List Of Alchemical Substances

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Alchemical studies produced a number of substances, which were later classified as particular chemical compounds or mixtures of compounds.

Many of these terms were in common use into the 20th century.

Metals and metalloids

  • Antimony/Stibnium – Sb
  • Bismuth (German: Wismuth) – Bi
  • Copper/Cuprum – associated with Venus. Cu
  • Gold/Aurum – associated with the Sun. Au
  • Iron/Ferrum – associated with Mars. Fe
  • Lead/Plumbum – associated with Saturn. Pb
  • Quicksilver/Hydrargyrum – associated with Mercury. Hg
  • Silver/Argentum – associated with the Moon. Ag
  • Tin/Stannum – associated with Jupiter. Sn

Minerals, stones, and pigments

  • Bluestone – mineral form of copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate, also called blue vitriol.
  • Borax – sodium borate; was also used to refer to other related minerals.
  • Cadmia/Tuttia/Tutty – probably zinc carbonate.
  • Calamine – zinc carbonate.
  • Calomel/Horn Quicksilver/horn mercury – mercury(I) chloride, a very poisonous purgative formed by subliming a mixture of mercuric chloride and metallic mercury, triturated in a mortar and heated in an iron pot. The crust formed on the lid was ground to powder and boiled with water to remove the calomel.
  • Calx – calcium oxide; was also used to refer to other metal oxides.
  • Chalcanthum – the residue produced by strongly roasting blue vitriol (copper sulfate); it is composed mostly of cupric oxide.
  • Chalk – a rock composed of porous biogenic calcium carbonate. CaCO3
  • Chrome green – chromic oxide and cobalt oxide.
  • Chrome orange – chrome yellow and chrome red.
  • Chrome red – basic lead chromate – PbCrO4+PbO
  • Chrome yellow/Paris Yellow/Leipzig Yellow – lead chromate, PbCrO4
  • Cinnabar/Vermilion – refers to several substances, among them: mercury(II) sulfide (HgS), or native vermilion (the common ore of mercury).
  • Copper Glance – copper(I) sulfide ore.
  • Cuprite – copper(I) oxide ore.
  • Dutch White – a pigment, formed from one part of white lead to three of barium sulfate. BaSO4
  • Flowers of antimony – antimony trioxide, formed by roasting stibnite at high temperature and condensing the white fumes that form. Sb2O3
  • Fool's gold – a mineral, iron disulfide or pyrite; can form oil of vitriol on contact with water and air.
  • Fulminating silver – principally, silver nitride, formed by dissolving silver(I) oxide in ammonia. Very explosive when dry.
  • Fulminating gold – a number of gold based explosives which "fulminate", or detonate easily.
    • – gold hydrazide, formed by adding ammonia to the auric hydroxide. When dry, can explode on concussion.
    • – an unstable gold carbonate formed by precipitation by potash from gold dissolved in aqua regia.
  • Galena – lead(II) sulfide. Lead ore.
  • Glass of antimony – impure antimony tetroxide, SbO4 formed by roasting stibnite. A yellow pigment for glass and porcelain.
  • Gypsum – a mineral; calcium sulfate. CaSO4
  • Horn Silver/Argentum Cornu – a weathered form of chlorargyrite, an ore of silver chloride.
  • Luna cornea – silver chloride, formed by heating horn silver till it liquefies and then cooling.
  • King's yellow – formed by mixing orpiment with white arsenic.
  • Lapis solaris (Bologna stone) – barium sulfide – 1603, Vincenzo Cascariolo.
  • Lead fume – lead oxide, found in flues at lead smelters.
  • Lime/Quicklime (Burnt Lime)/Calx Viva/Unslaked Lime – calcium oxide, formed by calcining limestone
  • Slaked Lime – calcium hydroxide. Ca(OH)2
  • Marcasite – a mineral; iron disulfide. In moist air it turns into green vitriol, FeSO4.
  • Massicot – lead monoxide. PbO
  • Litharge – lead monoxide, formed by fusing and powdering massicot.
  • Minium/Red Lead – trilead tetroxide, Pb3O4; formed by roasting litharge in air.
  • Naples yellow/Cassel yellow – oxychloride of lead, formed by heating litharge with sal ammoniac.
  • Mercurius praecipitatus – red mercuric oxide.
  • Mosaic gold – stannic sulfide, formed by heating a mixture of tin filings, sulfur, and sal-ammoniac.
  • Orpiment – arsenic trisulfide, an ore of arsenic.
  • Pearl white – bismuth nitrate, BiNO3
  • Philosophers' Wool/nix alba (white snow)/Zinc White – zinc oxide, formed by burning zinc in air, used as a pigment
  • Plumbago – a mineral, graphite; not discovered in pure form until 1564
  • Powder of Algaroth – antimony oxychloride, formed by precipitation when a solution of butter of antimony and spirit of salt is poured into water.
  • Purple of Cassius – formed by precipitating a mixture of gold, stannous and stannic chlorides, with alkali. Used for glass coloring
  • Realgar – arsenic disulfide, an ore of arsenic.
  • Regulus of antimony
  • Resin of copper – copper(I) chloride (cuprous chloride), formed by heating copper with corrosive sublimate.
  • Rouge/Crocus/Colcothar – ferric oxide, formed by burning green vitriol in air.
  • Stibnite – antimony or antimony trisulfide, ore of antimony.
  • Turpeth mineral – hydrolysed form of mercury(II) sulfate.
  • Verdigris – Carbonate of Copper or (more recently) copper(II) acetate. The carbonate is formed by weathering copper. The acetate is formed by vinegar acting on copper. One version was used as a green pigment.
  • White arsenic – arsenious oxide, formed by sublimating arsenical soot from the roasting ovens.
  • White lead – carbonate of lead, a toxic pigment, produced by corroding stacks of lead plates with dilute vinegar beneath a heap of moistened wood shavings. (replaced by blanc fixe & lithopone)
  • Venetian White – formed from equal parts of white lead and barium sulfate.
  • Zaffre – impure cobalt arsenate, formed after roasting cobalt ore.
  • Zinc Blende – zinc sulfide.

Salts

  • Glauber's salt – sodium sulfate. Na2SO4
  • Sal alembroth – salt composed of chlorides of ammonium and mercury.
  • Sal ammoniac – ammonium chloride.
  • Sal petrae (Med. Latin: "stone salt")/Salt of Petra/Saltpetre/Nitrate of potash – potassium nitrate, KNO3, typically mined from covered dungheaps.
  • Salt/Common salt – A mineral; sodium chloride, NaCl, formed by evaporating seawater (impure form).
  • Salt of tartar – potassium carbonate; also called potash.
  • Salt of hartshorn/Sal volatile – ammonium carbonate formed by distilling bones and horns.
  • Tin salt – hydrated stannous chloride; see also spiritus fumans, another chloride of tin.

Vitriols

  • Blue vitriol – copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate.
  • Green vitriol – a mineral; iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate. (or ferrous sulfate)
  • Red vitriol - cobalt sulfate.[1]
  • Sweet vitriol – diethyl ether. It could be made by mixing oil of vitriol with spirit of wine and heating it.[2]
  • White vitriol – zinc sulfate, formed by lixiviating roasted zinc blende.

Waters, oils and spirits

  • Aqua fortis/spirit of nitre – nitric acid, formed by 2 parts saltpetre in 1 part (pure) oil of vitriol (sulfuric acid). (Historically, this process could not have been used, as 98% oil of vitriol was not available.)
  • Aqua ragia/Spirit of turpentine/Oil of turpentine/Gum turpentine – turpentine, formed by the distillation of pine tree resin.
  • Aqua regia (Latin: "royal water") – a mixture of aqua fortis and spirit of salt.
  • Aqua tofani – arsenic trioxide, As2O3 (extremely poisonous)
  • Aqua vitae/aqua vita/Spirit of Wine, ardent spirits – ethanol, formed by distilling wine[2]
  • Butter (or oil) of antimony – antimony trichloride. Formed by distilling roasted stibnite with corrosive sublimate, or dissolving stibnite in hot concentrated hydrochloric acid and distilling. SbCl3
  • Butter of tin – hydrated tin(IV) chloride; see also spiritus fumans, another chloride of tin.
  • Oil of tartar – concentrated potassium carbonate, K2CO3 solution
  • Oil of tartar per deliquium – potassium carbonate dissolved in the water which its extracts from the air.
  • Oil of vitriol/Spirit of vitriol – sulfuric acid, a weak version can be formed by heating green vitriol and blue vitriol. H2SO4
  • Spirit of box/Pyroxylic spirit – methanol, CH3OH, distilled wood alcohol.
  • Spiritus fumans – stannic chloride, formed by distilling tin with corrosive sublimate.
  • Spirit of hartshorn – ammonia, formed by the decomposition of sal-ammoniac by unslaked lime.
  • Spirit of salt/Acidum salis – the liquid form of hydrochloric acid (also called muriatic acid), formed by mixing common salt with oil of vitriol.
    • Marine acid air – gaseous form of hydrochloric acid.

Others

  • Alkahest – universal solvent.
  • Azoth – initially this referred to a supposed universal solvent but later became another name for Mercury.
  • Bitumen – highly viscous liquid or semi-solid form of petroleum.
  • Blende
  • Brimstone – sulfur
  • Flowers of sulfur – formed by distilling sulfur.
  • Caustic potash/Caustic wood alkali – potassium hydroxide, formed by adding lime to potash
  • Caustic Soda/Caustic marine alkali – sodium hydroxide, NaOH, formed by adding lime to natron.
  • Caustic volatile alkali – ammonium hydroxide.
  • Corrosive sublimate – mercuric chloride, formed by subliming mercury, calcined green vitriol, common salt, and nitre.
  • Gum Arabic – gum from the acacia tree.
  • Liver of sulfur – formed by fusing[clarification needed] potash and sulfur.
  • Lunar caustic/lapis infernalis – silver nitrate, formed by dissolving silver in aqua fortis and evaporating.
  • Lye – potash in a water solution, formed by leaching wood ashes.
  • Potash – potassium carbonate, formed by evaporating lye; also called salt of tartar. K2CO3
  • Pearlash – formed by baking potash in a kiln.
  • Milk of sulfur (lac sulphuris) – formed by adding an acid to thion hudor (lime sulfur).
  • Natron/Soda Ash/Soda – sodium carbonate. Na2CO3
  • Nitrum flammans – ammonium nitrate.
  • Sugar of Lead – lead(II) acetate, formed by dissolving lead oxide in vinegar.
  • Script error: The function "transl" does not exist. – lime sulfur, formed by boiling flowers of sulfur with slaked lime.

See also

  • Alchemical symbol
  • List of alchemists

References

  1. "Vitriol | chemical compound | Britannica". 18 August 2023. https://www.britannica.com/science/vitriol. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Gray, Theodore (2014). Molecules. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. pp. 27–31. ISBN 978-1-60376-396-7. 

External links

  • Eklund, Jon (1975). The Incompleat Chymist: Being an Essay on the Eighteenth-Century Chemist in His Laboratory, with a Dictionary of Obsolete Chemical Terms of the Period (Smithsonian Studies in History and Technology, Number 33). Smithsonian Institute Press.
  • Giunta, Carmen. Glossary of Archaic Chemical Terms: Introduction and Part I (A-B). Classic Chemistry.
  • Giunta, Carmen. A Dictionary of the New Chymical Nomenclature. Classic Chemistry. Based on Guyton de Morveau, Louis Bernard; Lavoisier, Antoine; Bertholet, Claude-Louis; Fourcroy, Antoine-François de (1788) [1787]. Method of Chymical Nomenclature. Translated by St. John, James. pp. 105-176.



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