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radical, of which we cannot hitherto form any ideas, as the acid does not appear to have been decomposed in any experiment. It is only by means of compound affinity that experiments ought to be made with this view, with any probability of success. TABLE _of the Combinations of Boracic Acid, with the Salifiable Bases, in the Order of Affinity._ _Bases._ _Neutral Salts._ Lime Borat of lime. Barytes barytes. Magnesia magnesia. Potash potash. Soda soda. Ammoniac ammoniac. Oxyd of zinc zinc. iron iron. lead lead. tin tin. cobalt cobalt. copper copper. nickel nickel. mercury mercury. Argill argill. _Note._--Most of these combinations were neither known nor named by the old chemists. The boracic acid was formerly called _sedative salt_, and its compounds _borax_, with base of fixed vegetable alkali, &c.--A. SECT. XXII.--_Observations upon Boracic Add and its Combinations._ This is a concrete acid, extracted from a salt procured from India called _borax_ or _tincall_. Although borax has been very long employed in the arts, we have as yet very imperfect knowledge of its origin, and of the methods by which it is extracted and purified; there is reason to believe it to be a native salt, found in the earth in certain parts of the east, and in the water of some lakes. The whole trade of borax is in the hands of the Dutch, who have been exclusively possessed of the art of purifying it till very lately, that Messrs L'Eguillier of Paris have rivalled them in the manufacture; but the process still remains a secret to the world. By chemical analysis we learn that borax is a neutral salt with excess of base, consisting of soda, partly saturated with a peculiar acid long called _Homberg's sedative salt_, now _the boracic acid_. This acid is found in an uncombined state in the waters of certain lakes. That of Cherchiais in Italy contains 94-1/2 grains in each pint of water. To obtain boracic acid, dissolve some borax in boiling water, filtrate the solution, and add sulphuric acid, or any other having greater affinity to soda than the boracic acid; this latter acid is separated, and is procured in a crystalline form by cooling. This acid was long considered as
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