Abstract
AN abstract appeared a few weeks ago in NATURE relating to the “Occlusion of Gases by Platinum and their Expulsion by Ignition,” which induces me to mention some curious results obtained by Mr. Lowndes and myself by the ignition of platinum in different gases. We were led to the experiments by another investigation on the behaviour of carbon at high temperatures in various gases. We find that when a platinum wire is heated to nearly melting by a current in an atmosphere of chlorine, the walls of the glass vessel become covered with a yellow deposit, which is insoluble in water, but dissolves in hydrochloric acid, and then, after addition of a little nitric acid, gives all the reactions of platinic chloride. The yellow deposit is in fact platinous chloride. At the same time the thick part of the platinum wire conveying the current, and which was not heated very highly, became incrusted with very fine long crystals of platinum. Some of these were more than the sixteenth of an inch in length, and apparently considerably more were located on that end of the thick wire leading to the negative pole than on the other.
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HODGKINSON, W. The Ignition of Platinum in Different Gases. Nature 38, 6–7 (1888). https://doi.org/10.1038/038006d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/038006d0
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