alembic

alembicIllustration of a long-necked glass alembic from the first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 2, plate LXIV, figure 3. Components include the mattrass (A), the neck, (B), and the head (C).

alembic, apparatus for distillation used chiefly by alchemists. It was rendered obsolete and superseded by more convenient forms of stills for both experimental and industrial purposes. It consisted essentially of three parts: a gourdlike vessel containing the material to be distilled, called the cucurbit or mattrass; a vessel to receive and condense the vapour, called the head, capital, or alembic proper; and a receiver for the distillate, connected by a pipe with the capital. The entire apparatus was sometimes constructed of glass, but more usually the cucurbit was of copper or earthenware, and the capital alone of glass.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.