cupping.
The Barometer.
A Novel Barometer.
Compressed Air.
Noiseless Bell.
The Bursting Bladder.
Weight of the Air.
Spoons which will Melt in Hot Water.
Effect of Compression.
To Cover Iron with Copper.
The Elements.
Potassium.
Metallic Colors.
Crystallization of Metals.
Experiment.
Crystallization.
Beauties of Crystallization.
To Crystallize Camphor.
Another Experiment.
A Solid Changed to a Liquid.
Magic of Heat.
Sublimation by Heat.
Heat Passing Through Glass.
Metals Unequally Influenced by Heat.
Spontaneous Combustion.
Inequality of Heat in Fire-Irons.
Expansion of Metal by Heat.
The Alchemist’s Ink.
Chameleon Liquids.
Magic Dyes.
Wine Changed into Water.
The Chemistry of Water.
Two Bitters Make a Sweet.
Visible and Invisible.
To Form a Liquid from Two Solids.
Restoration of Color by Water.
Two Liquids Make a Solid.
Two Solids Make a Liquid.
A Solid Opaque Mass Makes a Transparent Liquid.
Two Cold Liquids Make a Hot One.
To Make Ice.
Curious Change of Colors.
The Protean Light.
To Change the Colors of Flowers.
Changes of the Poppy.
Changes of the Rose.
Marking Indelibly.
Visible Growth.
Colored Flames.
Orange Colored Flame.
Emerald Green Flame.
Instantaneous Flame.
Water of Different Temperatures in the Same Vessel.
Warmth of Different Colors.
Laughing Gas.
Magic Vapor.
Gas from the Union of Metals.
Green Fire.
Combustion of Three Metals.
To Make Paper Apparently Incombustible.
Heat Not to be Estimated by Touch.
Flame Upon Water.
Rose-colored Flame Upon Water.
Currents in Boiling Water.
Hot Water Lighter than Cold.
Expansion of Water by Cold.
The Cup of Tantalus.
The Magic Whirlpool.
Fire Under Water.
To Light Steel.
A Test of Love.
An Egg Pushed Into a Wine Bottle.
A Chemical Fountain.
Weighing Gases.
In Water but not Wet.
Image of a Volcano.
Reciprocal Images.
Imitation of Animal Tints.
Melting a Coin.
Explosive Gas.
Cold from Evaporation.
Self-Dancing Egg.
Flash of Fire in a Room.
Cast Iron Drops.
Explosion without Heat.
Fiery Powder.
Illumination.
Sun and Spirit.
Stars in Water.
Parlor Ballooning.
Marvelous.
Mutability.
Chemical Affinity.
Table of Contents
This high-sounding term means that substances have a power of uniting together that can be better explained by an experiment. Allow a few drops of water to fall on a perfectly clean piece of iron. In a short time a reddish-brown substance will appear on the iron that in ordinary language is called rust. What does this mean? Water is a compound substance composed of oxygen and hydrogen, but when brought into contact with iron the oxygen prefers to unite with the iron and sets the hydrogen free. Hence, would the chemist say, oxygen has a stronger affinity
for iron than for hydrogen. In this case the rust is composed of rust, a combination of iron and oxygen called oxide of iron. What has taken place may be shown by the following, which will be easily understood:
Oxygen
Hydrogen
}
Water + Iron = Oxide
of Iron + Hydrogen.
So all that the chemical combination in the above means is that the iron has taken the place of the hydrogen in the water used for the experiment. If weighed it would be found as always, that the water and the iron weighed precisely the same as the oxide of iron and the hydrogen.
It is to this same principle of chemical affinity that the curious experiments of magic writing with sympathetic inks are possible.
Sympathetic Inks.
Table of Contents
By means of these may be carried on a correspondence which is beyond the discovery of all not in the secret. With one class of these inks the writing becomes visible only when moistened with a particular solution. Thus, if we write to you with a solution of sulphate of iron the letters are invisible. On the receipt of our letter, you rub over the sheet a feather or sponge, wet with a solution of nut-galls, and the letters burst forth into sensible being at once, and are permanent.
2. If we write with a solution of sugar of lead and you moisten with a sponge or pencil dipped in water impregnated with sulphuretted hydrogen, the letters will appear with metallic brilliancy.
3. If we write with a weak solution of sulphate of copper, and you apply ammonia, the letters assume a beautiful blue. When the ammonia evaporates as it does on exposure to the sun or fire, the writing disappears, but may be revived again as before.
4. If you write with oil of vitriol very much diluted, so as to prevent its destroying the paper, the manuscript will be invisible except when held to the fire, when the letters will appear black.
5. Write with cobalt dissolved in diluted muriatic acid; the letters will be invisible when cold, but when warmed they will appear a bluish green.
Secrets thus written will not be brought to the knowledge of a stranger, because he does not know the solution which was used in writing, and therefore knows not what to apply to bring out the letters.
Other forms of elective affinity produce equally novel results. Thus, two invisible gases, when combined, form sometimes a visible solid. Muriatic acid and ammonia are examples, also ammonia and carbonic acid.
On the other hand, if a solution of sulphate of soda be mixed with a solution of muriate of lime the whole