Potassium alum
Names | |
---|---|
IUPAC name
Potassium alum[2]
| |
Other names
| |
Identifiers | |
| |
3D model (JSmol)
|
|
ChEBI | |
ECHA InfoCard | 100.112.464 |
E number | E522 (acidity regulators, ...) |
PubChem CID
|
|
UNII |
|
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
|
|
| |
| |
Properties | |
KAl(SO4)2·12H2O | |
Molar mass | 258.192 g/mol (anhydrous) 474.37 g/mol (dodecahydrate) |
Appearance | White crystals |
Odor | Watery metallic |
Density | 1.725 g/cm3 |
Melting point | 92 to 95 °C (198 to 203 °F; 365 to 368 K) |
Boiling point | Decomposes at 200[3] °C (392 °F; 473 K) |
14.00 g/100 mL (20,5°C) 36.80 g/100 mL (50 °C) | |
Solubility in other solvents | Insoluble in acetone |
Refractive index (nD)
|
1.4564 |
Hazards | |
NFPA 704 (fire diamond) | |
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
|
Potassium alum, potash alum, or potassium aluminium sulfate is a chemical compound first mentioned under various Sanskrit names in Ayurvedic medicinal texts such as charak samhita, sushrut samhita, and ashtang hridaya; is chemically defined as the double sulfate of potassium and aluminium, with chemical formula KAl(SO4)2. It is commonly encountered as the dodecahydrate, KAl(SO4)2·12H2O. It crystallizes in an octahedral structure in neutral solution and cubic structure in an alkali solution with space group Pa3 and lattice parameter of 12.18 Å.[4] The compound is the most important member of the generic class of compounds called alums, and is often called simply alum.[5]
Potassium alum is commonly used in water purification, leather tanning, dyeing,[6] fireproof textiles, and baking powder as E number E522. It also has cosmetic uses as a deodorant, as an aftershave treatment and as a styptic for minor bleeding from shaving.[7][8]
History
[edit]Historically, potassium alum was used extensively in the wool industry[9] from Classical antiquity, during the Middle Ages, and well into 19th century as a mordant or dye fixative in the process of turning wool into dyed bolts of cloth.[citation needed]
Antiquity
[edit]Egypt
[edit]Potassium alum was also known to the Ancient Egyptians, who obtained it from evaporites in the Western desert and reportedly used it as early as 1500 BCE to reduce the visible cloudiness (turbidity) in the water.[citation needed]
Mesopotamia
[edit]According to the expert on Middle Eastern history of chemistry Martin Levey, potassium alum is one of the few compounds known to the ancients that can be found relatively pure in nature, as well as one of only a few chemicals used in Mesopotamian chemical technology that can be identified with certainty.[10] Both native and imported potassium alum was used.[10] Together with other agents, potassium alum was used in glass-making, tanning, and in the dyeing of cloth, wood, and possibly hair.[10] A tanning process using potassium alum is described in tablets from the first millennium BCE.[10] When Levey wrote his article in 1958, no description of the dyeing process had been found, so it is not known how potassium alum was used in it. In Mesopotamian medicine potassium alum was used extensively, for example against itch, jaundice, some eye condition, and unidentified ailments.[10]
According to Levey, potassium alum was used in "classical times" as a flux when soldering copper, in the fireproofing of wood, and in the separation of silver and gold, but that there is no evidence that these uses existed in Mesopotamia.[10]
Greece
[edit]The production of potassium alum from alunite is archaeologically attested on the island Lesbos.[11] This site was abandoned in the 7th century but dates back at least to the 2nd century CE.
Rome
[edit]Potassium alum was described under the name alumen or salsugoterrae by Pliny,[12] and it is clearly the same as the stypteria (στυπτηρία) described by Dioscorides.[13] However, the name alum and other names applied to this substance — like misy, sory, chalcanthum, and atramentum sutorium — were often applied to other products with vaguely similar properties or uses, such as iron sulfate or "green vitriol".[14][full citation needed]
India and China
[edit]Potassium alum is mentioned in Ayurvedic texts namely Charak Samhita, Sushurta Samhita, and Ashtanga Hridaya with the name such as sphaṭika kṣāra, phitkari or saurashtri. It is used in traditional Chinese medicine with the name mingfan .
Middle Ages
[edit]In the 13th and 14th centuries, alum (from alunite) was a major import from Phocaea (Gulf of Smyrna in Byzantium) by Genoans and Venetians (and was a cause of war between Genoa and Venice) and later by Florence. After the fall of Constantinople, alunite (the source of alum) was discovered at Tolfa in the Papal States (1461). The textile dyeing industry in Bruges, and many locations in Italy, and later in England, required alum to stabilize the dyes onto the fabric (make the dyes "fast") and also to brighten the colors.[15][16]
Modern era
[edit]England
[edit]Potassium alum was imported into England mainly from the Middle East, and, from the late 15th century onwards, the Papal States for hundreds of years. Its use there was as a dye-fixer (mordant) for wool (which was one of England's primary industries, the value of which increased significantly if dyed).[citation needed] These sources were unreliable, however, and there was a push to develop a source in England especially as imports from the Papal States ceased following the excommunication of Henry VIII.[17]
With state financing, attempts were made throughout the 16th century, but without success until the early 17th century. An industry was founded in Yorkshire to process the shale, which contained the key ingredient, aluminium sulfate, and made an important contribution to the Industrial Revolution. One of the oldest historic sites for the production of alum from shale and human urine are the Peak alum works in Ravenscar, North Yorkshire. By the 18th century, the landscape of northeast Yorkshire had been devastated by this process, which involved constructing 100-foot (30 m) stacks of burning shale and fuelling them with firewood continuously for months. The rest of the production process consisted of quarrying, extraction, steeping of shale ash with seaweed in urine, boiling, evaporating, crystallisation, milling and loading into sacks for export. Quarrying ate into the cliffs of the area, the forests were felled for charcoal and the land polluted by sulfuric acid and ash.[18]
Identification of the formula
[edit]In the early 1700s, Georg Ernst Stahl claimed that reacting sulfuric acid with limestone produced a sort of alum.[19][20] The error was soon corrected by Johann Pott and Andreas Marggraf, who showed that the precipitate obtained when an alkali is poured into a solution of alum, namely alumina, is quite different from lime and chalk, and is one of the ingredients in common clay.[21][22]
Marggraf also showed that perfect crystals with properties of alum can be obtained by dissolving alumina in sulfuric acid and adding potash or ammonia to the concentrated solution.[23][24] In 1767, Torbern Bergman observed the need for potassium or ammonium sulfates to convert aluminium sulfate into alum, while sodium or calcium would not work.[23][25]
At the time, potassium ("potash") was believed to be exclusively found on plants. However, in 1797, Martin Klaproth discovered the presence of potassium in the minerals leucite and lepidolite.[26][27]
Louis Vauquelin then conjectured that potassium was likewise an ingredient in many other minerals. Given Marggraf and Bergman's experiments, he suspected that this alkali constituted an essential ingredient of natural alum. In 1797 he published a dissertation demonstrating that alum is a double salt, composed of sulfuric acid, alumina, and potash.[28] In the same journal volume, Jean-Antoine Chaptal published the analysis of four different kinds of alum, namely, Roman alum, Levant alum, British alum and alum manufactured by himself,[29] confirming Vauquelin's results.[23]
Characteristics
[edit]Potassium alum crystallizes in regular octahedra with flattened corners and is very soluble in water. The solution is slightly acidic and is astringent to the taste. Neutralizing a solution of alum with potassium hydroxide will begin to cause the separation of alumina Al(OH)
3.[citation needed]
When heated to nearly a red heat, it gives a porous, friable mass, which is known as "burnt alum". It fuses at 92 °C (198 °F) in its own water of crystallization.[citation needed]
Natural occurrence
[edit]Potassium alum dodecahydrate occurs in nature as a sulfate mineral called alum-(K), typically as encrustations on rocks in areas of weathering and oxidation of sulfide minerals and potassium-bearing minerals.[citation needed]
In the past, potassium alum has been obtained from alunite (KAl(SO
4)
2·2Al(OH)
3), mined from sulfur-containing volcanic sediments.[30] Alunite is an associate and likely potassium and aluminium source.[1][31] It has been reported at Vesuvius, Italy; east of Springsure, Queensland; in Alum Cave, Tennessee; Alum Gulch, Santa Cruz County, Arizona and the Philippine island of Cebu.
In order to obtain alum from alunite, it is calcined and then exposed to the action of air for a considerable time. During this exposure it is kept continually moistened with water, so that it ultimately falls to a very fine powder. This powder is then lixiviated with hot water, the liquor decanted, and the alum allowed to crystallize.[citation needed]
The undecahydrate also occurs as the fibrous mineral kalinite (KAl(SO
4)
2·11H
2O).[32]
Industrial production
[edit]Potassium alum historically was mainly extracted from alunite.
Potassium alum is now produced industrially by adding potassium sulfate to a concentrated solution of aluminium sulfate.[33] The aluminium sulfate is usually obtained by treating minerals like alum schist, bauxite and cryolite with sulfuric acid.[34] If much iron should be present in the sulfate then it is preferable to use potassium chloride in place of potassium sulfate.[34]
Uses
[edit]Medicine and cosmetics
[edit]Potassium alum is used in medicine mainly as an astringent (or styptic) and antiseptic.
Styptic pencils are rods composed of potassium alum or aluminum sulfate, used topically to reduce bleeding in minor cuts (especially from shaving) and abrasions, nosebleeds, and hemorrhoids, and to relieve pain from stings and bites.[citation needed] Potassium alum blocks are rubbed over the wet skin after shaving.[8]
Potassium alum is also used topically to remove pimples and acne, and to cauterize aphthous ulcers in the mouth and canker sores, as it has a significant drying effect to the area and reduces the irritation felt at the site.[36][37] It has been used to stop bleeding in cases of hemorrhagic cystitis[38] and is used in some countries as a cure for hyperhidrosis.[citation needed]
It is used in dentistry (especially in gingival retraction cords) because of its astringent and hemostatic properties.[citation needed]
Potassium and ammonium alum are the active ingredients in some antiperspirants and deodorants, acting by inhibiting the growth of the bacteria responsible for body odor. Alum's antiperspirant and antibacterial properties[39][40] contribute to its traditional use as an underarm deodorant.[12] It has been used for this purpose in Europe, Mexico, Thailand (where it is called sarn-som), throughout Asia and in the Philippines (where it is called tawas). Today, potassium or ammonium alum is sold commercially for this purpose as a "deodorant crystal".[41][42][7] Beginning in 2005 the US Food and Drug Administration no longer recognized it as a wetness reducer, but it is still available and used in several other countries, primarily in Asia.[citation needed]
Potassium alum was the major immunologic adjuvant used to increase the efficacy of vaccines, and has been used since the 1920s.[43] But it has been almost completely replaced by aluminium hydroxide and aluminium phosphate in commercial vaccines.[44]
Alum may be used in depilatory waxes used for the removal of body hair or applied to freshly waxed skin as a soothing agent.
In the 1950s, men sporting crewcut or flattop hairstyles sometimes applied alum to their hair, as an alternative to pomade, to keep the hair standing up.[citation needed]
Culinary
[edit]Potassium alum may be an acidic ingredient of baking powder to provide a second leavening phase at high temperatures (although sodium alum is more commonly used for that purpose).[citation needed] For example, potassium alum is frequently used in leavening of youtiao, a traditional Chinese fried bread, throughout China.[45]
Alum was used by bakers in England during the 1800s to make bread whiter. This was theorized by some, including John Snow, to cause rickets.[46][47] The Sale of Food and Drugs Act 1875 (38 & 39 Vict. c. 63) prevented this and other adulterations.[48]
Potassium alum, under the name "alum powder", is found in the spice section of many grocery stores in the US. Its chief culinary use is in pickling recipes, to preserve and add crispness to fruit and vegetables.[49]
Flame retardant
[edit]Potassium alum is used as a fire retardant to render cloth, wood, and paper materials less flammable.[33]
Tanning
[edit]Potassium alum is used in leather tanning,[50] in order to remove moisture from the hide and prevent rotting.[citation needed] Unlike tannic acid, alum doesn't bind to the hide and can be washed out of it.[citation needed]
Dyeing
[edit]Alum has been used since antiquity as mordant to form a permanent bond between dye and natural textile fibers like wool.[51] It is also used for this purpose in paper marbling.[52]
Chemical flocculant
[edit]Potassium alum has been used since remote antiquity for purification of turbid liquids.[53] It is still widely used in the purification of water for drinking and industrial processes water, treatment of effluents and post-storm treatment of lakes to precipitate contaminants.[54]
Between 30 and 40 ppm of alum[53][55] for household wastewater, often more for industrial wastewater,[56] is added to the water so that the negatively charged colloidal particles clump together into "flocs", which then float to the top of the liquid, settle to the bottom of the liquid, or can be more easily filtered from the liquid, prior to further filtration and disinfection of the water.[33] Like other similar salts, it works by neutralizing the electrical double layer surrounding very fine suspended particles, allowing them to join into flocs.
The same principle is exploited when using alum to increase the viscosity of a ceramic glaze suspension; this makes the glaze more readily adherent and slows its rate of sedimentation.[citation needed]
Lake pigments
[edit]Aluminum hydroxide from potassium alum serves as a base for the majority of lake pigments.[57]
Dissolving iron and steel
[edit]Alum solution has the property of dissolving steels while not affecting aluminium or base metals. Alum solution can be used to dissolve steel tool bits that have become lodged in machined castings.[58][59]
Other
[edit]In traditional Japanese art, alum and animal glue were dissolved in water, forming a liquid known as dousa (ja:礬水), and used as an undercoat for paper sizing.[citation needed]
Alum is an ingredient in some recipes for homemade modeling compounds, often called "play clay" or "play dough", intended for use by children.[citation needed]
Potassium alum was formerly used as a hardener for photographic emulsions (films and papers), usually as part of the fixer. It has now been replaced in that use by other chemicals.
Toxicology and safety
[edit]Potassium alum may be a weak irritant to the skin.[60]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Alum-(K) Mineral Data". Mineralogy Database. Archived from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ^ International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (2005). Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 2005). Cambridge (UK): RSC–IUPAC. ISBN 0-85404-438-8. Electronic version.
- ^ "Material Safety Data Sheet - Aluminum potassium sulfate dodecahydrate". Archived from the original on 25 October 2020. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
- ^ "Crystal structure of the alums". Crystallography Open Database. 1934. Archived from the original on 15 April 2018. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- ^ Bottomley, L.; Bottomley, L. A. (2010). Chemistry 1310: Laboratory Manual. Plymouth, Michigan: School of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology / Hayden-McNeil Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7380-3819-3.
- ^ "alum | chemical compound". Britannica.com. Archived from the original on 26 May 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
- ^ a b Helmenstine, Anne Marie. "What is Alum?". About.com. Archived from the original on 14 April 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ^ a b "Alum Block for Shaving – When and How to Use One". BlakenBlade.com. Blake'n Blade Shave Shop. Archived from the original on 15 January 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- ^ See Henry VII of England trade section. Henry broke the Pope's monopoly by financing shipping bootstrapping a trading system with the Ottoman Empires mines
- ^ a b c d e f Levey, Martin (1958). "Alum in Ancient Mesopotamian Technology". Isis. 49 (2): 166–169. doi:10.1086/348667. JSTOR 226929 – via JSTOR.
- ^ A. Archontidou 2005, "Un atelier de preparation de l'alun a partir de l'alunite dans l'isle de Lesbos" in L'alun de Mediterranée. ed P. Borgard et al.
- ^ a b Alumen, and the Several Varieties of it; Thirty-eight Remedies. Archived 22 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Pliny the Elder, The Natural History, book 35, chapter 52; on the Perseus Digital Library at Tufts University. Last accessed 27 December 2011.
- ^ Dioscorides, book 5, chapter 123.
- ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 766–767.
- ^ "Color in Relation to the Political and Economic History of the Western World" by Sidney M Edelstein, Proceedings of the Perkin Centennial, American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists, September 1956
- ^ "Worldly Goods: A New History of the Renaissance", Lisa Jardine, 1996, Norton&Co, pages 114–116 ISBN 978-0393318661
- ^ "How alum shaped the Yorkshire coast". National Trust, UK. Archived from the original on 3 December 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
- ^ Chance, Stephen (20 November 2013). "Was alum the first example of the north-east's 'dirty' industries? | UK news". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
- ^ George Ernst Stahl (1703), Specimen Beccherianum Archived 5 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine. Johann Ludwig Gleditsch, Leipzig.
- ^ George Ernst Stahl (1723), Ausführliche Betrachtung und zulänglicher Beweiss von den Saltzen, daß diesselbe aus einer zarten Erde, mit Wasser innig verbunden, bestehen Archived 22 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine (Detailed treatment and adequate proof of salts, that they consist of a subtile earth intimately bound with water) Wäysenhaus, Halle.
- ^ Johann Heinrich Pott (1746), Chymische Untersuchungen, welche fürnehmlich von der Lithogeognosia oder Erkäntniß und Bearbeitung der gemeinen einfacheren Steine und Erden ingleichen von Feuer und Licht handeln Archived 22 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine, volume 1, p. 32.
- ^ Andreas Sigismund Marggraf (1754), "Expériences faites sur la terre d'alun" Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Experiments made on the earth of alum), Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences et belles-lettres de Berlin, pp. 41–66.
- ^ a b c Chisholm 1911, p. 766.
- ^ Marggraf (1754) "Expériences qui concernent la régénération de l'alun de sa propre terre, l'après avoir séparé par l'acide vitriolique ; avec quelques compositions artificielles de l'alun par moyen d'autres terres, et dudit acide" Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine. Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences et belles-lettres de Berlin, pp. 31–40.
- ^ Torbern Bergman (1767), "IX. De confectione Aluminis" Archived 23 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine. In Opuscula physica et chemica, I. G. Müller, Leipzig, 1788), volume 1, pp. 306–307.
- ^ Martin Heinrich Klaproth (1797), Beiträge zur Chemischen Kenntniss Der Mineralkörper Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Contributions to [our] chemical knowledge of mineral substances). Decker and Co., Posen, and Heinrich August Rottmann, Berlin; pp. 45–46 and https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433066422746;view=1up;seq=213 Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine p. 193.
- ^ Martin Heinrich Klaproth (1801), Analytical Essays Towards Promoting the Chemical Knowledge of Mineral Substances. T. Cadell, Jr. & W. Davies, London. His finding of potassium in leucite appears on pp. 353–354.: "On the contrary, I was surprised in an unexpected manner, by discovering in it another constituent part, consisting of a substance, the existence of which, certainly, no one person would have conjectured within the limits of the mineral kingdom .... This constituent part of leucite ... is no other than pot-ash, which, hitherto, has been thought exclusively to belong to the vegetable kingdom, and has, on this account, been called vegetable alkali. ... This discovery, which I think of great importance, cannot fail to occasion considerable changes in the systems of natural history ...". The discovery of potassium in lepidolite is mentioned on p. 472.
- ^ Vauquelin (1797), "Sur la nature de l'Alun du commerce, sur l'existence de la potasse dans ce sel, et sur diverses combinaisons simples ou triples de l'alumine avec l'acide sulfurique" Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine (On the nature of commercial alum, on the existence of potash in this salt, and on various simple or triple compounds of alumina with sulfuric acid). In Annales de Chimie et de Physique, 1st series, volume 22, pages 258–279.
- ^ Jean-Antoine Chaptal (1797), "Comparée des quatre principales sortes d'Alun connues dans le commerce; et Observations sur leur nature et leur usage" Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Comparison of the four main types of commercial alum; and observations on their nature and use). In Annales de Chimie et de Physique, 1st series, volume 22, pages 280–296.
- ^ Bottomley (2010) p. 35.
- ^ "Alum-(K) mineral data and information". MinDat. Archived from the original on 3 July 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ^ "Kalinite Mineral Data". MinDat. Archived from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ^ a b c Otto Helmboldt, L. Keith Hudson, Chanakya Misra, Karl Wefers, Wolfgang Heck, Hans Stark, Max Danner, Norbert Rösch "Aluminium Compounds, Inorganic" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 2007, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim.doi:10.1002/14356007.a01_527.pub2
- ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 767.
- ^ Handa, Parvesh (1982). Herbal beauty care. New Delhi: Orient Paperbacks. p. 12. ISBN 9788122200249. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
- ^ "Canker Sores – Treatment & Prevention". lagunaparkdentistry.com. Archived from the original on 9 June 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
- ^ Ong, Willie T. "Singaw: Ano ang lunas?". Philippine Star. Archived from the original on 1 November 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
- ^ Kennedy, C.; Snell, M. E.; Witherow, R. E. (1984). "Use of Alum to Control Intractable Vesical Haemorrhage". British Journal of Urology. 56 (6): 673–675. doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.1984.tb06143.x. PMID 6534488.
- ^ Kanlayavattanakul, M.; Lourith, N. (1 August 2011). "Body malodours and their topical treatment agents". International Journal of Cosmetic Science. 33 (4): 298–311. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2494.2011.00649.x. PMID 21401651. S2CID 11235250.
- ^ Aguilar, T. N.; Blaug, S. M.; Zopf, L. C. (July 1956). "A study of the antibacterial activity of some complex aluminum salts". Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association. 45 (7): 498–500. doi:10.1002/jps.3030450720. PMID 13345689.
- ^ US patent 5399364, Francis Verdan, "Cosmetic assembly defined by encased stick of alum", issued 1995-05-21 [1]
- ^ Baki, Gabriella; Alexander, Kenneth S. (27 April 2015). Introduction to Cosmetic Formulation and Technology. John Wiley & Sons. p. 324. ISBN 9781118763780. Archived from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
- ^ Mbow, M. Lamine; De Gregorio, Ennio; Ulmer, Jeffrey B. (2011). "Alum's adjuvant action: Grease is the word". Nature Medicine. 17 (4): 415–416. doi:10.1038/nm0411-415. PMID 21475229. S2CID 6343632.
- ^ Marrack, Philippa; McKee, Amy S.; Munks, Michael W. (2009). "Towards an understanding of the adjuvant action of aluminium". Nature Reviews Immunology. 9 (4): 287–293. doi:10.1038/nri2510. ISSN 1474-1733. PMC 3147301. PMID 19247370.
- ^ Li, G.; Zhao, X.; Wu, S.; Hua, H.; Wang, Q.; Zhang, Z. (June 2017). "Dietary exposure to aluminium in the popular Chinese fried bread youtiao". Food Additives & Contaminants – Part A: Chemistry, Analysis, Control, Exposure & Risk Assessment. 34 (6): 972–979. doi:10.1080/19440049.2017.1306757. PMID 28332421. S2CID 24675971.
- ^ "On the adulteration of bread as a cause of rickets" (PDF). ucla.edu. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 April 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
- ^ "Brown Bread". The Church of England Magazine. Vol. 22. Church Pastoral-aid Society, London. January–June 1847. p. 355.
- ^ Hassall, Arthur Hill (1857). Adulterations detected; or, Plain instructions for the discovery of frauds in food and medicine. Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans & Roberts. p. 43.
- ^ Harampolis, Alethea; Rizzo, Jill (2013). The Flower Recipe Book. Artisan Books. ISBN 9781579655303.
- ^ Young, Laura S. (1995). Bookbinding & Conservation by Hand: A Working Guide. Oak Knoll Press. ISBN 9781884718113. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
- ^ Berger, G. (1840). The Mechanic and Chemist. p. 91.
- ^ Berry, Galen (2017). The Art of Marbling on Paper and Fabric. p. 6.
- ^ a b Faust, Samuel D.; Aly, Osman M. (1999). Chemistry of water treatment (2nd ed.). Chelsea, Michigan: Ann Arbor Press. ISBN 9781575040110. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
- ^ "Storm water treatment will strip phosphorus from Arboretum pond, College of Engineering @ the University of Wisconsin-Madison, initiatives in energy, health, nanotechnology, security, and information technology". Engr.wisc.edu. Archived from the original on 21 September 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
- ^ Bratby, John (2006). Coagulation and flocculation in water and wastewater treatment (2nd ed.). London: IWA Publ. ISBN 9781843391067.
- ^ Rice, J. K. (June 1957). "The use of organic flocculants and flocculating aids in the treatment of industrial water and industrial waste water". Symposium on Industrial Water and Industrial Waste Water (207): 41–51. doi:10.1520/STP39285S. ISBN 978-0-8031-5629-6. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
- ^ Dackerman, Susan (2002). Painted Prints: The Revelation of Color in Northern Renaissance & Baroque Engravings, Etchings, & Woodcuts. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0271022352. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqZYgReuywM Archived 19 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine AvE demonstrates use of alum to remove a broken stud from an aluminium engine head
- ^ "What did you do today? (2014)". Model Engineer. Archived from the original on 2 August 2017. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
- ^ Gallego, H.; Lewis, E. J.; Crutchfield, C. E. III (July 1999). "Crystal deodorant dermatitis: Irritant dermatitis to alum-containing deodorant". Cutis. 64 (1): 65–6. PMID 10431678.
Works cited
[edit]- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alum". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 766–767. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the