Hello. I'm writing from Portugal, so I hope you'll excuse me for my (bad) english.
I'm reading a book -- Conversations in chemistry --, by Wilhelm Ostwald, which can be downloaded at
www.archive.org. It's a book for those who want to begin their studies in chemistry.
In the reading of the book there is -- at least until now -- one thing that I don't understand. In page 71 of his book he describes this experiment: he "puts a tripod with powdered iron on a little floating board, light it, and cover it with a large glass, so placed that it stands on the bottom." He let's the glowing iron extinguish and then comes to this observation: one fifth of the air has vanished. He doesn't tell how he made that conclusion, but I presume that the floating board must have risen so the volume of the gas inside the glass has diminished by one fifth and hence the given conclusion. Then he says that air is a mixture of two gases, oxygen and nitrogen, and that they get separated by burning. What I don't understand is what hapenned to oxygen: did it pour out of the glass? If so, I don't understand the phenomena of combustion. Then there is a question by the pupil: "what if there was only oxygen inside the glass, would it entirely vanish by burning?" Answer by the master: "certainly, if there was no other gas." If this is so, what about the law of conservation of mass? And, would there be a vacuum inside the glass?
Thank you for your help.