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Phlogiston theory
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=== J. H. Pott === [[Johann Heinrich Pott]], a student of one of Stahl's students, expanded the theory and attempted to [[Popular science|make it much more understandable to a general audience]]. He compared phlogiston to light or fire, saying that all three were substances whose natures were [[Tacit knowledge|widely understood but not easily defined]]. He thought that phlogiston should not be considered as a particle but as an essence that permeates substances, arguing that in a pound of any substance, one could not simply pick out the particles of phlogiston.<ref name="White"/> Pott also observed the fact that when certain substances are burned they increase in mass instead of losing the mass of the phlogiston as it escapes; according to him, phlogiston was the basic fire principle and could not be obtained by itself. Flames were considered to be a mix of phlogiston and water, while a phlogiston-and-earthy mixture could not burn properly. Phlogiston permeates everything in the universe, it could be released as heat when combined with an acid. Pott proposed the following properties: # The form of phlogiston consists of a circular movement around its axis. # When homogeneous it cannot be consumed or dissipated in a fire. # The reason it causes expansion in most bodies is unknown, but not accidental. It is proportional to the compactness of the texture of the bodies or to the intimacy of their constitution. # The increase of weight during [[calcination]] is evident only after a long time, and is due either to the fact that the particles of the body become more compact, decrease the volume and hence increase the density as in the case of lead, or those little heavy particles of air become lodged in the substance as in the case of powdered [[zinc oxide]]. # Air attracts the phlogiston of bodies. # When set in motion, phlogiston is the chief active principle in nature of all inanimate bodies. # It is the basis of colours. # It is the principal agent in fermentation.<ref name="White"/> Pott's formulations proposed little new theory; he merely supplied further details and rendered existing theory more approachable to the common man.
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