Page:Scientific Papers of Josiah Willard Gibbs.djvu/407

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ABSTRACT BY THE AUTHOR.
371

the term will vanish. But in the calculation of electromotive forces, which is the most important application of the equation, it is convenient and customary to suppose that the temperature is maintained constant. Now this term , which represents the heat absorbed by the cell, is frequently neglected in the consideration of cells of which the temperature is supposed to remain constant. In other words, it is frequently assumed that neither heat or cold is produced by the passage of an electrical current through a perfect electro-chemical apparatus (except that heat which may be indefinitely diminished by increasing the time in which a given quantity of electricity passes), unless it be by processes of a secondary nature, which are not immediately or necessarily connected with the process of electrolysis.

That this assumption is incorrect is shown by the electromotive force of a gas battery charged with hydrogen and nitrogen, by the currents caused by differences in the concentration of the electrolyte, by electrodes of zinc and mercury in a solution of sulphate of zinc, by a priori considerations based on the phenomena exhibited in the direct combination of the elements of water or of hydrochloric acid, by the absorption of heat which M. Favre has in many cases observed in a galvanic or electrolytic cell, and by the fact that the solid or liquid state of an electrode (at its temperature of fusion) does not affect the electromotive force.