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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"*. "
The Experimental Study of Gases: An Account of the Experimental Methods ... - Page 172
by Morris William Travers - 1901 - 323 pages
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The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge, Volume 12

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...matter, could be effected, even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above...
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The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge, Volume 12

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...matter, could be effected, even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." It appeared, therefore, that a certain temperature exists, above...
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Gas and Gases

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...matter, could be effected, even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." In this experiment carbon dioxide was brought from the region...
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Applied Thermodynamics: A Textbook Covering the Syllabuses of the B. Sc ...

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 be effected, even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied." The isothermal for 35-5° C. is similar, but the inflection by...
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The Rise and Development of the Liquefaction of Gases

Willett Lepley Hardin - 1899 - 272 pages
...peculiar appearance of moving or flickering striae throughout the entire mass. At temperatures above 88° no apparent liquefaction of carbonic acid, or separation...matter, could be effected, even when a pressure of 300 or 400 atmospheres was applied. Nitrous oxide gave analogous results." A complete account of the...
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