Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise by P. Gerald Sanford
page 47 of 352 (13%)
page 47 of 352 (13%)
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[Illustration: FIG. 8.--SEPARATOR. _A_, Compressed Air Pipes; _G_, Nitro-
glycerine enters from Nitrator; _N_, Nitro-glycerine to _P_; _L_, Lantern Window; _W_, Window in Side; _S_, Waste Acids to Secondary Separator; _T_, Tap to remove last traces of Nitro-glycerine; _P_, Lead Washing Tank; _A_, Compressed Air; _W_, Water Pipe; _N_, Nitro-glycerine from Separator.] If nothing unusual occurs, and it has not been necessary to bring the compressed air into use, and so disturb the process of separation, the waste acids may be run away from beneath the nitro-glycerine, and allowed to flow away to the secondary separator, where any further quantity of nitro-glycerine that they contain separates out after resting for some days. The nitro-glycerine itself is run into a smaller tank in the same house, where it is washed three or four times with its own bulk of water, containing about 3 lbs. of carbonate of soda to neutralise the remaining acid. This smaller tank should contain a lead pipe, pierced and coiled upon the bottom, through which compressed air may be passed, in order to stir up the charge with the water and soda. After this preliminary washing, the nitro-glycerine is drawn off into indiarubber buckets, and poured down the conduit to the filter house. The wash waters may be sent down a conduit to another building, in order to allow the small quantity of nitro-glycerine that has been retained in the water as minute globules to settle, if thought worth the trouble of saving. This, of course, will depend upon the usual out-turn of nitro-glycerine in a day, and the general scale of operations. [Illustration: FIG. 9.--FILTERING AND WASHING PLANT. _W_, Lead Washing Tank; _WP_, Water Pipe; _L_, Lid; _S_, Nitro-glycerine from Separator; _A, B, C_, Filtering Tanks; _B2_, Indiarubber Bucket.] ~Filtering and Washing.~--The filter house (Fig. 9), which must of course |
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