JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide

Jules Bouis (1822-1886) was a French pharmacist that made a detailed study of castor oil. With the help of heat and distillation he separated and prepared a variety of compounds, such as oenantol, ricinolamide, ricinelaidic, caprylic, phosphocaprylic, and sebacic acids, ricinelaidine, caprylic alcoh...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jaime Wisniak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas 2022-12-01
Series:Revista CENIC Ciencias Químicas
Online Access:https://revista.cnic.cu/index.php/RevQuim/article/view/4009
_version_ 1797960348110684160
author Jaime Wisniak
author_facet Jaime Wisniak
author_sort Jaime Wisniak
collection DOAJ
description Jules Bouis (1822-1886) was a French pharmacist that made a detailed study of castor oil. With the help of heat and distillation he separated and prepared a variety of compounds, such as oenantol, ricinolamide, ricinelaidic, caprylic, phosphocaprylic, and sebacic acids, ricinelaidine, caprylic alcohol, caprylene, capryl halides, sulfocaprylates, and capril amine. He also provided a detailed description of the physical and chemical properties of these compounds. Bouis analyzed the phenomena of solidification and fusion, particularly of fatty materials, and proposed a new method for their best determination based on covering the bulb of the thermometer with a thin layer of the material being tested. He explained the changes in the values of these parameters, when repeating the fusion-solidification cycle, as caused by a change in the structure of the solid phase. He gave a detailed tabulation of the variation of these parameters with the composition of a fatty mixture. Bouis studied the action of chlorine on mercury(I) cyanide in the dark and under the influence of sunlight and discovered a new derivative of formula C8N4Cl8,C4Cl6, methylene chloromesitate, and the existence of several cyanogene chlorides. Bouis studied the action of hydrogen on wrought iron and steel and found that it always generated ammonia from the outer layer of the metal and that steel contained much less nitrogen than wrought iron. This treatment transformed wrought iron into a very crystalline and fragile material that did not keep magnetism.
first_indexed 2024-04-11T00:44:36Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5351f0840f154d6ebcf397fdf09982a7
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2221-2442
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-11T00:44:36Z
publishDate 2022-12-01
publisher Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas
record_format Article
series Revista CENIC Ciencias Químicas
spelling doaj.art-5351f0840f154d6ebcf397fdf09982a72023-01-05T21:54:04ZengCentro Nacional de Investigaciones CientíficasRevista CENIC Ciencias Químicas2221-24422022-12-015323583724171JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanideJaime WisniakJules Bouis (1822-1886) was a French pharmacist that made a detailed study of castor oil. With the help of heat and distillation he separated and prepared a variety of compounds, such as oenantol, ricinolamide, ricinelaidic, caprylic, phosphocaprylic, and sebacic acids, ricinelaidine, caprylic alcohol, caprylene, capryl halides, sulfocaprylates, and capril amine. He also provided a detailed description of the physical and chemical properties of these compounds. Bouis analyzed the phenomena of solidification and fusion, particularly of fatty materials, and proposed a new method for their best determination based on covering the bulb of the thermometer with a thin layer of the material being tested. He explained the changes in the values of these parameters, when repeating the fusion-solidification cycle, as caused by a change in the structure of the solid phase. He gave a detailed tabulation of the variation of these parameters with the composition of a fatty mixture. Bouis studied the action of chlorine on mercury(I) cyanide in the dark and under the influence of sunlight and discovered a new derivative of formula C8N4Cl8,C4Cl6, methylene chloromesitate, and the existence of several cyanogene chlorides. Bouis studied the action of hydrogen on wrought iron and steel and found that it always generated ammonia from the outer layer of the metal and that steel contained much less nitrogen than wrought iron. This treatment transformed wrought iron into a very crystalline and fragile material that did not keep magnetism.https://revista.cnic.cu/index.php/RevQuim/article/view/4009
spellingShingle Jaime Wisniak
JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide
Revista CENIC Ciencias Químicas
title JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide
title_full JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide
title_fullStr JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide
title_full_unstemmed JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide
title_short JULES BOUIS Castor oil, fats, steel, and mercury(I) cyanide
title_sort jules bouis castor oil fats steel and mercury i cyanide
url https://revista.cnic.cu/index.php/RevQuim/article/view/4009
work_keys_str_mv AT jaimewisniak julesbouiscastoroilfatssteelandmercuryicyanide