A conductimetric investigation of phenomena in extremely dilute aqueous solutions
- Authors: Faure, Pierre Knobel
- Date: 1957
- Subjects: Adsorption , Solution (Chemistry)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4524 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1014891
- Description: 1. The apparatus used in this investigation is fully described, and a new method is outlined for the calibration of bridge resistances "in situ". 2. A chart is given for the accurate correction of weights in air to weights in vacuum for a range of temperatures extending from 10° to 28°C, and for pressures from 690 to 730 mm. 3. An automatic recycling still has been designed for the continuous production of "ultra-pure" water. This still is capable of delivering daily, in routine operation, 16 l. of water of conductivity less than 100 nm/cm after aeration with "C0₂- and NH₃-free" air. 4. A very soluble layer appears to form on the surface of' glass when it is dried; this layer is readily removed on contact with water. 5. The removal of carbon dioxide and of ammonia from aqueous solution by aeration with an indifferent gas has been fully investigated, and it has been shown that these gases can be completely eliminated by such a process. Whereas the carbon dioxide is removed fairly rapidly, however, the ammonia, whether present alone or together with carbon dioxide, only goes out of solution rather slowly. 6. It has been shown that ammonia is adsorbed from aqueous solution on the glass walls of the cell. 7. There does not appear to be any ammonium bicarbonate in the residual impurity left in the "ultra-pure" water obtained from the still; the impurity can, in fact, be regarded as neutral salt with sufficient accuracy for most purposes. 8. The resistance change which accompanies any variation in the rate of bubbling of the stirring gas through the water has been investigated, but no solution has been found as to the cause of this change. 9. A comparison has been made of the efficiency of different gases for stirring purposes, and it seems that, for general work, nitrogen is by far the most suitable of the common gases. 10. The extrapolation to be used for converting resistances to their values at infinite frequency appears ...
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1957
- Authors: Faure, Pierre Knobel
- Date: 1957
- Subjects: Adsorption , Solution (Chemistry)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4524 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1014891
- Description: 1. The apparatus used in this investigation is fully described, and a new method is outlined for the calibration of bridge resistances "in situ". 2. A chart is given for the accurate correction of weights in air to weights in vacuum for a range of temperatures extending from 10° to 28°C, and for pressures from 690 to 730 mm. 3. An automatic recycling still has been designed for the continuous production of "ultra-pure" water. This still is capable of delivering daily, in routine operation, 16 l. of water of conductivity less than 100 nm/cm after aeration with "C0₂- and NH₃-free" air. 4. A very soluble layer appears to form on the surface of' glass when it is dried; this layer is readily removed on contact with water. 5. The removal of carbon dioxide and of ammonia from aqueous solution by aeration with an indifferent gas has been fully investigated, and it has been shown that these gases can be completely eliminated by such a process. Whereas the carbon dioxide is removed fairly rapidly, however, the ammonia, whether present alone or together with carbon dioxide, only goes out of solution rather slowly. 6. It has been shown that ammonia is adsorbed from aqueous solution on the glass walls of the cell. 7. There does not appear to be any ammonium bicarbonate in the residual impurity left in the "ultra-pure" water obtained from the still; the impurity can, in fact, be regarded as neutral salt with sufficient accuracy for most purposes. 8. The resistance change which accompanies any variation in the rate of bubbling of the stirring gas through the water has been investigated, but no solution has been found as to the cause of this change. 9. A comparison has been made of the efficiency of different gases for stirring purposes, and it seems that, for general work, nitrogen is by far the most suitable of the common gases. 10. The extrapolation to be used for converting resistances to their values at infinite frequency appears ...
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1957
The British organ and its music during the nineteenth century
- Authors: Wise, James Patrick Gerald
- Date: 1957
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:2694 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1013429
- Description: It is a curious fact that, although the literature of the organ is a reasonably large one, no attempt has been made to study the history of the instrument in Britain in any detail. Hopkins and Rimbault covered a certain amount of ground up to 1800, but even they could not deal very extensively with the subject in a volume that was tracing the history of the organ not only in Britain, but throughout Europe, and not only its history but its construction also. For similar reasons Dr. Sumner? (name unclear), in his recent book, could paint little more than an outline picture. However, the British organ's development prior to 1800 was one that does not admit of very discursive treatment. Progress was lamentably slow in comparison with that of Continental organs; and consequently the nineteenth century dawned with British organ-building literally hundreds of years behind that of France, Germany, Belgium and Holland. Yet, a century later, the position was redeemed, and even before the present era opened, the products of British organ-builders were not merely equal to, but, in general superior to those of the Continent in tonal design, mechanism, in artistic finish, and in ordinary maintenance and preservation. The nineteenth century, then, must clearly be regarded as a remarkable, indeed glorious, period in British organ-building, in fact one is tempted to enquire, whether there exists, in the entire artistic and scientific history of any country a similar example of accelerated development; in which one country has made up three hundred years' leeway in one third of that time. This thesis therefore, sets out to examine and describe the events of the century, and the men who were responsible for those events, to trace the growth of the organ in its various departments, and as the instrument itself is only a means to an end, to say something about the way in which it was used, the music that was played on it, and the men who played and composed this music. The thesis is divided into two volumes, the first deals entirely with the history of the instrument and its builders during the nineteenth century, with an introduction briefly recounting the story from the Restoration up to the year 1800; and the second volume is concerned with the music and the musicians as well as the several detailed indexes which are so necessary if a work of this kind is to be of any value at all. A full bibliography is given in Volume Two, but supreme acknowledgement must be paid here to the quarterly periodical "The Organ" - still thriving after an active career that began in July 1921. Its scholarly articles range over the whole field of international organ-building and organ-history, and without its help this thesis would have been far less comprehensive in its scope and far lesss authorative in its source-material.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1957
- Authors: Wise, James Patrick Gerald
- Date: 1957
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:2694 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1013429
- Description: It is a curious fact that, although the literature of the organ is a reasonably large one, no attempt has been made to study the history of the instrument in Britain in any detail. Hopkins and Rimbault covered a certain amount of ground up to 1800, but even they could not deal very extensively with the subject in a volume that was tracing the history of the organ not only in Britain, but throughout Europe, and not only its history but its construction also. For similar reasons Dr. Sumner? (name unclear), in his recent book, could paint little more than an outline picture. However, the British organ's development prior to 1800 was one that does not admit of very discursive treatment. Progress was lamentably slow in comparison with that of Continental organs; and consequently the nineteenth century dawned with British organ-building literally hundreds of years behind that of France, Germany, Belgium and Holland. Yet, a century later, the position was redeemed, and even before the present era opened, the products of British organ-builders were not merely equal to, but, in general superior to those of the Continent in tonal design, mechanism, in artistic finish, and in ordinary maintenance and preservation. The nineteenth century, then, must clearly be regarded as a remarkable, indeed glorious, period in British organ-building, in fact one is tempted to enquire, whether there exists, in the entire artistic and scientific history of any country a similar example of accelerated development; in which one country has made up three hundred years' leeway in one third of that time. This thesis therefore, sets out to examine and describe the events of the century, and the men who were responsible for those events, to trace the growth of the organ in its various departments, and as the instrument itself is only a means to an end, to say something about the way in which it was used, the music that was played on it, and the men who played and composed this music. The thesis is divided into two volumes, the first deals entirely with the history of the instrument and its builders during the nineteenth century, with an introduction briefly recounting the story from the Restoration up to the year 1800; and the second volume is concerned with the music and the musicians as well as the several detailed indexes which are so necessary if a work of this kind is to be of any value at all. A full bibliography is given in Volume Two, but supreme acknowledgement must be paid here to the quarterly periodical "The Organ" - still thriving after an active career that began in July 1921. Its scholarly articles range over the whole field of international organ-building and organ-history, and without its help this thesis would have been far less comprehensive in its scope and far lesss authorative in its source-material.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1957
The struggle for national independence in its international setting : its economic and political background and its manifestation in the Fourth Committee of the United Nations General Assembly
- Authors: Lumsden, Geoffrey S
- Date: 1957
- Subjects: United Nations. General Assembly Self-determination, National Sovereignty Economics -- Political aspects Economic policy
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:1091 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012790
- Description: The decade following the close of the Second World War has been dominated throughout by the clash of political power of the United States and the Soviet Union. Their wartime alliance has crumbled. New, antagonistic alliances have come into existence. The so-called 'EastWest' split, polar in its effect, has forced the admission that prospects of stable peace depend on how successfully bridges can be made to span the gulf. This over-riding and pervading reality has blinded us to the importance of another struggle, which is everywhere mounting in force and intensity and which history may well record as a dominant theme of the twentieth century -- the world-wide struggle for independence. In some cases it has produced revolution and violence: full-scale wars have been fought in its cause in Indonesia and Indo-China; military engagements have taken place in Kenya and Tunisia; Cypriots and British garrison forces have exchanged fire; Malayans have rioted; and 'incidents' too numerous to detail have been reported from a great variety of countries where political dependence exists. Intro., p. 1.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1957
- Authors: Lumsden, Geoffrey S
- Date: 1957
- Subjects: United Nations. General Assembly Self-determination, National Sovereignty Economics -- Political aspects Economic policy
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:1091 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1012790
- Description: The decade following the close of the Second World War has been dominated throughout by the clash of political power of the United States and the Soviet Union. Their wartime alliance has crumbled. New, antagonistic alliances have come into existence. The so-called 'EastWest' split, polar in its effect, has forced the admission that prospects of stable peace depend on how successfully bridges can be made to span the gulf. This over-riding and pervading reality has blinded us to the importance of another struggle, which is everywhere mounting in force and intensity and which history may well record as a dominant theme of the twentieth century -- the world-wide struggle for independence. In some cases it has produced revolution and violence: full-scale wars have been fought in its cause in Indonesia and Indo-China; military engagements have taken place in Kenya and Tunisia; Cypriots and British garrison forces have exchanged fire; Malayans have rioted; and 'incidents' too numerous to detail have been reported from a great variety of countries where political dependence exists. Intro., p. 1.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1957
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