| Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) - 1835 - 564 páginas
...associated theories of definite proportions and electro-chemical affinity, is very great. According 'to it, the equivalent weights of bodies are simply those...which contain equal quantities of electricity, or have naturally equal electric powers ; jt being the electricity which determines the equivalent number,... | |
| 1835 - 1102 páginas
...associated theories of definite proportions and electro-chemical affinity, is very great. According to it, the equivalent weights of bodies are simply those...which contain equal quantities of electricity, or have naturally equal electric powers ; it being the electricity which determines the equivalent number,... | |
| 1835 - 566 páginas
...proportions and electro-chemical affinify, s very great According to it, the equivalent weights of KM I if s are simply those quantities of them which contain equal quantities of electricity, or have naturally equal electric, powers ; it being the electricity which determines the equivalent number,... | |
| John Frederic Daniell - 1839 - 606 páginas
...decomposition of, and that which decomposes a certain quantity of matter are alike." According to this view, the equivalent weights of bodies are simply those...which contain equal quantities of electricity, or have naturally equal electric powers ; it being the electricity which determines the equivalent number,... | |
| Michael Faraday - 1839 - 634 páginas
...associated theories of definite proportions and electrochemical affinity, is very great. According to it, the equivalent weights of bodies are simply those...which contain equal quantities of electricity, or have naturally equal electric powers ; it being the ELECTRICITY which determines the equivalent number,... | |
| Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir - 1884 - 558 páginas
...electrical phenomena, has been considered by Helmholtz in the Faraday Lecture for iSSi1. Faraday's statement that 'the equivalent weights of ' bodies are simply...' theory or phraseology, then the atoms of bodies which are ' equivalent to each other in their ordinary chemical action, ' have equal quantities of... | |
| Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1894 - 406 páginas
...in the same proportion and yet give rise to totally distinct compounds; Faraday's discovery in 1833, "that the equivalent weights of bodies are simply...which contain equal quantities of electricity," or, in other words, that the atoms of bodies have equal quantities of electricity naturally associated... | |
| John Theodore Merz - 1896 - 520 páginas
...1834, when explaining his researches on electro - chemical action, he says ('Exper. Res.,' No. 869): "If we adopt the atomic theory or phraseology, then the atoms of bodies which are equivalents to each other in their ordinary chemical action have equal quantities of electricity... | |
| John Theodore Merz - 1896 - 484 páginas
...1834, when explaining his re-searches on electro - chemical action, he says ('Exper. Res.,' No. 869): "If we adopt the atomic theory or phraseology, then the atoms of bodie' which are equivalents to each other in their ordinary chemical action have equal quantities... | |
| Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1898 - 352 páginas
...acceptance. In developing this theory he uses the following language : — According to it [ie this theory], the equivalent weights of bodies are simply those...which contain equal quantities of electricity, or have naturally equal electric powers ; it being the ELECTRICITY which determines the equivalent number,... | |
| |