The total pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of the gases in the mixture. Nature - Page 308edited by - 1898Full view - About this book
| Edmund Burke - History - 1899 - 660 pages
...There are cases in which this law does not hold good, and M. Leduc proposes a modification, namely, that the volume occupied by a mixture of gases is...conditions of pressure and temperature of the mixture. At - 200° C. the specific electrical resistance of iron is extremely low. From that point up to red... | |
| Chemical Society (Great Britain) - Chemistry - 1898 - 1020 pages
...well-known law of partial pressures, which is not in absolute agreement with the facts, the statement that the volume occupied by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the volumes occupied by its constituents under the particular temperature and pressure. In a mixture of gases,... | |
| Edmund Burke - Books - 1899 - 678 pages
...There are cases in which this law does not hold good, and M. Leduc proposes a modification, namely, that the volume occupied by a mixture of gases is...conditions of pressure and temperature of the mixture. At - 200° C. the specific electrical resistance of iron is extremely low. From that point up to red... | |
| Edmund Burke - Books - 1899 - 672 pages
...There are cases in which this law does not hold good, and M. Leduc proposes a modification, namely, that the volume occupied by a mixture of gases is...conditions of pressure and temperature of the mixture. At - 200° C. the specific electrical resistance of iron is extremely low. From that point up to red... | |
| Sir James Hopwood Jeans, James Jeans - Kinetic theory of gases - 1904 - 376 pages
...contributions, one from each constituent gas. This is confirmed by Dalton's Law : The pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the pressures exerted separately by its several components. TEMPERATURE. Definition. 124. The question... | |
| Sydney Young - Chemistry, Physical and theoretical - 1908 - 462 pages
...it would be more correct to state the law, as applicable to ordinary gases, in the following form. " The volume occupied by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the volumes which the component gases would separately occupy at the same temperature and under the same pressure... | |
| Arthur Woolsey Ewell - Chemistry, Physical and theoretical - 1909 - 396 pages
...substance used. 100. Dalton's Law. — In 1802 Dalton1 announced the law that the pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the separate pressures which each gas would exert 1 Mem. Manch. Lit. & Phil. Soc., 1802, p. 535. GAY LUSSAC'S... | |
| William Reed Veazey, Charles David Hodgman - Chemistry - 1914 - 346 pages
...constituent elements are always the same. Dal ton's Law of Partial Pressures. — -The pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the separate pressures which each gas would exert if it alone occupied the whole volume. This fact is expressed... | |
| James Riddick Partington - Chemistry, Physical and theoretical - 1924 - 298 pages
...under a (constant) total i In the case of non-ideal gases, Leduc (ACP, 1898, [vii.], 15, 106) assumes that the volume occupied by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the volume» which each gas would occupy at the pressure and temperature of the mixture. This is found... | |
| Lester Clyde Lichty - Natural gas - 1924 - 546 pages
...0.0446. TABLE VII MOLECULAR WEIGHTS Dalton's Law. — This law states that the total pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the pressures which would be exerted by each gas, were it to occupy the same volume as the mixture. Thus,... | |
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