Abstract
Since our last communication to the Society we have succeeded in reversing characteristic lines of the vapours of rubidium and cæsium. Considering the known volatility of these elements, and the small quantity of their compounds at our disposal, we thought it better to try the effects first in glass tubes. For this purpose a piece of combustion tubing had one end drawn out and the end turned up sharply, and sealed off (like an ill-made combustion tube of the usual form) so as to produce an approximately plane face at the end of the tube; a small bulb was then blown at about an inch from the end, and the tube drawn out at about an inch from the bulb on the other side, so as to form a long narrower tube. Some dry rubidium or cæsium chloride was next introduced into the bulb, and a fragment of fresh cut sodium, and the narrow part of the tube turned up, so as to allow the tube and bulb to be seen through in the direction of the axis of the tube. The open end was then attached to a Sprengel pump, and the air exhausted; the sodium was then melted, and afterwards either dry hydrogen or dry nitrogen admitted, and the end of the tube sealed off at nearly the atmospheric pressure. We found it necessary to have this pressure of gas inside the tube, otherwise the metal distilled so fast on heating it that the ends were speedily obscured by condensed drops of metal. Through these tubes placed lengthways in front of a spectroscope, a lime light was viewed. On warming the bulb of a tube in which rubidium chloride had been sealed up with sodium, the D lines were of course very soon seen, and very soon there appeared two dark lines near the extremity of the violet light, which, on measurement, were found to be identical in position with the well-known violet lines of rubidium. Next appeared faintly the channelled spectrum of sodium in the green, and then a dark line in the blue, very sharp and decided, in the place of the more refrangible of the characteristic lines of cæsium in the flame spectrum. As the temperature rose these dark lines, especially those in the violet, became sensibly broader; and then another fine dark line appeared in the blue, in the place of the less refrangible of the cæsium blue lines. During this time no dark line could be observed in the red, but as the temperature rose a broad absorption band appeared in the red, with its centre about midway between B and C, ill-defined at the edges, and though plainly visible not very dark. The lines in the violet had now become so broad as to touch each other and form one dark band. On cooling, the absorption band in the red became gradually lighter without becoming defined, and was finally overpowered by the channelled spectrum of sodium in that region. The double dark line in the violet became sharply defined again as the temperature fell. There are two blue lines in the spectrum of rubidium taken with an induction-coil very near the two blue lines of cæsium, but they are comparatively feeble, and the two dark lines in the blue which we observed in the places of the characteristic blue lines of cæsium we believe must have been due to a small quantity of cæsium chloride in the sample of rubidium chloride. These blue lines were not, however, visible when some of the rubidium chloride was held in the flame of a Bunsen’s burner, nor when a spark was taken from a solution of the chloride; but the more refrangible of them (Cs a ) was visible in the spark of an induction-coil, without a Leyden jar, taken between beads of the rubidium chloride fused on platinum wires.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.