Researches, also, to class bodies together according to certain relations derived from their electrical actions ; and wishing to express those relations without at the same time involving the expression of any hypothetical views, I intend using the following... Series 1-14 [Phil. trans., 1831-38] 1839 - Page 197by Michael Faraday - 1839Full view - About this book
| William Mansfield Clark - 1928 - 758 pages
...(1891) to the electric charge associated with each "bond" in one chemical atom. Electrolytes.—"Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric current,...being set free; these I propose to call electrolytes." Faraday in 1834. Electrode.—"In place of the term pole, I propose using that of electrode, and I... | |
| Sydney Ross - 1991 - 254 pages
...electrodes (fjteicrpov and 6801; a pathway, though Faraday also thought of it as a doorway); bodies that are 'decomposed directly by the electric current, their elements being set free' were to be called electrolytes (f^XeKtpov + Xvr6<; = that which can be electrically loosened or decomposed);... | |
| Sir William Cecil Dampier Dampier, Margaret Dampier - 2003 - 312 pages
...also, to class bodies together according to certain relations derived from their electrical actions; and wishing to express those relations without at...set free; these I propose to call electrolytes*.... Finally, I require a term to express those bodies which can pass to the electrodes, or, as they are... | |
| 578 pages
...metals, alkalies, and bases, are evolved there, and it is in contact with the negative electrode. 664. I shall have occasion in these Researches, also, to...being set free ; these I propose to call electrolytes :J Water, therefore, is an electrolyte. The bodies which like nitric or sulphuric acids, are decomposed... | |
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