| Arthur Lalanne Kimball - 1911 - 710 pages
...molecules of dissolved substance per gram of pure solvent is the same in one as in the other, just as equal volumes of different gases at the same temperature and pressure contain equal numbers of molecules. (Avogadro's law.) CAPILLARITY AND SURFACE TENSION. 254. Capillarity. —... | |
| William Ramsay - 1912 - 204 pages
...French chemist of last century. CHAPTER III MOLECULAR WEIGHTS FROM Avogadro's Law, that equal volumes of gases at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of molecules, it is possible to deduce the molecular weight of any compound which can be obtained in the state of... | |
| Lester Paige Breckenridge, Henry Kreisinger, Walter T. Ray - 1912 - 436 pages
...because the volumetric weights of gases are directly proportional to their molecular weights, as all gases at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of molecules in the same volume. In working with the law of mass action all that is necessary is to sub stitute... | |
| 1912 - 570 pages
...because the volumetric weights of gases are directly proportional to their molecular weights, as all gases at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of molecules in the same volume. In working with the law of mass action all that is necessary is to substitute the... | |
| John Charles Hessler, Albert Lincoln Smith - 1912 - 572 pages
...Avogadro is that it takes equal numbers of molecules to occupy equal spaces, or, that equal volumes of all gases, at the same temperature and pressure, contain the same number of molecules. Avogadro was an Italian physicist, and announced his hypothesis in 1811. Ampere reached the same conclusion... | |
| Joseph William Mellor - 1912 - 896 pages
...It was at one time thought that this law was accounted for by itssuming that " equal volumes of all gases at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of atoms." What facts show that this assumption is incorrect ? What hypothesis is now accepted ? — Univ.... | |
| Edwin Bissell Holt, Walter Taylor Marvin, William Pepperell Montague, Ralph Barton Perry, Walter B. Pitkin, Edward Gleason Spaulding - 1912 - 522 pages
...gases should be the same, but the masses and velocities different, is explainable, if equal volumes of gases, at the same temperature and pressure, contain the same number of parts, either ultimate parts, or complexes acting as units. (Avagadro's hypothesis.) (i) That equal... | |
| Alexander Wilmer Duff - 1912 - 720 pages
...still further assumption equation (5) may be further generalized. According to Avogadro's hypothesis equal volumes of different gases at the same temperature and pressure contain equal numbers of molecules, that is, the total masses of equal volumes will be proportional to the... | |
| Arnold Frederick Holleman - 1912 - 532 pages
...overcome by a hypothesis, which AVOGADRO enunciated in 1811, to the effect that equal volumes of all yascs at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of molecules. AVOGADRO further supposes that the molecules of oxygen, hydrogen, chlOiine, and other elements cor.sis... | |
| Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1913 - 390 pages
...formulae was based on the adoption of the symbols H2O for water and making other formula; conform to this. If it be true, as Avogadro taught, that " equal volumes...quantities of all substances which fill the same volume in the state of gas must be taken as molecular proportions under the same conditions. Previously to this... | |
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