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A practical handbook of dyeing and calico-printing / by William Crookes
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MORDANTS.

295

contains a certain amount of phosphate of soda and of carbonate of ammonia,which probably play an essential part. The use of cow-dung is apparently ofold origin, although on this subjedt no very precise data exist. It is knownthat the Swiss calico-printers and dyers made use of it in the middle of theeighteenth century, and M. J. Hausmann pointed out the benefits derivedfrom this material in 1790.* M. D. Kcechlin has set forth the favourableeffedts of the dunging in the following paragraphsf :The aim to be attainedby the use of cow-dung is (1), to effect the entire combination of the sub-saltsof alumina with the fibre of the cloth, by causing the separation of nearly allthe acetic acid which had not been volatilised during the drying of themordant; (2), to dissolve and remove from the cloth a portion of the sub-stances which had been used as thickeners ; (3), to separate and remove fromthe fabric the uncombined portion of the mordant, and likewise to removesuch particles thereof as are simply mechanically fixed by the thickeners;(4), to prevent, by the peculiar nature of the substances which constitute thedung, the fixing upon the white portions of the cloth of any non-combinedmordant which becomes soluble by the acetic acid set free, and which acid atlast accumulates in the dung-bath. As for the theory of the action of the dung,the clue must be sought in its composition. The labours of Morin,J Perrot,§and Camille Kcechlin have elucidated this question to a certain degree, with-out, however, solving the question completely. According to M. Morin, thefiltered aqueous extradt of cow-dung, after having been exhausted by alcoholand ether, yields to water a soluble principle which he has named bubuline,and which he considers to be the adtive constituent, because, according to hisexperiments, this material has the property of precipitating most of the solu-tions of metals : later researches have shown, however, that the bubuline hasno separate existence as an immediate principle, being rather a mixture ofalbumenoid materials, coloured by compounds due to the bile, and of vegetableorigin. According to M. Perrot, cow-dung from animals fed with dry fodder,

contains in 100 parts

Water .69*58

Bitter principle . 0*75

Saccharine matter . 0*93

Chlorophyll. 0*28

Albumen .. 0*63

Lignine.26*99

Chloride of sodium . 0*08

Sulphate of potassa ... 0*05

Sulphate of lime. 0*25

Carbonate of lime . 0*24

Phosphate of lime . 0*46

Carbonate of iron .. .. .. .. 0*09

Silica . 0*14

100*47

* Lettre a Berthollet, Annales de Chimievol. xii., p. in.

t Bulletin de la Society Industrielle, vol. i., p. 313. At the time this was written theageing process, at least as now known and practised, was not used,t Bulletin de la Societe Industrielle," vol. iv., p. 164.

§ Ibid., vol. viii., pp. 113 and 124.