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Are vegetables the only source from which potash can be derived?
MRS. B.
No: for though far most abundant in vegetables, it is by no means confined to that cla.s.s of bodies, being found also on the surface of the earth, mixed with various minerals, especially with earths and stones, whence it is supposed to be conveyed into vegetables by the roots of the plant. It is also met with, though in very small quant.i.ties, in some animal substances. The most common state of potash is that of _carbonat_; I suppose you understand what that is?
EMILY.
I believe so; though I do not recollect that you ever mentioned the word before. If I am not mistaken, it must be a compound salt, formed by the union of carbonic acid with potash.
MRS. B.
Very true; you see how admirably the nomenclature of modern chemistry is adapted to a.s.sist the memory; when you hear the name of a compound, you necessarily learn what are its const.i.tuent parts; and when you are acquainted with these const.i.tuents, you can immediately name the compound which they form.
CAROLINE.
Pray, how were bodies arranged and distinguished before this nomenclature was introduced?
MRS. B.
Chemistry was then a much more difficult study; for every substance had an arbitrary name, which it derived either from the person who discovered it, as _Glauber's salts_ for instance; or from some other circ.u.mstance relative to it, though quite unconnected with its real nature, as potash.
These names have been retained for some of the simple bodies; for as this cla.s.s is not numerous, and therefore can easily be remembered, it has not been thought necessary to change them.
EMILY.
Yet I think it would have rendered the new nomenclature more complete to have methodised the names of the elementary, as well as of the compound bodies, though it could not have been done in the same manner. But the names of the simple substances might have indicated their nature, or, at least, some of their princ.i.p.al properties; and if, like the acids and compound salts, all the simple bodies had a similar termination, they would have been immediately known as such. So complete and regular a nomenclature would, I think, have given a clearer and more comprehensive view of chemistry than the present, which is a medley of the old and new terms.
MRS. B.
But you are not aware of the difficulty of introducing into science an entire set of new terms; it obliges all the teachers and professors to go to school again, and if some of the old names, that are least exceptionable, were not left as an introduction to the new ones, few people would have had industry and perseverance enough to submit to the study of a completely new language; and the inferior cla.s.ses of artists, who can only act from habit and routine, would, at least for a time, have felt material inconvenience from a total change of their habitual terms. From these considerations, Lavoisier and his colleagues, who invented the new nomenclature, thought it most prudent to leave a few links of the old chain, in order to connect it with the new one.
Besides, you may easily conceive the inconvenience which might arise from giving a regular nomenclature to substances, the simple nature of which is always uncertain; for the new names might, perhaps, have proved to have been founded in error. And, indeed, cautious as the inventors of the modern chemical language have been, it has already been found necessary to modify it in many respects. In those few cases, however, in which new terms have been adopted to designate simple bodies, these names have been so contrived as to indicate one of the chief properties of the body in question; this is the case with oxygen, which, as I explained to you, signifies generator of acids; and hydrogen generator of water. If all the elementary bodies had a similar termination, as you propose, it would be necessary to change the name of any that might hereafter be found of a compound nature, which would be very inconvenient in this age of discovery.
But to return to the alkalies. --We shall now try to melt some of this caustic potash in a little water, as a circ.u.mstance occurs during its solution very worthy of observation. --Do you feel the heat that is produced?
CAROLINE.
Yes, I do; but is not this directly contrary to our theory of latent heat, according to which heat is disengaged when fluids become solid, and cold produced when solids are melted?
MRS. B.
The latter is really the case in all solutions; and if the solution of caustic alkalies seems to make an exception to the rule, it does not, I believe, form any solid objection to the theory. The matter may be explained thus: When water first comes in contact with the potash, it produces an effect similar to the slaking of lime, that is, the water is solidified in combining with the potash, and thus loses its latent heat; this is the heat that you now feel, and which is, therefore, produced not by the melting of the solid, but by the solidification of the fluid.
But when there is more water than the potash can absorb and solidify, the latter then yields to the solvent power of the water; and if we do not perceive the cold produced by its melting, it is because it is counterbalanced by the heat previously disengaged.*
A very remarkable property of potash is the formation of gla.s.s by its fusion with siliceous earth. You are not yet acquainted with this last substance, further than its being in the list of simple bodies. It is sufficient, for the present, that you should know that sand and flint are chiefly composed of it; alone, it is infusible, but mixed with potash, it melts when exposed to the heat of a furnace, combines with the alkali, and runs into gla.s.s.
[Footnote *: This defence of the general theory, however plausible, is liable to some obvious objections. The phenomenon might perhaps be better accounted for by supposing that a solution of alkali in water has less capacity for heat than either water or alkali in their separate state.]
CAROLINE.
Who would ever have supposed that the same substance which converts transparent oil into such an opake body as soap, should transform that opake substance, sand, into transparent gla.s.s!
MRS. B.
The transparency, or opacity of bodies, does not, I conceive, depend so much upon their intimate nature, as upon the arrangement of their particles: we cannot have a more striking instance of this, than is afforded by the different states of carbon, which, though it commonly appears in the form of a black opake body, sometimes a.s.sumes the most dazzling transparent form in nature, that of diamond, which, you recollect, is carbon, and which, in all probability, derives its beautiful transparency from the peculiar arrangement of its particles during their crystallisation.
EMILY.
I never should have supposed that the formation of gla.s.s was so simple a process as you describe it.
MRS. B.
It is by no means an easy operation to make perfect gla.s.s; for if the sand, or flint, from which the siliceous earth is obtained, be mixed with any metallic particles, or other substance, which cannot be vitrified, the gla.s.s will be discoloured, or defaced, by opake specks.
CAROLINE.
That, I suppose, is the reason why objects so often appear irregular and shapeless through a common gla.s.s-window.
MRS. B.
This species of imperfection proceeds, I believe, from another cause. It is extremely difficult to prevent the lower part of the vessels, in which the materials of gla.s.s are fused, from containing a more dense vitreous matter than the upper, on account of the heavier ingredients falling to the bottom. When this happens, it occasions the appearance of veins or waves in the gla.s.s, from the difference of density in its several parts, which produces an irregular refraction of the rays of light that pa.s.s through it.
Another species of imperfection sometimes arises from the fusion not being continued for a length of time sufficient to combine the two ingredients completely, or from the due proportion of potash and silex (which are as two to one) not being carefully observed; the gla.s.s, in those cases, will be liable to alteration from the action of the air, of salts, and especially of acids, which will effect its decomposition by combining with the potash, and forming compound salts.
EMILY.
What an extremely useful substance potash is!
MRS. B.
Besides the great importance of potash in the manufactures of gla.s.s and soap, it is of very considerable utility in many of the other arts, and in its combinations with several acids, particularly the nitric, with which it forms saltpetre.
CAROLINE.
Then saltpetre must be a _nitrat of potash_? But we are not yet acquainted with the nitric acid?
MRS. B.
We shall therefore defer entering into the particulars of these combinations till we come to a general review of the compound salts. In order to avoid confusion, it will be better at present to confine ourselves to the alkalies.
EMILY.
Cannot you show us the change of colour which you said the alkalies produced on blue vegetable infusions?
MRS. B.
Yes; very easily. I shall dip a piece of white paper into this syrup of violets, which, you see, is of a deep blue, and dyes the paper of the same colour. --As soon as it is dry, we shall dip it into a solution of potash, which, though itself colourless, will turn the paper green--
CAROLINE.