... power is in proportion to the chemical affinities producing it; that when it is deficient in force it may be helped by calling in chemical aid, the want in the former being made up by an equivalent of the latter; that, in other words, the forces termed... Philosophical Magazine - Page 1671894Full view - About this book
| Michael Faraday - Electricity - 1839 - 614 pages
...aid, the want in the former being made up by an equivalent of the latter ,• that, in other words, the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same. 919. When the circumstances connected with the production of electricity in the ordinary voltaic circuit... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - Electric power - 1844 - 512 pages
...chemical affinities, more powerful in their nature, over another set which are less powerful ; and the forces termed chemical affinity and Electricity are one and the same. It is the union of the zinc with the oxygen of the water, that determines the current in the common... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - Electricity - 1855 - 566 pages
...of chemical affinities more powerful in their nature, over another set which are less powerful ; and the forces termed chemical affinity and Electricity are one and the same. It is the union of the zinc with the oxygen of the water, that determines the current in the common... | |
| Benjamin Silliman - Physics - 1865 - 744 pages
...corollaries : — First, The source of Voltaic electricity in the pile is chemical action solely. Second, The forces termed chemical affinity and electricity, are one and the same. One or two additional illustrations of these laws will suffice in this place, referring the student... | |
| Dentistry - 1878 - 736 pages
...chemical aid, the want in the former being made up by an equivalent of the latter ; that, in other words, the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same." The latter sentence being italicised in the original in order to fix the attention upon the fact, at... | |
| Science - 1881 - 904 pages
...chlorine, bromine, to a negative charge. Faraday very often recurs to this to express his conviction that the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same. I have endeavored to give you a survey of the facts in their mutual connection, avoiding, as far as... | |
| Thomas Sterry Hunt - Medicine - 1882 - 274 pages
...light, or radiant heat, or chemical action,"* while Faraday was wont " to express his conviction that the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same." Helmholtz, from whom I here quote, adds : " I think the facts leave no doubt that the very mightiest... | |
| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - Natural history - 1883 - 780 pages
...aid, the want in the former being made up by an equivalent of the latter ; that, in other words, " the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same." ' That equivalents exist is no proof of oneness, but we see here great progress made by Faraday in... | |
| Marcellus John Thompson - Chemical affinity - 1884 - 38 pages
...action and its results, he says : " Faraday very often recurs to this to express his conviction that the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same. . . I think these facts leave no doubt that the very mightiest among chemical forces are of electrical... | |
| Thomas Sterry Hunt - Chemistry - 1886 - 744 pages
...light, or radiant heat, or chemical action,"f while Faraday was wont "to express his conviction that the forces termed chemical affinity and electricity are one and the same." Helmholtz, from whom I here quote, adds, " I think the facts leave no * Of the two essays above quoted,... | |
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