Page:Experimental researches in electricity.djvu/247

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
There was a problem when proofreading this page.
221
Resistance to Electrolysis

749. Three pairs of zinc and platina plates, fig. 54, were able to produce a current which could pass an interposed platina plate, and effect the electrolysation of water in cell IV. The current was evident, both by the continued deflection of the galvanometer, and the production of bubbles of oxygen and hydrogen at the electrodes in cell IV. Hence the accumulated surplus force of three plates of zinc, which are active in decomposing water, is more than equal, when added together, to the force, with which oxygen and hydrogen are combined in water, and is sufficient to cause the separation of these elements from each other.

750. The three pairs of zinc and platina plates were now opposed by two intervening platina plates, fig. 55. In this case the current was stopped.

751. Four pairs of zinc and platina plates were also neutralised by two interposed platina plates, fig. 56.

752. Five pairs of zinc and platina, with two interposed platina plates, fig. 57, gave a feeble' current; there was permanent deflection at the galvanometer, and decomposition in the cells VI and VII. But the current was very feeble; very

much less than when all the intermediate plates were removed and the two extreme ones only retained: for when they were placed six inches asunder in one cell, they gave a powerful current. Hence five exciting pairs, with two interposed obstructing plates, do not give a current at all comparable to that of a single unobstructed pair.

753. I have already said that a very feeble current passed when the series included one interposed platina and two pairs