 | 1865 - 338 pages
...nitrogen, or 3" parts by weight of hydrogen combined with 14 parts by weight of nitrogen. Further, when one volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes...hydrogen into two volumes of combined nitrogen and hv Irogen, but the reverse experiment is of very easy performance. Thus, if we submit ammonia gas to... | |
 | William Odling - 1866 - 188 pages
...by weight of hydrogen combined with 14 parts by weight of nitrogen, thus : — Ammonia Further, when one volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes...hydrogen into two volumes of combined nitrogen and hydrogen, but the reverse experiment is of very easy performance. Thus, if we submit ammonia gas to... | |
 | Ira Remsen - 1886 - 420 pages
...vapor: 2 volumes hydrogen combine to form •. 2 volumes water vapor. Finally, we have just learned that one volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes of hydrogen to form two volumes of ammonia: 3 volumes hydrogen combine to form 2 volumes ammonia. A careful study of the... | |
 | Paul Caspar Freer - 1895 - 304 pages
...into three equal parts in the beginning, and of these three parts one is left as nitrogen, so that — One volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes of hydrogen to form ammonia. Total Volume of Hydrogen and Nitrogen produced by the Decomposition of Ammonia. A final proof of the... | |
 | Rufus Phillips Williams - 1897 - 316 pages
...into three equal parts in the beginning, and of these three parts one is left as nitrogen, so that — One volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes of hydrogen to form ammonia. Total Volume of Hydrogen and Nitrogen produced by the Decomposition of Ammonia. A final proof of the... | |
 | Lyman Churchill Newell - 1903 - 618 pages
...Ammonia Chlorine Nitrogen Hydrochloric Acid (3) The same experiment, if performed accurately, shows that one volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes of hydrogen to form ammonia gas. A tube containing a known volume of chlorine is provided with a funnel through which concentrated... | |
 | Frederick Hutton Getman - 1913 - 498 pages
...one volume of oxygen combines with two volumes of hydrogen to form two volumes of water (vapor) ; and one volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes of hydrogen to form two volumes of ammonia. In a previous investigation, Gay-Lussac had shown that all gases behave identically... | |
 | Allerton Seward Cushman - 1920 - 116 pages
...volume of oxygen gas combines with two volumes of hydrogen to form not three but two volumes of steam. One volume of nitrogen combines with three volumes of hydrogen to form not four but two volumes of ammonia gas. The immediate inference was that the Daltonian atom must have... | |
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