XXVIth International Congress of Industrial Chemistry - Analytical

XXVIth International Congress of Industrial Chemistry. Anal. Chem. , 1953, 25 (10), pp 1574–1575. DOI: 10.1021/ac60082a051. Publication Date: Octobe...
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XXVlth International Congress of Industrial Chemistry XXVIth International Congress of Industrial Chemistry, which met in Paris in June, included meetings of the Analytical Section, which discussed macroanalysis, microanalysis, equipment, and laboratory apparatus. T h e secretary of the Analytical Chemistry Section is R4. D. Jouslin, Etablissements Cotelle et Foucher, 7 R u e ErnesbRenan, Issy-lee-Moulineaux (Seine), France. Abstracts of most of the papers are given here.

The precise determination of the quantity of electricity has been effected by measuring the duration of electrolysis and the utilization of supply at constant intensity. Sefram has furnished this supply, whose characteristics n e have been able t o control: the stability is of the order of 0.05% and the absolute value of the current intensity is within 0.1%.

Determination of Sulfur by Combustion. M. PONTET A N D R. BOULIN,Irsid, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France. The authors attempted to determine the operating conditions permitting determination of sulfur by combustion in siderurgical products without corrective coefficient. Conditions of the combustion were examined. The transformation of sulfurous gas being incomplete, the final iodine titration was replaced by acidimetric titration in silver nitrate medium. Agreement with gravimetric determinations is satisfactory.

Acquaintance with polarization curves (intensity of the current of electrolysis potential of the electrode) permits a better understanding and more rational utilization of electrochemical methods of determination. We take as an example of the methods where the electrode serves as indicator of concentration: amperometry under constant tension with or without reference electrode and potentiometry at constant intensity with or without reference electrode. Starting from the properties of the polarization curves we specify the principal characteristics of these methods and the experimental conditions necessary for obtaining sufficient exactitude. We show the importance of the utilization of these curves in perfecting the determinations.

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Determination of Impurities in Lead and Lead-Tin Alloys. G. DELASSUS, Recherches Chimique de Gaz de France. The rapid and precise determination of certain impurities in lead and lead-tin alloys, used in pipes and welds, is of interest to industry because their presence is capable of altering the mechanical qualities of these metals. A rapid polarographic determination of copper, cadmium, and zinc is presented. Quantitative Analysis by X-Ray Diffraction of Mixtures of Aluminum Hydrates. R. TERTIAN AND R. HOUSSEMAINE. The authors recall the interest in determinations by physical means with the aid of x-ray diffraction, from the point of view of immediate analysis (phase determination) or chemical analysis when the usual analytical methods are unsuccessful. The principle of quantitative analysis of mixtures of crystalline powders is explained briefly, with emphasis on the importance of experimental technique. The procedures adopted and the results obtained in the case of mixtures of aluminum hydrates of two or even three components (hydrargillite. bayerite, boehmite) are described in detail. Finally, examples of applications are given: analysis of minerals or industrial products.

Importance of Polarization Curves in Perfecting Electrochemical Determinations. R. GAUGUIN, Laboratoire de Chimie Analytique de 1'Ecole Superieure de Physique et de Chimie, Paris, France.

Determination of Water Vapor by Infrared Analysis. K. F. LUFT R. GUERIN, Office National d'btudes et Recherches Aeronautiques, Chatillon, France. The method of positive filtration for the analysis of gases by their infrared absorption has been adapted to determination of water vapor, utilizing ammonia as selective gas in place of water vapor itself. With analysis tubes 50 t o 200 mm. long, it is possible to measure concentrations of water vapor from thousandths of 1X to saturation concentration at atmospheric temperature in all gases containing practically no ammonia, such as nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, air, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide. The rapidity and the accuracy of the infrared analyzer, and the low volume of gas necessary for effectuating a determination, make it possible to solve certain prohlemq of analysis which hare been difficult by current methods AND

Examination of Ancient Objects by Analytical and Microanalytical Institut de Chimie Minerale et AnalyMethods. R. STREBINQER, tique, University Technique de Vienne, Vienna, Austria.

New Procedure for Determination of Oxygenated Water in the Illuminated Cinespectrograph for Studying the Kinetics of Very Presence of Organic Peroxides. J. BARLOTAND S. MARSAULE, Brief Chemical Reactions. M. LAPORTE, Laboratoire de Recherches Poudrerie Nationale de Toulouse, Toulouse, France. Electroniques, Institut du Radium, I1 Rue Pierre Curie, Paris, The problem of the separation of oxygenated water and organic France. peroxides is often impossible to solve by the methods of analysis usually employed. The authors have found that in many cases a Volumetric Determination of Zirconium. L). B~ZJER. precise determination may be made by fixing the oxygenated water by lime in the form of calcium oxide in the presence of ethyl alcohol. The method described permits volumetric determination of zirThe oxide is titrated after filtration by permanganate. Organic conium in solution by means of two acidimetric measurements. peroxide may be measured by well-known proredures such as by The determination is easy and very rapid. There is no systematic iodine. error. The results are reproducible to about 0.5%. The method is not very selective and several metals interfere. The principle is as follows: Determination of Nitric Nitrogen by the Devarda Method. Study Measurement of Total Acid. The solution of the zirconium salt of an Alloy. L. BRISSAUD AND J. TRANCFIANT, Laboratoire Central is determined by a solution of titrated sodium. The zirconium des Poudres, 12 Quai Henri IV, Paris, France. hydroxide is precipitated a t about pH 1 to 2. At the same time free The Devarda method is in use for determining nitric nitrogen, in acid and Z r + + + + are determined. particular in organic nitrates and smokeless powders. I t is capable Hf OH- -+HzO of giving extremely precise results (relative error of about 1 in 700) if perfectly suitable reagents are employed. Zr++++ 40H- + Zr(0H)r The aluminum-copper-zinc alloy has been studied. It is shown I that to suit all the variants of the Devarda method with the same succesa it is necessary to use an alloy whose percentage composition Determination of Free Acid. To another sample is added an has a sufficiently great influence. But above all, granulometry and excess of alkaline fluoride. The zirconium is complexed, with forspecific surface must be between certain limits, which are determined. mation of zirconium fluoride, ZrFe--. Under these conditions zirconium hydroxide does not precipitate until about pH 7 to 9 (depending upon the proportion of fluoride). Free acid can then be Standardization of a Titrated Solution of Hydrochloric Acid by determined. The difference between the two measurements gives Constant-Intensity Coulometry. J. BADOZ-LAMBLING, Laboratoire the zirconium content, l Z r + + + + = 4Hf. du Professeur Charlot, Ecole Superieure de Physique et de Chimie, 10 The method has been applied to solutions of zirconium chloride Rue Vauquelin, Paris, France. and sulfate. I t is equally suited for determination of tanning prodWe have determined within 0.2y0 the titer of a solution of hydroucts with zirconium base. chloric arid by coulometric determination at constant intensity. We have in the first place specified the experimental conditions that Determination, by Heavy Water, of the Humidity of Solids Not permit obtaining a current yield of loo%, then chosen and justified Dispersible in Water. Application to the Study of Macromolecular the choice of bromophenol blue as indicator of the end of the reaction.

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V O L U M E 2 5 , NO. 10, O C T O B E R 1 9 5 3 Structures. R. VIALLARD AND MLLE. MARCHETTI, University of Paris, Paris, France. The utilization of heavy water for the determination of water linked to solid substances was proposed by Viallard in 1950. The interest of the method of isotopic substitution resides in the possibility of studying the substances in conditions which are practically the normal conditions of hydration. The results obtained in the case of an artificial elastomer (Perbunan) and on organic glass (methyl methacrylate), resorting t o the densimetric technique of indirect analysis by means of a float, are explained. In view of an extension of the method to the study of macromolecular structures, a technique for the kinetic study of exchanges, brought about in view of the characterization of mobile hydrogens, has been perfected. Preliminary experiments on cellulose have made it possible t o separate neatly the exchange phase with water of hydration from the exchange phase with the mobile hydrogens of the polyose. These experiments will be pursued, utilizing the techniques of spectrographic determination in the infrared. Adaptation of Apparatus for Determining Carbon-Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Nitrogen to the Analysis of Certain Complex Substances. J. GARACH, Service des Recherches Chimique, AND G. VALDENEX, Service des Goudrons et DQrivBs,Gaz de France. Micro and semimicroanalytical methods for the determination of the constituents of organic compounds cannot be applied to certain complex molecules without special precautions. The authors have studied and adapted these methods to the dctermination of carbonhydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen in the heavy products of the gas industry. At the same time they have tried to make the use of the apparatus easier and more rapid without sacrificing precision and accuracy given by operations in series. Elementary Analysis of Organic Fluorine Compounds. l f . BELC H E R , University of Birmingham, Birmingham. England. When fluorine is present in an orgnnic compound i t is ordinarily neceixiry to modify the conventional method of determining a particul.ir clement. Ectimation of fluorine is complicated also by the difficulty of decompoaing its derivatives comiJetely, and by tile fact t h a t the methods of dctermination of the hydrofluoric ion leave something t o be desired. Cp to now thc following procedures have been pcrfectcd sufficiently for work i n series. 1)etermination of carbon and hydrogen. Dererniination of fluorine (on a semimicro scale) in presence or ab-cmce of nitrogen, sulfur, other halogens, phosphorus, and arsenic. Determination of fluorine (on an entirely micro scale) in prcience or abvnce of nitrogen, sulfur, and all other halogens. Determination of chlorine. bromine, iodine. in presence or absence of 4 f u r and nitrogen. Determinarion of traces of hydrogen in fluorinared hydrocarbons. The methods for the determination of sulfur and nitrogen are still under investigation. Analytical Technique for the Determination of Tritium in Organic Compounds. MME. CORVALAND MESSRS. DREYFUS,GRENON. HERMANN, AXD VIALLARD, University of Paris, Paris, France. A certain number of authors have utilized tritium as tracer for the study of reactions of organic chemistry. As tritium emits beta particles of weak energy, most of these authors have measured this radioisotope by means of counters in which are introduced samples of one of the volatile compounds used in the experiments. I n each

1575 particular case a preliminary study of the conditions of functioning of the counter is necessary, and this is one of the circumstances which limit the applications of tritium in this field. The technique described rests on the measurement of the activity of samples of hydrogen coming from the reduction of water furnished by the semimicrocombustion catalyzed by the tritiated substance. The effect is made once for all and the operations, in part automatic, are accomplished by means of a standardized apparatus. The ensemble, presented in the Salon de la Chimie, is made up of a row of burners for the oxidation of the substance and the condensation of the water of combustion, a furnace for the preparation of the hydrogen, a bank of special counters, and a totalizer of electronic impulses for the counting of the particles emitted. Characterization of the E5ciencp of Distillation Column of Fixed Packing. H. BRUSSET A N D E. CHAHVEKILIAN, Laboratoire de Chimie Industrielle de 1’Ecole Centrale, Paris, France. We present a critical study of the notion of number of theoretical plates equivalent t o packed distillation columns, in the light of the “theory of interfacial films.” We mention factors capable of induencing the efficiency of such columns: nature and physical characteristics of the mixture, coefficient of relative volatility, flow of liquid and of vapor, titer of the mixture, distillation pressure, employment of theoretical plate, etc. The equivalent height of a theoretical plate is more or less a function of all these factors. The height of a unit of transfer depends equally on most of these same factors, and t o a degree more important than is predicted by the theory. We consider the problem of the practical determination of the efficiency of a column and the conditions that must be fulfilled by the standardized mixtures utilized either at atmospheric pressure or at pressures from 1 mm. of mercury. Laboratory Cycloconcentrator. G . DUCELLIER. The Ducellier cycloconcentrator is an apparatus composed of a boiler for recovering condensed water and a concentrator with no moving parts, permitting autorotation of the liquid t o be concentrated. A projection cylinder permits spreading the liquid in thin sheets on the sides of the concentrator. The volume of liquid can he reduced t o one tenth. New Methods of Organization for Quantitative Analysis. BELCHER, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, England.

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Study of the Pneumatic Classification of Powders from 1 to 100 Microns on a Laboratory Scale. TH.REIS. Study of Chromatography. R. GRADE.

Microelectrorheophoresis. Application to Proteins, Amino Acids, and Sugars. M. MACHEBOEUF (deceased), P. RIBEYROTTE, AW J. M. DUBERT,Institut Pasteur, Paris, France. New Method Based on the Variation of a Capacity Permitting Multiple Records of Small Differences of Pressure in Chemistry and Biology. TH. GAST. Dense Fluids and Their Industrial Applications. G. HULOT,Soci6t6 d’Etudes Chimiques pour 1’Industrie et l’Agriculture, France. Application of the Thermobalance to the Determination of a Mixture of Lime, Magnesia, Calcium Carbonate, and Dolomite. M. GIBAUDAND M. GELOSO,Faculty of Sciences, Paris, France.

Section of Analytical Chemistry, International Union meeting of the International Union of Pure and Applied A Chemistry, held in Stockholm, C. J. Van Nieuwenburg, T THE

Delft, Holland, president of the Section of Analytical Chemistry, presented a report of t h e activities of the section from September 1952 to August 1953. T h e Subcommission on Stability Constants of Complexes, Commission on Physicochemical D a t a of Analytical Interest, has collected stability constants of complexes of about one half of t h e inorganic cations. It is hoped t h a t this phase of the work m a y b e finished in 1954. T h e Subcommission on Absorption Spectrography will soon sub-

mit a partial list of extinction coefficients of organometallic compounds of analytical interest. T h e Subcommissions on Polarographic Data and Potentiometric Data are critically reviewing the literature on half-wave potentials and diffusion current constants. L. G. Sill& has been recommended as a liaison member of the Commission on Physicochemical Symbols and Terminology of t h e Section of Physical Chemistry. T h e subcommissions are also engaged in making recommendations in the field of p H standardization. A program is being planned on t h e compilation of dissociation constants of weak acids and bases.