StoichiometryLongmans, Green, and Company, 1908 - 381 pages |
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acetic acid alcohol amount apparatus atmos atomic weight benzene Berthelot boiling point Boyle's law bulb calculated carbon dioxide carbon tetrachloride Chem chemical chloride chlorobenzene components composition compounds compressed Compt condensation constant pressure constant temperature critical point critical pressure critical temperature critical volume curve determined dilute diminishes dissociation dissolved distillation elements employed equal equation equivalent error Ethyl experimental formula freezing point gaseous gram higher increase isochor isopentane isothermal lower Lussac maximum mean mercury metals method methyl acetate miscible mixtures of minimum molecular weight molecules nitrogen number of molecules observed obtained osmotic pressure oxide oxygen perfect gases phys proportional propyl pure quantity Ramsay ratio relation rise of temperature salts saturated vapour silver solid solubility solution solvent specific heat specific volume substances sulphate surface temperature and pressure tube v₁ vapour density vapour pressure velocity volumes of liquid Waals weight of oxygen
Popular passages
Page xxiv - Cavendish, namely, that, as nearly as possible, two volumes of hydrogen combine with one volume of oxygen to form water, the gases having been measured at the same temperature and pressure.
Page 255 - The total pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of the gases in the mixture.
Page iv - THERMOCHEMISTRY. By JULIUS THOMSEN, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry in the University of Copenhagen. Translated by KATHARINE A. BURKE, B.Sc. (Lond.), Assistant in the Department of Chemistry, University College, London. Crown 8vo.
Page 173 - On partially liquefying carbonic acid by pressure alone, and gradually raising at the same time the temperature to 88° Fahr., the surface of demarcation between the liquid and gas became fainter, lost its curvature, and at last disappeared. The space was then occupied by a homogeneous fluid, which exhibited, when the pressure was suddenly diminished or the temperature slightly lowered, a peculiar appearance of moving or flickering striae throughout its entire mass.
Page xxiii - ... expeditiously by heating the substance, mixed with chlorate of potassium and sodium chloride, and then estimating the hydrogen a,s well as the carbon. This process was afterwards perfected by Liebig. Berzelius, however, was able to show that compounds of carbon, like those of other elements, were instances of combination in constant and multiple proportions. In 1815 two papers were published in the Annals of Philosophy by Dr. Prout which have had much influence on the progress of chemistry. They...
Page iv - STOICHIOMETRY. By SYDNEY YOUNG, D.Sc., FRS, Professor of Chemistry in the University of Dublin...
Page iv - ELECTRO-CHEMISTRY. PART I.— GENERAL THEORY. By RA LEHFELDT, D.Sc., Professor of Physics at the East London Technical College. Including a Chapter on the Relation of Chemical Constitution to Conductivity, by TS MOORE, BA, B.Sc., Lecturer in the University of Birmingham. Crown 8vo.
Page xxii - ... he regarded the former as a compound of one atom of carbon and two of hydrogen, and the latter as a compound of one atom of carbon and one of hydrogen, and similarly for the two oxides of carbon. Knowing the relative weights in which these elements enter into combination, he deduced what he supposed were the relative weights of the atoms.
Page 262 - It was found by Regnault that when two non-miscible liquids are placed together over the mercury in a barometer tube, the observed vapour pressure is equal to the sum of the vapour pressures of the two liquids when heated separately to the same temperature. It is only necessary that both...
Page 63 - For compressible flow this becomes: where y is the ratio of the specific heat at constant pressure to that at constant volume...