phycite
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]phycite (countable and uncountable, plural phycites)
- (organic chemistry, obsolete) Erythritol, C4H6(OH)4, that has been obtained from the alga Protococcus vulgaris.
- 1853, William Francis, The Chemical Gazette, page 200:
- The elementary composition of phycite is as follows: — Carbon 39.33 Hydrogen 8.25 Oxygen 52.46 which is represented by the formula C12 H15O12, in consequence of its relations...
- 1853, American Journal of Science:
- Phycite is a saccharine substance obtained from an Alga, the Protococcus vulgaris, known under the name “Phycie.”
- 1854, Annual of Scientific Discovery, page 266:
- Although this new substance, phycite, (as he calls it) is very sweet, M. Lamy objects to its being called a sugar.