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Transactions of Faraday Society

Reproduced from Transactions of Faraday Society, 62, Hambleton FH, Hockey JA, Infra-red spectroscopic investigation of the interaction of BCI3 with aerosol silicas, 1694-1701, 1966, with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry. [Pg.152]

Levich, V.D., Physicochemical Hydrodynamics. 1962, Englewood Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall Macdonald, D.D., Transient Techniques in Electrochemistry. 1911, New York Plenum Newman, J., Electrochemical Systems. 1973, Englewood Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall Randles, J.E.B., Transactions of Faraday Society, 1948. 44 p. 327 Rubinstein, I., Physical electrochemistry. 1995, New York Marcel Dekker Sluyters-Rembach, M. and J.H. Sluyters, in Electroanalytical Chemistry, A.J. Bard, Editor. 1970, Marcel Dekker New York... [Pg.145]

M. Faraday. Experimental Relations of gold (and other metals) to light. Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society of London 147,145 (1857). [Pg.378]

Mott N F and M J Littleton 1938. Conduction in Polar Crystals. I. Electrolytic Conduction in Solid Salts. Transactions of the Faraday Society 34 485-499. [Pg.652]

Faraday, M. (1832). Experimental Researches in Electricity. First Series, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, pp. 125-162. [Pg.747]

Faraday developed the laws of electrolysis between 1831 and 1834. In mid-December of 1833. he began a quantitative study of the electrolysis of several metal cations, including Sn2+, Pb2+, and Znz+. Despite taking a whole day off for Christmas, he managed to complete these experiments, write up the results of three years work, and get his paper published in the Philosophic Transactions of the Hoyal Society on January 9,1834. In this paper, Faraday introduced the basic vocabulary of electrochemistry, using for the first time the terms "anode," cathode," ion, "electrolyte," and "electrolysis."... [Pg.501]

Michael Faraday, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 1834... [Pg.1]

J.A.V. Butler, Studies in heterogeneous equilibria. Part II The kinetic interpretation of the Nemst theory of electromotive force, Transactions of the Faraday Society 19, 729-733 (1924). [Pg.184]

Reprinted from the Transactions of the Faraday Society, No. 171, Vol. XXXI., Part 8, August, 1935... [Pg.185]

Haul, RA.W. and Stein, L.H. 1955 Diffusion in calcite crystals on the basis of isotope exchange with carbon dioxide. Faraday Society Transactions 51 1280-1290. [Pg.112]

Biefer, GJ Mason, SG, Electrokinetic Streaming, Viscous Flow and Electrical Conduction in Inter-Fiber Networks, The Pore Orientation Factor, Transactions of the Faraday Society 55, 1239, 1959. [Pg.608]

Ogston, AG, The Spaces in a Uniform Random Suspension of Fibers, Transactions of the Faraday Society 54, 1754, 1958. [Pg.617]

Permissions granted by the following journals and publishers are gratefully acknowledged Academic Press, Inc., Annual Reviews, Inc., Canadian Journal of Research, Chemische Berichte, Die Makromoleku-lare Chemie, India Rubber World, Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, Interscience Publishers, Inc., Journal of the American Chemical Society, Journal of Applied Physics, Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of the Chemical Society (London), Journal of Colloid Science, Journal of Polymer Science, Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards, Transactions of the Faraday Society, Williams and Wilkins Company, and Zeitschrift fur physikalische Chemie. [Pg.680]

Fuoss, R. M. (1934). Distribution of ions in electrolyte solutions. Transactions of the Faraday Society, 30, 967-80. [Pg.86]

Selvaratnam, M. Spiro, M. (1965). Transference numbers of orthophosphoric acid and the limiting equivalent conductance of the HgPO ion in water at 25 °C. Transactions of the Faraday Society, 61, 360-73. [Pg.277]

Dollimore, D. Spooner, P. (1971). Sintering studies on zinc oxide. Transactions of the Faraday Society, 67, 2750-9. [Pg.354]

Pritchard, J. and Tompkins, F.C. (1960) Surface-potential measurements. Adsorption of hydrogen by Group IB metals. Transactions of the Faraday, Society, 56, 540-550. [Pg.353]

Wallace H. Carothers. Polymers and Polyfunctionality. Transactions of the Faraday Society. 32 (1936) 39-53. Carothers Cambridge speech is the source for polymers providing the bulk of living things Collins cauliflower mass and no mention of nylon. [Pg.224]

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science Transactions of the Faraday Society... [Pg.17]

Pollard, F. H., and Wyatt, P. M. H Reactions Between Formaldehyde and Nitrogen Dioxide Part III, The Determination of Flame Speeds, Transactions of the Faraday Society, Vol. 45, No. 328,... [Pg.141]

McDowell, C. A., and Thomas, J. H., Oxidation of Aldehydes in the Gaseous Phase Part IV. The Mechanism of the Inhibition of the Gaseous Phase Oxidation of Acetaldehyde by Nitrogen Peroxide, Transactions of the Faraday Society, Vol. 46, No. 336, 1950, pp. 1030-1039. [Pg.141]


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