Day 76, Spring of 470 AV
Early Morning
Lym's Workshop beneath the Opal Temple
Early Morning
Lym's Workshop beneath the Opal Temple
The lunch and walk down the beach to clear his mind was uneventful, but anticipation brewed in the vantha's mind. He had remembered reading paragraphs on Spirits of Niter which attributed several destructive recipes to it. While he was not planning on setting Mura on fire, the destructive capacity of the substance stirred the dregs of bloodlust within him. It would be interesting to learn about a substance that was not merely used in household chores.
Upon returning to the underground cavern that was the workshop, he noticed Lym already there, though with several new unknowns introduced into the fold.
"Quickly, Eridanus. Do not tally," She beckoned, and he proceeded to wear the leather gloves in advance. Remembering what she said about the dangerous properties of Corrosionem and that of the Spirits of Salt, it is likely that its 'twin ghost' be just as dangerous, if not more.
There was an even stranger looking device now on the table, though it was made of glass as well. It was now routine as the philterer began to explain and Eridanus began to draw the apparatus and write down the notes accordingly.
Apparently it was known as an Alembic. In truth, the term Alembic can either refer to the apparatus itself, or the set-up involving the apparatus. In most philtering texts the term would refer to the set-up, for the device on its own could not achieve much. It looked like a teapot, with his spout pointing upwards, but that when when it was upside down. Put upright, it had a large bulbous ceiling on top, connected to a sort of funnel-shaped object welded to the walls of the bulbous ceiling. There is an opening to the glass bulb that is connected to a small glass tube that pointed at an angle away and downwards.
The glass tube of the alembic was meant to be connected to the receiving exit of a receiver flask, and the welded funnel was meant to be connected to the mouth of a cone flask. Once the connecting joints were secured and sealed with resin stopgaps, the whole thing would be a closed system, except for the mouth of the receiver flask which could then be connected to other experimental set-ups, or be closed by a resin stopgap for an entirely closed system.
"Distillation," Lym clarified, putting a name to the process as she lectured on, her student dutifully taking everything down.
According to the konti, different substances and different liquids evaporate at different temperatures. By understanding the order in which substances evaporate on an increasing scale of heat, the intrepid philterer can separate mixed substances. For example, substance A evaporates at average wood fire heat while substance B evaporates at average coal fire heat. By bringing the temperature to just slightly above the heat of wood fire, one can separate the mixed substances such that substance B remained at liquid while substance A is completely evaporated.
That would bring the philterer to the next question - How does one harvest the gas? That was where the beauty of the alembic came in. As gas, and air in general do not have a set direction, the heat would cause them to seek the sky. As the alembic has an exit going upwards (the glass tube), the gas would then follow this tube and move into the bulbous glass portion.
As glass is a generally cool material, and since it was at a distance away from the heat, it would be cooler - and if the alembic was set-up properly the coolness would be below wood fire, using the example above. This would cause the gaseous substance A to condense - just like how morning dew condenses - into liquid, and it would roll down the glass ceiling to the welded glass funnel portion, then into the cone flask connected below.
As the entire set-up would be a closed system, no air or gas would be introduced to decrease the purity of the distillation process, and the evaporated substances would not escape either.
"That is what we call Distillation," Lym finished, waiting for Eridanus to finish writing down these points before she moved on.
Upon returning to the underground cavern that was the workshop, he noticed Lym already there, though with several new unknowns introduced into the fold.
"Quickly, Eridanus. Do not tally," She beckoned, and he proceeded to wear the leather gloves in advance. Remembering what she said about the dangerous properties of Corrosionem and that of the Spirits of Salt, it is likely that its 'twin ghost' be just as dangerous, if not more.
There was an even stranger looking device now on the table, though it was made of glass as well. It was now routine as the philterer began to explain and Eridanus began to draw the apparatus and write down the notes accordingly.
Apparently it was known as an Alembic. In truth, the term Alembic can either refer to the apparatus itself, or the set-up involving the apparatus. In most philtering texts the term would refer to the set-up, for the device on its own could not achieve much. It looked like a teapot, with his spout pointing upwards, but that when when it was upside down. Put upright, it had a large bulbous ceiling on top, connected to a sort of funnel-shaped object welded to the walls of the bulbous ceiling. There is an opening to the glass bulb that is connected to a small glass tube that pointed at an angle away and downwards.
The glass tube of the alembic was meant to be connected to the receiving exit of a receiver flask, and the welded funnel was meant to be connected to the mouth of a cone flask. Once the connecting joints were secured and sealed with resin stopgaps, the whole thing would be a closed system, except for the mouth of the receiver flask which could then be connected to other experimental set-ups, or be closed by a resin stopgap for an entirely closed system.
"Distillation," Lym clarified, putting a name to the process as she lectured on, her student dutifully taking everything down.
According to the konti, different substances and different liquids evaporate at different temperatures. By understanding the order in which substances evaporate on an increasing scale of heat, the intrepid philterer can separate mixed substances. For example, substance A evaporates at average wood fire heat while substance B evaporates at average coal fire heat. By bringing the temperature to just slightly above the heat of wood fire, one can separate the mixed substances such that substance B remained at liquid while substance A is completely evaporated.
That would bring the philterer to the next question - How does one harvest the gas? That was where the beauty of the alembic came in. As gas, and air in general do not have a set direction, the heat would cause them to seek the sky. As the alembic has an exit going upwards (the glass tube), the gas would then follow this tube and move into the bulbous glass portion.
As glass is a generally cool material, and since it was at a distance away from the heat, it would be cooler - and if the alembic was set-up properly the coolness would be below wood fire, using the example above. This would cause the gaseous substance A to condense - just like how morning dew condenses - into liquid, and it would roll down the glass ceiling to the welded glass funnel portion, then into the cone flask connected below.
As the entire set-up would be a closed system, no air or gas would be introduced to decrease the purity of the distillation process, and the evaporated substances would not escape either.
"That is what we call Distillation," Lym finished, waiting for Eridanus to finish writing down these points before she moved on.