GLUE, a valuable agglutinant, consisting of impure gelatin and widely used as an adhesive medium for wood, leather, paper and similar substances. Glues and gelatins merge into one another by imperceptible degrees. The difference is conditioned by the degree of purity; the more impure form is termed glue and is only used as an adhesive, the purer forms, termed gelatin, have other applications, especially in culinary operations and confec tionery. (See GELATIN.) It is only necessary to state here that gelatigenous or glue-forming tissues occur in the bones, skins and intestines of all animals, and that by extraction with hot water these agglutinating materials are removed, and the solution on evaporating and cooling yields a jelly-like substance—gelatin or glue.
Glues may be most conveniently classified according to their sources : bone glue, skin glue and fish glue; these may be regarded as impure forms of bone gelatin, skin gelatin and isinglass.
The separation of the fat, or "de-greasing of the bones" is affected (I) by boiling the bones with water in open vessels; (2) by treatment with steam under pressure ; or (3) by means of solvents. The last process is superseding the first two, which give a poor return of fat—a valuable consideration—and also involve the loss of a certain amount of glue. Many solvents have been proposed; the greatest commercial success appears to attend Scot tish shale oil and natural petroleum (Russian or American) boil ing at about loo° C. The vessels in which the extraction is carried out consist of upright cylindrical boilers, provided with manholes for charging, a false bottom on which the bones rest ; and with two steam coils—one for heating only, the other for leading in "live" steam. There is a pipe from the top of the vessel leading to a condensing plant. The vessels are arranged in batteries. In the actual operation the boiler is charged with bones, solvent is run in, and the mixture gradually heated by means of the dry coil; the spirit distils over, carrying with it the water present in the bones; and after a time the extracted fat is run off from discharge cocks in the bottom of the extractor. A fresh charge of solvent is introduced, and the cycle repeated ; this is repeated a third and fourth time, after which the bones contain only about 0.2% of fat, and a little of the solvent, which is removed by blowing in live steam under 70 to 8o lb. pressure. The de-greased bones are now cleansed from all dirt and flesh by rotation in a horizontal cylindrical drum covered with stout wire gauze. The attrition accompanying this motion suffices to remove the loosely adherent matter, which falls through the meshes of the gauze ; this meal contains a certain amount of glue-forming matter, and is generally passed through a finer mesh, the residuum being worked up in the glue-house, and the flour which passes through being sold as a bone-meal, or used as a manure.
The bones, which now contain 5 to 6% of glue-forming nitrogen and about 6o% of calcium phosphate, are next treated for glue. The most economical process consists in steaming the bones under pressure (I 5 lb. to start with, afterwards 5 lb.) in upright cylin drical boilers fitted with false bottoms. The glue-liquors collect beneath the false bottoms, and when of a strength equal to about 2o% dry glue they are run off to the clarifiers. The first runnings contain about 65 to 7o% of the total glue ; a second steaming extracts another 25 to 3o%. For clarifying the solutions ordinary alum is used, one part being used for 200 parts of dry glue.
The clear liquors are now concentrated to a strength of about 32% dry glue in winter and 35% in summer. This is invariably effected in vacuum pans—open boiling yields a dark-coloured and inferior product. Many types of vacuum plant are in use ; the Yaryan form, invented by H. T. Yaryan, is perhaps the best, and the double effect system is the most efficient. Af ter concentra tion the liquors are bleached by in sulphur dioxide, manu factured by burning sulphur ; by this means the colour can be lightened to any desired degree. The liquors are now run into galvanized sheet-iron troughs, eft. long, 6in. wide and sin. deep, where they congeal to a firm jelly, which is subsequently removed by cutting round the edges, or by warming with hot water, and turning the cake out. The cake is sliced to sheets of convenient thickness, generally by means of a wire knife, i.e., a piece of wire placed in a frame. Mechanical slicers acting on this principle are in use. Instead of allowing the solution to congeal in troughs, it may be "cast" on sheets of glass, the bottoms of which are cooled by running water. After congealing, the tremulous jelly is dried ; this is an operation of great nicety : the desiccation must be slow and is generally effected by circulating a rapid current of air about the cakes supported on nets set in frames.
The skins are then placed in hemp nets and introduced into an open boiler which has a false bottom, and a tap by which liquid may be run off. As the boiling proceeds test quantities of liquid are from time to time examined, and when a sample is found on cooling to form a stiff jelly, which happens when it contains about 32% dry glue, it is ready to draw off. The solution is then run to a clarifier, in which a temperature sufficient to keep it fluid is maintained, and in this way any impurity is permitted to sub side. The glue solution is then run into wooden troughs or coolers in which it sets to a firm jelly. The cakes are removed as in the case of bone glue (see above), and, having been placed on nets, are, in the Scottish practice, dried by exposure to open air. This primitive method has many disadvantages : on a hot day the cake may become unshapely, or melt and slip through the net, or dry so rapidly as to crack; a frost may produce fissures, while a fog or mist may precipitate moisture on the surface and occasion a mouldy appearance. The surface of the cake, which is generally dull after drying, is polished by washing with water. The practice of boiling, clarification, cooling and drying, which has been already described in the case of bone glue, has been also applied to the separation of skin glue.
There are innumerable recipes for adhesives specially applicable to certain substances and under certain conditions. For repairing glass, ivory, etc., isinglass (q.v.), which may be replaced by fine glue, yields valuable cements. Bookbinders employ an elastic glue obtained from an ordinary glue solution and glycerin, the water being expelled by heating ; an efficient cement for mounting photographs is obtained by dissolving glue in ten parts of alcohol and adding one part of glycerin ; portable or mouth glue—so named because it melts in the mouth—is prepared by dissolving one part of sugar in a solution of four parts of glue. An india rubber substitute is obtained by adding sodium tungstate and hydrochloric acid to a strong glue solution.
See Thomas Lambert, Glue, Gelatine and their Allied Products (1905) ; R. L. Fernbach, Glues and Gelatine (1907) ; H. C. Standage, Agglutinants of all Kinds for all Purposes (19o7).