GLOSSARY 333 set by heat and pressure but which do not return to the plastic state on reheating. Tincture, a dilute extract of a drug or chem- ical, usually a plant principle in alcohol. Tinting Strength, the ability of a coloring material like dye or pigment to impart color; same as * tinctorial power.* Tooth, the roughened or absorbent quality of a surface which favors the application and adhesion of paint coatings. Top Tone (or Mass Tone), the full strength and color of a pigment or paint when viewed by reflected light (see also Under- tone). Tufa, a sedimentary rock composed of silica or calcium carbonate deposited from waters of lakes, rivers, and springs. Ultra-Violet (or Ultra-Violet Rays), that por- tion of the invisible spectrum that lies beyond the violet or on the shorter wave- length side of the visible spectrum; that portion of the light spectrum between 4000 A units and lao A units. Undertone, the color of a pigment or paint when viewed by transmitted light or when spread thinly over, or mixed with, much white. Unsaturated, (i) designating an organic com- pound having double or triple bonds or linkages between carbon atoms; e.g.> ethyl- ene, H2C = CH2, or acetylene, HC m CH; (a) said of a solution which is capable of dis- solving more solute. U.S.P., letters commonly affixed to the name of a material indicating that it conforms in grade to the specifications of the United States Pharmacopoeia and that it is ap- proved for use hi medicinal preparations; it does not necessarily mean, however, that the material is chemically pure. Valence, a value or number which expresses the capacity of an atom to combine with other atoms in definite proportions; it is measured with the combining capacity of hydrogen taken as a unit; e.gf> chlorine in HC1 (hydrochloric acid) is monovalent; oxygen in HsO (water) is divalent; and carbon in CHU (methane) is tetravalent. Vapor Pressure, the pressure at which a liquid and its vapor are in equilibrium at a definite temperature. If the v.p. reaches the pre- vailing atmospheric pressure (i atmos- phere), the liquid boils. V.p. is usually ex- pressed in millimeters of mercury; e.g., v.p. at 20° C. for water is 17.5 mm.; for alcohol, 44 mm.; and for acetone, 178 mm. Viscosity, the internal friction of a fluid which influences its rate of flow or causes it to exhibit slight resistance to change of form; the state of being glutinous or sticky or resistant to flow. Volatile, designating a substance that evapo- rates rapidly. Water of Crystallization (Water of Eydration), water that is combined with certain crystal- line salts in definite proportions by weight and which may be completely removed by heating; e.g.9 CaSCX-aH^O (calcium sul- phate dihydrate) and CuSO^EhO (copper sulphate pentahydrate). X-Rays, a group of invisible light rays of extremely short wave-length, ranging from 0.06 to 20 Angstrom units, produced in an exhausted tube (called an * x-ray tube ') by fast-moving cathode rays impinging upon a metal surface.