Chicago, Ill Paper - The Influence of Organic Matter and Iron on the Volumetric Determination of Manganese

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. B. Mackintosh
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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2
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85 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1885

Abstract

THE present note is intended as an addition to my previous communication on the volumetric determination of manganese, read at the Roanoke meeting," it having been suggested that the circumstances under which my experiments had been conducted, were essentially different from those met with in the analysis of irons. The method used in these experiments is the same in all its details as that described in the paper referred to. I have made seven experiments in all: two of these were in duplicate on half a gramme of a sample of spiegel dissolved in hydrochloric acid; one was on the same amount of spiegel with the addition of 25 C.C. of a standard solution of potassium permanganate; one was on the same amount of spiegel with the addition of 35 C.C. permanganate and much organic matter, viz., one drop of castor-oil, two or three drops of coal-tar benzol arid of gasolene (petroleum), about ten of alcohol, portions of starch and of sugar about the size of a small pea, and about half an inch of a common match cut into shavings. This organic matter was added to the manganese solution after the hydrochloric acid had been replaced by nitric, and the solution was heated until the wood-shavings had disappeared. The fifth experiment was made by dissolving half a gramme of spiegel alone in nitric acid; the sixth by dissolving half a gramme of spiegel in nitric acid with the addition of 25 C.C. potassium permanganate, some oxalic acid, half an inch of a match, one filter-paper 7 cm. in diameter, and two drops each of castor-oil and turpentine; and the seventh experiment by dissolving half a gramme of spiegel in hydrochloric acid and adding 35 C.C. permanganate, without however taking the precaution to evaporate off all the excess of hydrochloric acid. Under these circumstances, one would expect that if organic matter exercises any influence on the determination, it would be plainly evident in the results obtained. But the accompanying table of results
Citation

APA: J. B. Mackintosh  (1885)  Chicago, Ill Paper - The Influence of Organic Matter and Iron on the Volumetric Determination of Manganese

MLA: J. B. Mackintosh Chicago, Ill Paper - The Influence of Organic Matter and Iron on the Volumetric Determination of Manganese. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1885.

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