| Joshua Burgess - 1858 - 308 sider
...contains, or is composed of, two elements, one negative, and the other positive — hydrogen and oxygen. "Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric current, their elements being set free ; these I purpose to call electrolytes. Water therefore is an electrolyte. The bodies which, like nitric or sulphuric... | |
| John Henry Pepper - 1869 - 722 sider
...also, to class bodies together according to certain relations derived from their electrical actions ; and wishing to express those relations without at...decomposed directly by the electric current, their elements heing set free ; these I propose to call electrolytes*. Water, therefore, is an electrolyte. The bodies... | |
| John Henry Pepper - 1873 - 180 sider
...also, to class bodies together according to certain relations derived from their electrical actions ; and wishing to express those relations without at...sulphuric acids, are decomposed in a secondary manner are not included under this term. Then for electrochemically decomposed I shall often use the term... | |
| John Henry Pepper - 1877 - 764 sider
...also, to class bodies together according to certain relations derived from their electrical actions ; and wishing to express those relations without at...sulphuric acids, are decomposed in a secondary manner are not included under this term. Then for electrochemically decomposed I shall often use the term... | |
| Park Benjamin - 1893 - 614 sider
...metals, alkalies, and bases are evolved there, and it is in contact with the negative dcctrade. . . . Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric...set free ; these I propose to call electrolytes." . The distinction drawn by Faraday between the surfaces of the decomposing body at which the current... | |
| Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir - 1906 - 610 sider
...defines the terms which he introduced for the purpose of expressing the phenomena of electrolysis.3 "Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric...being set free; these I propose to call electrolytes (rfXeKrpuv, and Xvoo, solvo). . . . Then for electrochemical!;/ decomposed I shall often use the term... | |
| Harry Wheeler Morse - 1912 - 298 sider
...metals, alkalies, and bases, are evolved there, and it is in contact with the negative electrode. "... Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric...being set free ; these I propose to call electrolytes. . . . " Finally, I require a term to express those bodies which can pass to the electrodes. ... I propose... | |
| Harry Wheeler Morse - 1912 - 294 sider
...metals, alkalies, and bases, are evolved there, and it is in contact with the negative electrode. "... Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric...being set free ; these I propose to call electrolytes. . . . " Finally, I require a term to express those bodies which can pass to the electrodes. ... I propose... | |
| Sir William Cecil Dampier Dampier, Margaret Dampier Dampier - 1924 - 312 sider
...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... | |
| William Mansfield Clark - 1928 - 760 sider
...Stoney (1891) to the electric charge associated with each "bond" in one chemical atom. Electrolytes. — "Many bodies are decomposed directly by the electric...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... | |
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