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VI.—On the Products of the Destructive Distillation of Animal Substances. Part V.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2013

Thomas Anderson
Affiliation:
Professor of Chemistry in theUniversity of Glasgow.

Extract

In the fourth part of these researches, I described a new base produced by the action of sodium upon picoline, to which I gave the name of Parapicoline, because it has the same composition as picoline, although the circumstances of its formation appeared to show that it had been produced by the combination of two molecules of that substance, so that its true formula would be C12H14N2. Unfortunately, its high boiling point, and tendency to decompose when distilled, made it impossible to determine its vapour density, which afforded the only means of ascertaining whether this hypothesis was correct; and it was only assumed, because similar cases of polymerisation had been established beyond a doubt in the case of other classes of organic compounds. In the hope of obtaining a similar base of lower boiling point, and therefore better adapted to the necessary experiments, I have submitted pyridine to the action of sodium, and the results of the inquiry are contained in the following pages.

Type
Transactions
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1868

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References

page 209 note * 0·5 is the volume of the residual air at 414°.