On the Use And Abuse of Alcoholic Liquors in Health And Disease: Prize Essay

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On the Use And Abuse of Alcoholic Liquors in Health And Disease: Prize Essay
William Benjamin Carpenter, (
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of stearine = 136 carbon, 132 hydrogen, 10 oxygen.
Now, in the former case, the number of equivalents of oxygen necessary for the conversion of the starch into • Hydrates of carbon, compounds of carbon with hydrogen, t We thus make the sum total of the weights of carbon and hydrogen very nearly the same in the two cases ; for 140 equiv. of carbon (140 X 6) = 840 and 105 equiv. of hydrogen (105 X 1) = 105 945 whilst 136 equiv. of carbon (136 X 6) = 816 and 132 equiv. of hydrogen (132 X 1) = 132
...v [Author.] 948 IN SUSTAINING THE VITAL POWERS. 121 carbonic acid and water will be no more than that required for the change of its carbon into carbonic acid, namely (140 X 2 =) 280 ; but, in the latter case, the number required will not be merely that which will convert the 136 eq. of carbon into carbonic acid, namely (136 X 2 =) 272 ; but also that required for combination with those 122 equivalents of hydrogen, for which no equivalent of oxygen exists in the compound, making in all (272 + 122 =) 394.

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