In Becher's theory, presence of terra lapidea, represented the degree of fusibility. Terra fluida, indicated the degree of fluidity, subtility, volatility, and metallicity. Terra pinguis was the element which imparted oily, sulphurous, or combustible properties. Becher believed that terra pinguis was a key feature of combustion and was released when combustible substances were burned.
Georg Ernst Stahl, a German chemist, was a student of Becher's who expanded on his theories with several publications in the period between 1703 and 1731. In a 1718 work, Stahl was the first to rename terra pinguis as phlogiston from the Ancient Greek phlogios for "fiery". Stahl's work analyzed the role of phlogiston in combustion and calcination, the 17th century term for oxidation.
"Phlogisticated" substances are those that contain phlogiston and are "dephlogisticated" when burned; "in general, substances that burned in air were said to be rich in phlogiston; the fact that combustion soon ceased in an enclosed space was taken as clear-cut evidence that air had the capacity to absorb only a definite amount of phlogiston. When air had become completely phlogisticated it would no longer serve to support combustion of any material, nor would a metal heated in it yield a calx; nor could phlogisticated air support life, for the role of air in respiration was to remove the phlogiston from the body. Thus, phlogiston as first conceived was a sort of anti-oxygen.
Joseph Black's student Daniel Rutherford discovered nitrogen in 1772 and the pair used the theory to explain his results. The residue of air left after burning, in fact a mixture of nitrogen and carbon dioxide, was sometimes referred to as "phlogisticated air", having taken up all of the phlogiston. Conversely, when oxygen was first discovered it was thought to be "dephlogisticated air", capable of combining with more phlogiston and thus supporting combustion for longer than ordinary air .
Some phlogiston proponents explained this by concluding that phlogiston had negative weight; others, such as Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau, gave the more conventional argument that it was lighter than air. However, a more detailed analysis based on the Archimedean principle and the densities of magnesium and its combustion product shows that just being lighter than air cannot account for the increase in mass.
Still, phlogiston remained the dominant theory until Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier showed that combustion requires a gas which has weight (oxygen), which could be measured by means of weighing closed vessels. The use of closed vessels also negated the buoyancy which had disguised the weight of the gasses of combustion. These observations solved the weight paradox and set the stage for the new caloric theory of combustion. In some respects, the phlogiston theory can be seen as the opposite of the modern "oxygen theory". The phlogiston theory states that all flammable materials contain phlogiston that is liberated in burning, leaving the "dephlogisticated" substance in its "true" calx form. In the modern theory, on the other hand, flammable materials (and unrusted metals) are "deoxygenated" when in their pure form and become oxygenated when burned. However, the first part of the old theory requires that phlogiston has weight (since ashes weigh less), but the second requires that it have no weight or negative weight, since corroded metals weigh the same or more, depending on whether or not they are allowed to corrode in sealed chambers.
Phlogiston theory allowed chemists to bring explanation of apparently different phenomena into a coherent structure: combustion, metabolism, and formation of rust. The recognition of the relation between combustion and metabolism was a forerunner of the recognition that the metabolism of living creatures and combustion can be understood in terms of fundamentally related chemical processes. The nearest comparable contemporary concept is entropy, whereby the amount of phlogiston in a system would be inversely proportional to its entropy.
Phlogiston features in the science fiction short story "...The World, As We Know'T" by Howard Waldrop. In the story, a post-American Revolution scientist proves that phlogiston is real, with catastrophic results.
The 1991 computer game Ultima: Worlds of Adventure 2: Martian Dreams involved a "space cannon" that used phlogistonite to send a capsule to Mars.
Phlogiston is briefly referred to in the final chapter of Michael Crichton's The Lost World.
Bonobo Conspiracy mentions phlogiston in Episode #907
In the Dungeons & Dragons Spelljammer setting, Phlogiston was given as the name of the mysterious substance in which the crystal spheres which contained the planets bobbed around. It was highly flammable, a considerable problem for ships attempting to traverse the Phlogiston.
In World of Warcraft, Phlogiston is a source of fuel for various inventions.
Within Issue 6 of the Tom Strong comic book series, antagonist Paul Saveen attempts to burn Tom to death using "liquid phlogiston". Later in the same issue, the scene is revisited in the future with Paul Saveen acknowledging that phlogiston never existed and that it's a curious thing that it functioned as it did when in the past.
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. briefly mentions phlogiston in his novel Jailbird.
Robert M. Pirsig briefly mentions Phlogiston in his novel "Lila".
Heroics for Beginners by John Moore features a phlogiston machine.