Carius halogen method
The Carius halogen method in analytical chemistry is a method for the quantitative determination of halogens in chemical substances.[1]
A known mass of an organic compound is heated with fuming nitric acid in the presence of silver nitrate contained in a hard glass tube known as carius tube, in a furnace. Carbon and hydrogen present in the compound are oxidised to carbon dioxide and water. The halogen present forms the corresponding silver halide (AgX). It is filtered, washed, dried and weighed.
This chemical test works equally well for the determination of sulfur but without addition of silver nitrate. The sulfuric acid intermediate formed after reaction of sulfur with fuming nitric acid forms insoluble barium sulfate on addition of barium chloride.
This test was invented by the German Chemist, Georg Ludwig Carius (1829–1875).
References
- ↑ Julius B. Cohen Practical Organic Chemistry 1910 Link to online text