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On Ethane prepared from Ethyl Iodide, and on the Properties of some Mixtures of Ethane and Butane
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
In a paper on mixtures of ethane and nitrous oxide, read before the Physical Society of London in May 1895, I communicated a set of observations with regard to the condensation and the critical state of ethane. This substance was prepared by electrolysing sodium acetate: it was purified with fuming sulphuric acid, caustic soda, and phosphorus pentoxide, and condensed in a small copper cylinder, where it was subsequently boiled at low temperature in order to expel all permanent gas. The ethane with which the glass compression-tubes were filled was drawn from the liquid contained in the copper cylinder. Its condensation-pressures and critical constants are contained in the following table, which is taken from the paper mentioned (comp. fig. 3):—
The values of p and of the critical constants in Table I. are not absolutely correct. The observations showed the substance to contain some impurity, the condensation-pressures not being quite constant, but showing a slight increase, as is always the case for mixtures. The difference of the pressure at the beginning and at the end of the condensation amounted to 0·43 atmospheres at 15° C. It is, however, unlikely that this impurity in the ethane can have affected the values for p by more than a few tenths of an atmosphere. Nor will the value for the critical temperature differ by more than 0·1 or 0·27° C. from the true value, considering that Andrews' carbonic acid showed changes in vapour-pressure of over two atmospheres under the same circumstances, and that his value for the critical temperature, 30·9° C., is only about 0·4° C. too low.
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1897
References
page 433 note * Phil. Mag., 40, pp. 173–194Google Scholar.
page 434 note * Phil. Mag. (5), 18, p. 214Google Scholar.
page 434 note † Bulletin Ac. des Sciences de Cracovie, 1889, p. 27Google Scholar.
page 434 note ‡ Liebig's Annalen, 282, p. 245Google Scholar.
page 434 note § Jour. Chem. Soc., 45, p. 154Google Scholar; 47, p. 236.
page 434 note ∥ The compression-pump was a Natterer, which was very kindly lent to me by Prof. Crum-Brown.
page 435 note * Archives Néerlandaises, 26, pp. 354–422Google Scholar; Communications from the Physical Laboratory, Leiden, Nos. 4, 7, 8, 11, 13, 16, 17. Zeitschrift Physik. Chemie, 11, pp. 38–48Google Scholar.
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