The sublimations from the fumaroles are chiefly chloride of ammonium, perchloride of iron, and sulphur.
The disease may be kept under by administering from twenty to forty minims of tincture of perchloride of iron, 3 times a day.
Perchloride of mercury and chloride of ammonium, of each 20 gr.
The crude sulphide is rectified by redistillation over zinc or perchloride of mercury by means of a steam or water bath.
The internal remedies embrace quinine or bark, tincture of perchloride of iron, pernitrate of iron, chlorate of potash, and small, but repeated doses of the mineral acids.
A plug of lint may also be dipped in either of the above solutions, or rolled in the powders, and pushed up the nostrils, or some tincture of perchloride of iron, properly diluted and applied on a piece of lint, may be tried.
In a report addressed to the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1859, Drs Hoffmann and Frankland stated that the perchloride of iron was the cheapest and most efficient deodoriser that could be applied to sewage.
If the perchloride is employed it should remain in contact with the crude sulphide for at least 24 hours before redistillation.
Tincture of perchloride of iron, diluted hydrochloric acid, and chlorate of potash are also said to have been used successfully as topical applications.
With the perchloride of iron it gives a blackish-green color, and sulphuric acid colors it red.
Tannic acid, the neutral acetate of lead and caustic potash produce with it an abundant precipitate; the perchloride of iron colors it a dark green.
When perchlorideof mercury was subjected to the voltaic current, it did not conduct in the solid state, but it did conduct when fluid.
Perchloride of tin, chloride of arsenic, and the hydrated chloride of arsenic, being liquids, had no sensible conducting power indicated by the galvanometer, nor were they decomposed.
Protochloride of tin, when fused and placed at x, was also readily decomposed, yielding perchloride of tin at the anode (779.
Perchloride of Mercury (corrosive sublimate) produces an intense sensation of heat, and corrodes the parts with which it comes in contact.
Both the breath and urine may exhale the peculiar odor of acetone, or it may be absent, and the urine strikes the peculiar burgundy-red reaction with perchloride of iron to be again referred to.
Space will not permit of any notice of lemon-juice, perchloride of iron, the mineral acids, or the blistering treatment.
Injecting ice-water and perchloride of iron into the rectum will often check hemorrhage.
If for any reason they are preferred, the perchloride of iron is one of the very best preparations.
The similar colour produced by sulpho-cyanide of potassium and perchloride of iron is discharged by chloride of gold and corrosive sublimate.
Corrosive Sublimate= (perchloride of mercury) is in heavy colourless masses of prismatic crystals, possessing an acrid, metallic taste.
Meconic acid gives a blood-red colour withperchloride of iron, not discharged by corrosive sublimate or chloride of gold.
This develops a blood-red colour with perchloride of iron, bleached by corrosive sublimate.
A watery solution of savin strikes deep green with perchloride of iron, and if an infusion of the twigs has been taken the twigs may be detected with the microscope.
Iron: the perchloride in full doses by the mouth, and locally painted over the throat.
Iron: either perchlorideor sulphate as injection, along with opium.
Iron Perchloride Solution: 1 in 4, injected into the uterus.
Chalybeate waters more often succeed than pharmaceutical preparations; one drop of the solution of perchloride in a tumbler of water is an approximate substitute for them.
If the perchloride of mercury and zinc-filings be heated together, the same compound will result.
A strong solution of perchloride of iron penetrates only the thinner parts of the film, whereas a weaker acts also through the thicker parts.
The mordant used inperchloride of iron, which is a 'still mordant,' i.
The hæmorrhage may be pretty smart, but can generally be easily checked by compresses; if necessary, these can be soaked in the solution of the perchloride of iron.
The only effect of the increase in quantity of acid was to give the brown of perchloride of manganese instead of the pink of permanganic acid to mark the finishing point.
One of the most popular methods of reducing the density of an over-intensified gelatine negative is with a very weak solution of perchloride of iron.
It is not easy to give any strength for the solution of perchloride of iron, but it is best to begin weak, and strengthen as required.
Cochineal boiled in starch water, with oxalic acid (or tartaric), and perchlorideof tin.
This danger is greatly lessened by adding to the perchloride of tin a sufficient quantity of caustic potash lye to form a stannate of potash.
I have already mentioned that goods are sometimes padded with solution of perchloride of tin before printing-on them the steam colours, whereby they acquire both permanence and vivacity.
Some manufacturers run the goods before printing them through a weak solution of the perchloride of tin, with the view of brightening all the colours subsequently applied or raised upon them.
Quercitron and cochineal thickened with starch; to the paste add oxalic acid, and perchlorideof tin.
The proper pigment can be obtained only by adding to a neutral muriate of gold a mixture of the protochloride and perchloride of tin.
Decoctions of archil and cochineal, thickened with starch: to the paste, alum and perchloride of tin are added.
Decoction of Persian berries thickened with starch; to which some alum and muriate of tin are added, with a little perchloride of tin and oxalic acid.
The mallow tint is given by adding a little perchloride of tin to the above formula, and leaving out the blue.
By the first agent, perchloride of tin is volatilized; by the second, stannate of potash forms, which is carried off in the resulting alkaline scoriae.
Perchloride of mercury, 18 grains, mixed with 10 ounces of solution of lime.
Perchloride of iron in the form of tincture has been popularly used in England, from its supposed abortive property, and is sold under the name of "steel drops.
The perchloride is not unfrequently used to arrest haemorrhage as a topical application to the uterine cavity--a practice not free from danger, for it has before now induced violent inflammation and death from peritonitis.
The two preparations of iron which have any forensic importance are the perchloride and the sulphate.
According to the experiments of Berenger-Feraud and Porte,[958] the perchloride in the above cases was taken under conditions peculiarly favourable for the development of its toxic action, viz.
If the solution is mixed with perchloride of iron, and the sesquioxide of this metal subsequently eliminated by the addition of ammonia, it no longer causes a precipitation in barium solutions.
Characters written with a solution of ferrocyanide of potassium acquire a blue color, if washed with a solution of perchloride of iron.
The plate is then bitten with perchloride of iron, which gives a first biting, leaving all the lines in relief.
The surface is then covered with the biting fluid, which is a solution of perchloride of iron at 45° Baumé, and after few minutes' contact the plate is engraved.
In this position the watch-glass should be allowed to remain for some little time, after which a drop of solution of perchloride of iron is to be added, which will give rise to a blood-red color not discharged by corrosive sublimate.
In solution it may be detected by its acquiring a blood-red color on the addition of the perchloride of iron.
The perchloride of iron has also produced alarming symptoms, after being taken for the same purpose.
Neutral perchloride of iron, strikes a rich blue color with morphia when added in small quantity; if added in excess, the yellow of the test, combining with the blue, may produce a green.
It also forms a scarlet precipitate with perchloride of mercury; and 3.
A bath is first prepared consisting of ten parts perchloride of iron, five parts oxalic or some other vegetable acid, and one hundred parts water.
Pellet, and is based on the property of perchloride of iron of being converted into protochloride on exposure to light.
Prussiate of potash when brought into contact with the perchloride of iron immediately turns the latter blue, but it does not affect the protochloride.
Footnote 1: For this in case of need a solution of perchloride of iron free of manganese may be employed.
Sterilized vaseline or glycerine ofperchloride of mercury may be smeared over the point of the dilator to facilitate its passage.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "perchloride" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.