| 1843 - 714 pages
...current, unless it be itself a compound of more elementary ions, and so subject to actual decomposition. " If, therefore, an ion pass towards one of the electrodes, another ion must also be putsing simultaneously to the other electrode, although, from secondary action, it may not make its... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1844 - 512 pages
...then both will travel, the one to the anode, and the other to the cathode of the decomposing body. iii. If therefore an ion pass towards one of the electrodes, another ion must be also passing simultaneously to the other electrode, though from secondary action it may not make... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1855 - 574 pages
...then both will travel, the one to the anode, find the other to the cathode of the decomposing body. iii. If therefore an ion pass .towards one of the electrodes, another ion must be also passing simultaneously to the other electrode, though, from secondary action, it may not make... | |
| Michael Faraday, Johann Wilhelm Hittorf, Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Kohlrausch - 1899 - 116 pages
...cation, then both will travel, the one to the anode, the other to the cathode, of the decomposing body. III. If, therefore, an ion pass towards one of the...secondary action, it may not make its appearance. IV. A body decomposable directly by the electric current, * [Oxygen, chlorine, and iodine are undoubtedly... | |
| Michael Faraday, Johann Wilhelm Hittorf, Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Kohlrausch - 1899 - 116 pages
...simultaneously to the other electrode, although, from secondary action, it may not make its appearance. IV. A body decomposable directly by the electric current,...also render them up during the act of decomposition. V. There is but one electrolyte composed of the same two elementary ions ; at least such appears to... | |
| 1907 - 452 pages
...then both will travel, the one to the anode, the other to the cathode of the decomposing body. § 828. If, therefore, an ion pass towards one of the electrodes,...secondary action, it may not make its appearance. He distinctly recognised that " attraction of aggregation " lay at the root of electrolytic phenomena—... | |
| Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1915 - 744 pages
...hydrogen, oxygen, chlorine, iodine, lead, tin, are ions." Or again. Art. 829, "A body decomposable by the electric current, ie an electrolyte, must consist...also render them up during the act of decomposition." Nowadays electrochcmists do not call the substance hydrogen an ion : they would say one atom of hydrogen... | |
| Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1915 - 778 pages
...iodine, lead, tin, are ions." Or again, Art. 82!), "A body decomposable by the electric current, i.«. an electrolyte, must consist of two ions, and must...also render them up during the act of decomposition." Nowadays electrochemists do not call the substance hydrogen an ion : they would say one atom of hydrogen... | |
| Edgar Fahs Smith - 1917 - 546 pages
...unless it be itself a compound of more elementary ions, and so subject to actual decomposition." " If, therefore, an ion pass towards one of the electrodes,...secondary action, it may not make its appearance." 81. In explanation of the mixed precipitates produced upon the membrane, I suggest that the hydrated... | |
| Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1918 - 768 pages
...iodine, lead, tin, are ions." Or again, Art. 829, "A body decomposable by the electric current, te an electrolyte, must consist of two ions, and must also render them up during tbe act of decomposition." Nowadays electrochemists do not'eall the substance hydrogen an ion : they... | |
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