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Section III.—Determination of the Specific Gravity of a Saline Solution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2013

Extract

When determining the specific gravity of a saline solution by the hydrometric method, it is necessary first to find the weight which must be added to the hydrometer to immerse it to the 50-mm. mark when floating in the saline solution at the chosen standard temperature. This added weight is found by a series of observations in exactly the same manner as with the hydrometer in distilled water (see § 14 et seq.).

The details of three series of observations with hydrometer No. 17 in a solution of ⅛ gram-molecule of cæsium chloride in 1000 grams of water at 19·50° are given as an example in Table C. This table is arranged in the same manner as Table A1.

Type
I.—Experimental Researches on the Specific Gravity and the Displacement of some Saline Solutions
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1912

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References

page 46 note * Smithsonian Physical Tables, 5th revised edition, 1910.