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" At temperatures above 88° no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could be effected, even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied. Nitrous oxide gave analogous results"*. "
Experimental researches on the specific gravity and the displacement of some ... - Page 184
by John Young Buchanan - 1912 - 227 pages
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A Short History of the Progress of Scientific Chemistry in Our Own Times

Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1899 - 284 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° no apparent liquefaction1 of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." Andrews then proceeded to make a series of exact comparisons of the volume assumed by carbonic acid...
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A History of Physics in Its Elementary Branches: Including the Evolution of ...

Florian Cajori - 1899 - 344 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." l This temperature of 30.92° C., at which the liquid and the gaseous states of C02 merge into one...
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A History of Physics in Its Elementary Branches: Including the Evolution of ...

Florian Cajori - 1899 - 352 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." ' This temperature of 30.92° C., at which the liquid and the gaseous states of C02 merge into one...
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The Experimental Study of Gases: An Account of the Experimental Methods ...

Morris William Travers - 1901 - 366 pages
...entire mass. At temperatures above 31: C. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation iuto two distinct forms of matter, could be effected, even...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied, nitrous oxide gave analogous results." The temperature at which the phenomenon took place he called...
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The Experimental Study of Gases: An Account of the Experimental Methods ...

Morris William Travers - 1901 - 356 pages
...throughout the entire mass. At temperatures above 31 D C. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could be effected, even when a pressure of .'500 or 400 atmospheres was applied, nitrous oxide gave analogous results." The temperature at which...
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The Encyclopedia Americana: A Universal Reference Library ..., Volume 7

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...
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The Progress of Scientific Chemistry in Our Own Times: With Biographical Notices

Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1913 - 390 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° no apparent liquefaction 1 of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...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...
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Textbook of Physical Chemistry

Azariah Thomas Lincoln - 1918 - 568 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied. Nitrous oxide gave analogous results." Andrews plotted the results of his experiments, and the curves...
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The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge, Volume 12

1919 - 880 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above which carbon dioxide cannot be liquefied...
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The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge, Volume 12

1919 - 870 pages
...throughout its entire mass. At temperatures above 88° F. no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation into two distinct forms of matter, could...a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above which carbon dioxide cannot be liquefied...
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