James Marsh (chemist): Difference between revisions
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'''James Marsh''' ([[September 2]], [[1794]] – [[June 21]], [[1846]]) was a [[chemist]] who invented the [[Marsh test]] for detecting [[arsenic]]. |
'''James Marsh''' ([[September 2]], [[1794]] – [[June 21]], [[1846]]) was a [[chemist]] who invented the [[Marsh test]] for detecting [[arsenic]]. |
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== Scientific work == |
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While Marsh was most famous for inventing the test that bears his name, he was also a skilled and inventive scientist who held the post of Ordnance Chemist at the [[Royal Arsenal]] at [[Woolwich]]. He developed the screw time fuze for mortar shells and in [[1830]] the percussion tube. In [[1832]] the ''HMS Castor'' was the first ship to have her guns modified with these innovations. They were not approved for the Army until [[1845]], when Woolwich began their manufacture -- for coastal artillery only. They became obsolete in [[1866]]. Marsh also worked as an assistant to [[Michael Faraday]] at the nearby [[Royal Military Academy]] from [[1829]] to 1846. |
While Marsh was most famous for inventing the test that bears his name, he was also a skilled and inventive scientist who held the post of Ordnance Chemist at the [[Royal Arsenal]] at [[Woolwich]]. He developed the screw time fuze for mortar shells and in [[1830]] the percussion tube. In [[1832]] the ''HMS Castor'' was the first ship to have her guns modified with these innovations. They were not approved for the Army until [[1845]], when Woolwich began their manufacture -- for coastal artillery only. They became obsolete in [[1866]]. Marsh also worked as an assistant to [[Michael Faraday]] at the nearby [[Royal Military Academy]] from [[1829]] to 1846. |
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== For further reading == |
== For further reading == |
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[[Image:Marsh test apparatus.jpg|thumb|right|Apparatus for the Marsh test<ref>{{cite book | last = McMuigan | first = Hugh | authorlink = | title = An Introduction to Chemical Pharmacology | publisher = P. Blakiston's Son & Co. | date = 1921 | location = Philadelphia | pages = 396 – 397 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=n4I6AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA396&dq=arsenic+test+apparatus&lr=&as_brr=1 | access = 2007-12-16}}</ref>]] |
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* {{cite journal |title = Account of a method of separating small quantities of arsenic from substances with which it may be mixed |journal = Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal |volume = 21 |
* {{cite journal |title = Account of a method of separating small quantities of arsenic from substances with which it may be mixed |journal = Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal |volume = 21 |
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* {{cite journal |title = The Development of the Marsh Test for Arsenic |journal = Journal of Chemical Education |volume = |year = 1947 |pages = 487 – 490 |author = Webster, Stewart H.}} |
* {{cite journal |title = The Development of the Marsh Test for Arsenic |journal = Journal of Chemical Education |volume = |year = 1947 |pages = 487 – 490 |author = Webster, Stewart H.}} |
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== References == |
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==Notes and references== |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
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== External link == |
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* [http://www.cci.ethz.ch/experiments/Marsh/en/stat.html Movie of the Marsh test] |
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Revision as of 04:16, 17 December 2007
James Marsh (September 2, 1794 – June 21, 1846) was a chemist who invented the Marsh test for detecting arsenic.
Scientific work
While Marsh was most famous for inventing the test that bears his name, he was also a skilled and inventive scientist who held the post of Ordnance Chemist at the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich. He developed the screw time fuze for mortar shells and in 1830 the percussion tube. In 1832 the HMS Castor was the first ship to have her guns modified with these innovations. They were not approved for the Army until 1845, when Woolwich began their manufacture -- for coastal artillery only. They became obsolete in 1866. Marsh also worked as an assistant to Michael Faraday at the nearby Royal Military Academy from 1829 to 1846.
In 1832 Marsh was called as a chemist by the prosecution in a murder trial, wherein a certain John Bodle was accused of poisoning his grandfather with arsenic-laced coffee. Marsh performed the standard test by mixing a suspected sample with hydrogen sulfide and hydrochloric acid. While he was able to detect arsenic as yellow arsenic trisulfide, when it came to show it to the jury it had deteriorated, allowing the suspect to be acquitted due to reasonable doubt. Annoyed by this, Marsh developed a much better test. He combined a sample containing arsenic with sulfuric acid and arsenic-free zinc, resulting in arsine gas. The gas was ignited, and it decomposed to pure metallic arsenic which, when passed to a cold surface, would appear as a silvery-black deposit. So sensitive was the test that it could detect arsenic for as little as one-fiftieth of a milligram. He first described this test in The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal in 1836.[1]
For further reading
- Marsh J. (1836). "Account of a method of separating small quantities of arsenic from substances with which it may be mixed". Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. 21: 229–236.
- McMuigan, Hugh (1921). An Introduction to Chemical Pharmacology. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son & Co. pp. 396–397.
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- Wanklyn, James Alfred (1901). Arsenic. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. Ltd. pp. 39–57.
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- Webster, Stewart H. (1947). "The Development of the Marsh Test for Arsenic". Journal of Chemical Education: 487–490.
References
- ^ Marsh J. (1836). "Account of a method of separating small quantities of arsenic from substances with which it may be mixed". Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. 21: 229–236.
- ^ McMuigan, Hugh (1921). An Introduction to Chemical Pharmacology. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son & Co. pp. 396–397.
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