Scientific American Supplement, No. 611, September 17, 1887
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C. Of distilled water, and add ammoniauntil the precipitate first formed redissolves. 2. Dilute strongnitric acid with about two volumes of distilled water; boil, todestroy the lower oxides of nitrogen, and preserve in the dark. 3. Dissolve about 8 grammes of ammonic thiocyanate (sulphocyanide)crystals in a liter of water, and adjust to decinormal argenticnitrate solution, by diluting till one volume is exactly equal to avolume of the latter. Dilute the solution thus prepared with ninevolumes o...f distilled water, and label "Centinormal ammonic-thiocyanatesolution. " 4. A saturated solution of ferric alum. 5. Strong solutionof ammonia (sp. Gr. 0. 880). The uric acid estimation is conducted asfollows: Place 25 per cent. Of urine in a beaker with 1 gramme ofsodic bicarbonate. Add 2 or 3 c. C. Of strong ammonia, and then 1 or 2c. C. Of the ammoniated silver solution. If, on allowing theprecipitate caused by the latter reagent to subside, a furtherprecipitate is produced by the addition of more solution, the urinecontains an iodide, and silver solution must be added till there is anexcess.
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