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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
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 49 , Issue 1 , 1912 , pp. 44 - 52
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1912
References
page 46 note * Smithsonian Physical Tables, 5th revised edition, 1910.