The transparent bisulphide, which is highly pervious to invisible heat, exercises on it the same absorption as the perfectly opaque solution. ❋ John Tyndall (1856)
The "sulphur compounds" of coal-gas, however, consist mainly of carbon bisulphide, which is certainly not the chief "sulphur compound" in acetylene, even if present to any appreciable extent.] ❋ W. J. Atkinson Butterfield (N/A)
A solution of iodine in carbon bisulphide, on the other hand, completely blocks light, but is quite transparent to heat. ❋ Herbert George (2006)
The mixture is made by shaking together, in a glass bottle, one ounce bisulphide and one gallon of the plating liquid, allow to stand until excess of bisulphide has settled, and decant the clear liquid for use as required. ❋ Various (N/A)
Besides the colouring principle of the lazulite, there are always more or less mica and iron pyrites, the latter a lustrous yellow bisulphide of iron, which has often been mistaken for pellets of gold. ❋ George Field (N/A)
_Oxonite_, consisting of picric and nitric acids; and _Panclastite_, a name given to various mixtures, proposed by M. Turpin, such as liquid nitric peroxide, with bisulphide of carbon, benzol, petroleum, ether, or mineral oils. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
But by using a very small quantity of the bisulphide mixture, the plated surfaces were so bright that the use of polishing mops or buffs could be almost dispensed with. ❋ Various (N/A)
This is rapidly effected as follows: -- Twelve grms. of iodine are gradually added to a solution of 2 grms. of phosphorus in about 15 or 20 c.c. of bisulphide of carbon, this solution being contained in a flask of 250 c.c. capacity. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
It is soluble in ether, chloroform, benzene, glacial acetic acid, and nitro-benzene, in 1.75 part of methylated spirit, very nearly insoluble in water, and practically insoluble in carbon bisulphide. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
The solubility of salt in water differs again from its solubility in alcohol, ether, carbon, bisulphide. ❋ Irwin Edman (N/A)
Porous cakes, or lumps of chlorate of potash, exploded violently with bisulphide of carbon, nitro-benzol, carbonic acid, sulphur, benzene, and mixtures of these substances. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
The boring insects are eliminated by cutting out the insect with a knife, by injecting carbon bisulphide into the burrow and clogging the orifice immediately after injection with putty or soap, or in some cases where the tree is hopelessly infested, by cutting down and burning the entire tree. ❋ Jacob Joshua Levison (N/A)
A sponge saturated with carbon bisulphide should be placed in the box at intervals of not more than three months, to ensure the killing of parasites that destroy the specimens. ❋ Ontario. Ministry Of Education (N/A)
If camphor is present, it can be extracted with bisulphide of carbon after the material has been treated with ether-alcohol. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
To get over this I tried, some time ago, the use of bisulphide of carbon in the same way as used for obtaining ❋ Various (N/A)
The flask and its contents are heated on the water bath at 100° C. with constant attention, until the last traces of the carbon bisulphide have distilled away. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
Let the weight of the extract, freed from ether-alcohol before treatment with bisulphide of carbon, equal A, and the weight of extract after treatment with CS_ {2} and evaporation of the same equal B; and weight of the residue which is left after evaporation of the CS_ {2} and the camphor in solution equal C, the percentage of camphor will be A - B - C. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
Where the insects are few and can be readily reached, an injection of carbon bisulphide into the burrow, the orifice of which is then immediately closed with soap or putty, will often destroy the insects within. ❋ Jacob Joshua Levison (N/A)
The bisulphide solution is decanted, or poured into a separating funnel and separated from the nitro-glycerine. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
The leather, after this process, is soaked in petroleum or carbon bisulphide containing a little India-rubber solution, and is finally washed with petroleum benzoline. ❋ Various (N/A)