New York Paper - Investigations in Thermal Chemistry, Showing Atomic Heat-Valency (Discussion, p. 986)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Halbert Powers Gillette
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
309 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1904

Abstract

In every chemical reaction heat is either developed or absorbed, and this plus or minus heat of formation is as definite in quantity as the weights of the reacting elements. In this paper I shall show that each chemical element and each chemical radical has its own definite heat-valency,—a fact which, so far as I know, has hitherto escaped the attention of investigators, but, I feel sure, will be admitted after the demonstration here given, and may lead to some practical conclusions of value. When Berthelotys " law of maximum work " was found to have so many inexplicable exceptions, the pendulum of a scientific theory swung away from a recognition of the truth underlying that proposition; and this reaction went so far that not only has thermal chemistry been relatively neglected by recent investigators, but it is not uncommon now to find textbooks on physical chemistry which practically ignore all that Thomsen, Berthelot and others have done. To this temporary tendency of thought I attribute the failure to recognize the principles herein announced and explained. Not long ago, while studying tables of the formation-heat of various salts, I noticed that in this respect all potassium salts in solution differ from the corresponding sodium salts by 9.3 cal.1 I found also that similar differences exist between other salts, not only when the basic radical is varied, while the acid radical remains constant, but also when the acid radical is the variable. Thus chlorine salts in solution differ from bromine salts in this respect by 10.9 cal. Upon further study, I found that Thomsen had noted similar constant differences, but, so far as I can ascertain, he appears to have attached no great significance thereto.
Citation

APA: Halbert Powers Gillette  (1904)  New York Paper - Investigations in Thermal Chemistry, Showing Atomic Heat-Valency (Discussion, p. 986)

MLA: Halbert Powers Gillette New York Paper - Investigations in Thermal Chemistry, Showing Atomic Heat-Valency (Discussion, p. 986). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1904.

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