| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1905 - 1076 pages
...entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separatton into two distinct forms of matter, could be effected,...even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied.8 It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above which carbon dioxid cannot... | |
| John Young Buchanan - 1912 - 256 pages
...striae throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88" Fahr. no apparent liquefaction of C02 or separation into two distinct forms of matter could...when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied " (Pkil. Trans. (1869) vol. clix. p. 575). When a gas such as carbonic acid, under a pressure which... | |
| Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1913 - 394 pages
...flickering striae throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° no apparent liquefaction 1 of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." Andrews then proceeded to make a series of exact comparisons of the volume assumed by carbon dioxide... | |
| Azariah Thomas Lincoln - 1918 - 568 pages
...appearance of moving or flickering striae throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation...was applied. Nitrous oxide gave analogous results." Andrews plotted the results of his experiments, and the curves in Fig. 8 represent them. The pV curve... | |
| 1919 - 870 pages
...appearance of moving or flickering striae throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above which carbon dioxide cannot be liquefied... | |
| 1919 - 880 pages
...appearance of moving or flickering striae throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above which carbon dioxide cannot be liquefied... | |
| Robert Martin Caven - 1927 - 272 pages
...appearance of moving or flickering striae throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 31.1° C. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." In this experiment carbon dioxide was brought from the region of liquefaction to the region of no liquefaction... | |
| William Robinson (M.E.) - 1927 - 584 pages
...the tube, the space being then occupied by a homogeneous fluid. " No apparent liquefaction of CO2, or separation, into two distinct forms of matter could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." The isothermal for 35-5° C. is similar, but the inflection by change in volume is less abrupt. Further,... | |
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