Page:The American Cyclopædia (1879) Volume VII.djvu/651

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GAS 639 shown in fig. 2. From the reservoir it is car- ried in cast-iron main pipes through the streets, and in small wrought-iron pipes into buildings, where it is measured to each consumer in small meters, which were formerly of a similar con- struction to the one above described ; but of late years the wet has almost entirely been re- placed by the dry meter, which was invented by Mr. James Bogardus of New York in 1832, and is one of the most ingenious of mechanical contrivances. It was fraudulently patented in England by a person who had been employed by Mr. Bogardus, and afterward adopted in the United States without due credit to the inventor. His invention consists of a double bellows hav- ing four chambers, which, alternately moved by the pressure of the gas which is admitted upon one side or the other by the opening and closing of valves by such movements, communicates motion to a series of arms and levers by which a rotary motion is given to an index that regis- ters the number of cubic feet passing through the different chambers of the bellows. As these have a measured capacity, the volume of gas passing through the machine is therefore shown. Instead of a double bellows with four chambers, a triple one with six was at one time constructed ; but the machine was essentially the same, the arrangement of the arms and levers, the most ingenious parts, having almost the same form and acting upon the same princi- ple as the double bellows with four chambers. Wood Gas. It has been said that Le Bon, a Frenchman, made gas from wood about the end of the 18th century; but the invention did not prove practicable, as the gas had not suffi- cient illuminating power to compare with that made in England from coals. The reason of its failure, as explained by Dumas, was that the heat employed was too low to produce the heavier hydrocarbons. In 1849 Prof. Petten- kofer of Munich made experiments showing that the gases evolved from wood at a heat sufficient to carbonize it consist almost entirely of carbonic acid, carbonic oxide, and marsh gas (olefiant gas being quite absent) ; but that the tarry matters and vapors at the same time produced are, by the application of a much higher heat, capable of yielding a large quantity of heavy hydrocarbon gas. The manufacture of wood gas therefore requires retorts for converting the wood into empyreu- matic vapors, and others for converting these into permanent gases. The wood should be thoroughly dried before distillation. Accord- ing to the experiments of Eeissig, 50 kilo- grammes of aspen wood yielded 592 cubic feet of purified gas and 10 kilogrammes of charcoal, and the same quantity of fir wood 648 cubic feet of gas and 9-5 kilogrammes of charcoal. Pettenkofer's analysis of crude gas is as follows : Heavy hydrocarbons . 6-91 Marsh gas 11-06 Hydrogen 15'07 Carbonic acid 25-72 Carbonic oxide . . 40.59 The carbonic acid is removed by hydrate of lime. Reissig's analysis of the purified gas is as follows : Heavy hydrocarbons 7*24 Hydrogen 81-84 Marsh gas 85'80 Carbonic oxide 25'62 The illuminating power of the hydrocarbons in wood gas is one half greater than that of an equal volume of olefiant gas. Its specific grav- ity is about 0'7, which is rather greater than that of average coal gas, for which reason it requires burners with larger orifices. "Wood gas is successfully made in Germany. Peat Gas. Peat yields in dry distillation, according to an analysis by Vohl of a sample from Zu- rich, the following proportions of gaseous, liquid, and solid matters : Gases 17-625 Tarry matters 5-875 Aqueous distillate 52*000 Peat coke 25-000 The same apparatus is used as for wood gas. Keissig used a fat peat obtained near Munich, 134 Ibs. of which yielded 337 cubic feet of gas of good quality, having the following composition : Heavy hydrocarbons 9*52 Marsh gas 42-65 Hydrogen 27'50 Carbonic acid 20'83 Resin Gas. Resin yields a gas of high illu- minating power, but its use is necessarily re- stricted by its limited supply. Several years ago it was successfully employed at the Phila- delphia works to increase the richness of coal gas, and is now used in several southern towns. Petroleum Gas. Petroleum is used in small works for making illuminating gas in this coun- try, and very largely in Germany, Austria, and Russia. The crude oil is conducted from a reservoir continuously into red-hot cast-iron retorts, from which it passes through purifying apparatus, one vessel of which contains hydro- chloric acid. One hundred weight of Penn- sylvania oil yields about 1,600 feet of gas, which when purified consists, according to Bolley, of Heavy hydrocarbons. Light hydrocarbons.. Hydrogen 40-0 26-0 348 VOL. VII. 41 It has a specific gravity of about 0'7, and is the richest that can be made. It is used in burners which consume only from one half to two cubic feet per hour, and it is estimated that 200 cubic feet are nearly equal in illumi- nating power to 1,000 feet of coal gas. The New York mutual gas light company own a patent for a process of making illumina- ting gas from the naphtha which passes over in the first part of the distillation of petro- leum, and mingling it with coal gas, by which it is said that the latter is greatly enriched. The naphtha is volatilized in a separate boiler, and sent into retorts of similar construction to those for coal, where by the application of a