Genuine vermilion should become totally volatilised on being exposed to a red heat; and it should not impart a red colour to spirit of wine, when digested with it.
On heating, it is rapidly Volatilisation very slow; no volatilised as arsenious acid.
Hydrochloride of nicotine is more easily volatilised than the pure base.
Personne prefers to heat with caustic soda or potash, and then pass chlorine gas into the mixture; the excess of chlorine is expelled by boiling, mercuric chloride in presence of an alkaline chloride not being volatilised at 100 deg.
On adding to thevolatilised with watch-glass a little difficulty.
At a bright red-heat it is volatilised slowly, even when hydrogen is passed over it; chlorine, bromine, and iodine combine with it directly.
It is entirelyvolatilised at a temperature of 204.
Deville for the construction of furnaces in which platinum was melted, and silver volatilised by the action of the heat evolved by the combustion of detonating gas.
This naturally refers to those acids which are themselves volatilised by heat.
This method is not to be recommended; for without great care some of the salt will be volatilised and lost, the error causing the amount of curd to appear excessive.
Dry salicylic acid volatilised from a hot plate purifies the air, and perfectly disinfects the walls of a closed room.
It is a brittle vitreous solid, not volatilised by heat except in the presence of water.
The compressed pulp is next thoroughly dried over the fire, being constantly stirred the whole time, by which any remaining portion of the noxious juice is either volatilised or decomposed.
The volatilised bromine with the vapour of water is conducted into a receiver containing iron turnings, bromide of iron, which dissolves in the water contained in the receiver, being formed.
D'Arcet obviates this evil, as the whole of the volatilised mercury is carried off, and again condensed for further use.
The pure metal is found at the bottom of the crucible, whilst the impurities are either volatilised or dissolved in the flux.
As the water boils, the camphor is volatilised along with the steam, and condenses on the straw.
The volatilisednitric acid may be condensed, and again used for the same purpose.
It is volatilised by heat without the evolution of nitrous vapours.
The corrosive sublimate is found both in the volatilised matter and in the carbonised residuum, and is extracted from the latter by boiling it for 15 or 20 minutes in aqua regia.
The vapour from the portion volatilised at this temperature then collects in the upper part of this tube, and expels a corresponding quantity of oil.
They are volatilised on ignition; either with, or without, decomposition according to the acid present.
It must be remembered, however, that, although ammonic chloride is volatile, it cannot be volatilised in the presence of substances which form volatile chlorides without loss of the latter.
According to Personne mercuric chloride is notvolatilised from boiling solutions when alkaline chlorides are present.
The lead volatilised from a gold bullion assay would need to be ten times as rich as this to account for a loss of gold equal to the hundredth part of a milligram.
A safety-burning oil, according to the Act, must not flash under 100° Fahrenheit open test, and all those portions which flash at a less temperature must be volatilised off before the residue can be deemed a safe oil.
The final residue of coke, which is impregnated with the sulphur which has not been volatilised in the form of sulphurous gases, we need scarcely more than mention here.
In this, as in most combustions, a considerable part of the carbon is simply volatilised by the heat, and again obtained concrete on cooling.
If I recollect rightly, the former are decomposed by heat, whilst the latter are merely volatilised by it.
The correspondence of the colour of the light with that of the oxyd which emits it, is, in all probability, owing to some particles of the metal which are volatilised and carried off by the caloric.
But it is true with respect to lead, and some other noxious metals, because, unless care be taken, the particles of the oxyd which are volatilised by the heat are inhaled in with the breath, and may produce dangerous effects.
On separating the one from the other, a brilliant arc containing the mercury in a volatilised condition passes between them.
Footnote: The part played by resistance is strikingly illustrated by the deportment of silver and thallium when mixed together and volatilised in the arc.
There will be on the part of those particular rays a transference of motion from the agitated aether to the atoms of the volatilised metal, which, as already defined, is absorption.
Now the volatilised metal which gives us one bright band is to be figured as having its atoms united by springs all of the same tension, its vibrations are all of one kind.
But this, though a perfectly true and intelligible analogy, is not sufficient for our purpose; we must look with the mind's eye at the oscillating atoms of the volatilised metal.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "volatilised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.