In several experiments made by Eulenberg on pigeons, the birds were secured under glass shades, and exposed to the vapour of metallic arsenic vaporised by heat.
Eulenberg has studied the symptoms in rabbits, by submitting them to vaporised creasote--i.
The theory of action of lamps of this character is as follows: The pressure of air in the container forces the paraffin up the copper tube into the coil, where it is vaporised by the red-hot piping.
The spirit in the inner tube is vaporised by the heat from the burner when the outside wick is lit.
By this means the gold is vaporised and a perfect coating of gold is laid upon the wax.
But this simple arrangement for using vaporised oil, as will readily be seen, can be employed anywhere.
Strictly speaking the cost of using them is small, because unless the tank is leaky they last indefinitely, not evaporating with the water as it is vaporisedinto the gas or into the air.
The water clinging to the lower part of the basket is vaporised by the hot, half-spent carbide, and the steam attacks the upper part, so that polymerisation of the gas and baking of the carbide are inevitable.
In fact the only processes for diluting acetylene which possess real utility are that of adding vaporised petroleum spirit or benzene to the gas, as was described in Chapter X.
Patents have been taken out by Schwander for the preparation of a mixture of acetylene, air, and vaporised petroleum spirit.
It must be remembered also that only a gas yields a flame when it is burnt; the flame of a paraffin lamp and of a candle is due to the combustion of the vaporised fuel.
On the contrary, in the complete absence of liquid or vaporised water, calcium carbide is almost as inert a body as it is possible to imagine: for it will not take fire, and cannot in any circumstances be made to explode.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vaporised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.