They take fire at so low a temperature, that this assistance is not required to concentrate the heat and volatilise the fluid.
On the other hand, the primary, secondary, and tertiary bases do not decompose on heating, butvolatilise without decomposition.
Fixed red powders (such as brick-dust and minium) are detected by being left as a residue, after the application of heat sufficient to volatilise the mercury.
Many fuse when heated, and volatilise unchanged, but others are completely or partially decomposed at a red heat.
Now, it is utterly impossible that arsenic could volatilise from such a compound at ordinary temperatures; it does not decompose at any temperature below redness.
A red heat fails to volatilise it to any appreciable extent, and it is only slightly oxidised at that temperature; therefore it is not tarnished when exposed to the air.
In many cases the active principles of the ingredients are partly volatile and partly fixed, or at least do not readily volatilise at the temperature at which alcohol distils over.
Benzoline dissolves fat more readily than ether; it does not volatilise so rapidly at ordinary temperatures, it is always anhydrous and has the advantage of low price.
Volatilises when heated Does not volatilise | on platinum foil.
While it continues abundant, the passage of the current is so free--the resistance to it is so small--that the heat generated is incompetent to volatilise the silver.
But such spectra are produced with the greatest brilliancy when, instead of ordinary gases, we make use of metals heated so highly as to volatilise them.
The nitro compounds are mostly pale yellow liquids, which distil unchanged, and volatilise with water vapour, or colourless or pale yellow needles or prisms.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "volatilise" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.