Online Encyclopedia

BLOWPIPE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 90 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BLOWPIPE  , in the arts and

chemistry, a tube for directing a jet of air into a fire or into the flame of a lamp or
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gas jet, for the purpose of producing a high temperature by accelerating the combustion . The blowpipe has been in
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common use from the earliest times for soldering metals and working glass, but its introduction into systematic chemical analysis is to beascribed to A . F . Cronstedt, and not to Anton Swab, as has been maintained (see J . Landauer, Bey . 26, p . 898) . The first
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work on this application of the blowpipe was by G. v . Engestrom, and was published in 1770 as an appendix to a
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treatise on
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mineralogy . Its application has been variously improved at the hands of T . O . Bergman, J .

G . Gahm, J . J .

Berzelius, C . F . Plattner and others, but more especially by the two last-named chemists . The simplest and
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oldest form of blowpipe is a conical brass tube, about 7 in. in length, curved at the small end into a right angle, and terminating in a small round orifice, which is applied to the flame, while the larger end is applied to the mouth . Where the blast has to be kept up for only a few seconds, this instrument is quite serviceable, but in longer chemical operations inconvenience arises from the condensation of moisture exhaled by the lungs in the tube . Hence most blowpipes are now made with a cavity for retaining the moisture . Cronstedt placed a bulb in the centre of his blowpipe . Dr Joseph Black's instrument consists of a conical tube of tin
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plate, with a small brass tube, supporting the nozzle, inserted near the wider end, and a mouth-piece at the narrow end . The sizes of orifice recommended by Plattner are 0.4 and o•5 mm .

A

trumpet mouth-piece is recommended from the support it gives to the cheeks when inflated . The mode of blowing is
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peculiar, and requires some practice; an uninterrupted blast is kept up by the
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muscular
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action of the cheeks, while the ordinary respiration goes on through the nostrils . If the flame of a candle or lamp be closely examined, it will be seen to consist of four parts—(a) a deep blue ring at the
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base, (b) a dark cone in the centre, (c) a luminous portion round this, and (d) an exterior pale blue envelope (see
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llama) . In blow-
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pipe work only two of these four parts are made use of, viz. the pale envelope, for oxidation, and the luminous portion, for reduction . To obtain a good oxidizing flame, the blowpipe is held with its nozzle inserted in the edge of the flame close over the level of the
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wick, and blown into gently and evenly . A conical jet is thus produced, consisting of an inner cone, with an
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outer one commencing near its apex—the former, corresponding to (a) in the
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free flame, blue and well defined; the latter corresponding to (d), pale blue and vague . The heat is greatest just beyond the point of the inner cone, combustion being there most
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complete . Oxidation is better effected (if a very high temperature be not required) the farther the substance is from the
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apex of the inner cone, for the air has thus freer access . To obtain a good reducing flame (in which the combustible
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matter, very hot, but not yet burned, is disposed to take oxygen from any compound containing it), the nozzle, with smaller orifice, should just touch the flame at a point higher above the wick, and a somewhat weaker current of air should be blown . The flame then appears as a long, narrow, luminous cone, the end being enveloped by a dimly visible portion of flame corresponding to that which surrounds the free flame, while there is also a dark nucleus about the wick . The substance to be reduced is brought into the luminous portion, where the reducing power is strongest . Various materials are used as supports for substances in the blowpipe flame; the
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principal are
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charcoal, platinum and glass or
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porcelain .

Charcoal is valuable for its infusibility and

low conductivity for heat (allowing substances to be strongly heated upon it), and for its powerful reducing properties; so that it is chiefly employed in testing the fusibility of minerals and in reduction . The best kind of charcoal is that of close-grained pine or
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alder; it is cut in short prisms, having a flat smooth
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surface at right angles to the rings of growth . In this a shallow hole is made for receiving the substance to be held in the flame . Gas-carbon is sometimes used, since it is more permanent in the flame than wood charcoal . Platinum is employed in oxidizing processes, and in the
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fusion of substances with fluxes; also in observing the colouring effect of substances on the blow-pipe flame (which effect is
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apt to be somewhat masked by char-
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coal) . Most commonly it is used in the form of wire, with a small
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bend or
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loop at the end . The mouth blowpipe is unsuitable for the production of a large flame, and cannot be used for any lengthy operations; hence recourse must be made to types in which the air-blast is occasioned by
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mechanical means . The laboratory form in common use consists of a bellows worked by either hand or
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foot, and a
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special type of gas burner formed of two concentric tubes, one conveying the blast, the other the gas; the supply of air and gas being regulated by stopcocks . The hot blast blow-pipe of T . Fletcher, in which the blast is heated by passing through a copper coil heated by a
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separate burner, is only of service when a pointed flame of a fairly high temperature is required . Blowpipes in which oxygen is used as the blast have been manufactured by Fletcher, Russell & Co., and have proved of
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great service in conducting fusions which require a temperature above that yielded by the air-blowpipe . For the applications of the blowpipe in chemical analysis see CHEMISTRY:
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Analytical .

End of Article: BLOWPIPE
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