IT has often been maintained on chemical grounds that hydrogen gas is the vapour of a highly volatile metal. The idea forces itself upon the mind that palladium with its occluded hydrogen is simply an alloy of this volatile metal in which the volatility... Journal of the Franklin Institute - Page 2481869Full view - About this book
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1900 - 870 pages
...association with hydrogen. He regarded the product simply as an alloy of the volatile metal liydroyenium, in which the volatility of the one element is restrained...its metallic aspect equally to both constituents. Considerations of a purely chemical character have up to thepresent time proved insufficient to decide... | |
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1900 - 880 pages
...association with hydrogen. He regarded the product simply as an alloy of the volatile metal liydrogenium, in which the volatility of the one element is restrained...its metallic aspect equally to both constituents. Considerations of a purely chemical character have up to the present time proved insufficient to decide... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1869 - 674 pages
...November 23, 1868. It has often hcen maintained on chemical grounds that hydrogen gas is the vapour of a highly volatile metal. The idea forces itself...which the volatility of the one element is restrained hy its union with the other, and which owes its metallic aspect equally to both constituents. How far... | |
| 1869 - 340 pages
...Muter of the Mint. IT has often been maintained on chemical grounds that hydrogen gas is the vapour of a highly volatile metal. The idea forces itself...metallic aspect equally to both constituents. How fir such a view is borne out by the properties of the compound substance in question will appear by... | |
| 1869 - 374 pages
...MASTER ОГ TUB MIHT. IT has often been maintained on chemical grounds that hydrogen gas is the vapour of a highly volatile metaL The idea forces itself...and which owes its metallic aspect equally to both constituent.«. How far such a view is borne out by the properties of the compound substance in question... | |
| 1869 - 668 pages
...Master of the Mint. IT has often been maintained on chemical grounds that hydrogen gas it the vapour of a highly volatile metal. The idea forces itself...union with the other, and which owes its metallic aspea equally to both constituents. How far such a view is borne out by the properties of the compound... | |
| James Samuelson, Henry Lawson, William Sweetland Dallas - 1869 - 506 pages
...the results obtained by the Master of the Mint appear to confirm those views. Mr. Graham remarks : " The idea forces itself upon the mind that palladium,...its metallic aspect equally to both constituents." The following brief statements of the conditions of palladium — and of palladium charged with hydrogen... | |
| 1869 - 542 pages
...that hydrogen was merely the vapour of a highly volatile metal, wo may therefore be prepared to admit that "palladium with its occluded hydrogen is simply...restrained by its union with the other, and which gwes its metallic aspect equally to both constituents." As Mr. Graham proposes the name hydrogenium... | |
| Charles W. Vincent, James Mason - 1870 - 314 pages
...of laying before the Society an ingot of that highly volatile metal hydrogen ; but he states that " the idea forces itself upon the mind that palladium,...its metallic aspect equally to both constituents. " This idea he confirms by a series of experiments, in which palladium is charged with 800 or 900 times... | |
| American Pharmaceutical Association - 1870 - 482 pages
...and other metals with their occluded hydrogen probably are alloys of a volatile metal, Hydrogenium, in which the volatility of the one element is restrained...its metallic aspect equally to both constituents. Organic Chemistry continues to be productive, comprising among its results the synthesis of several... | |
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