Received April 24,—Read May 23, 1833.
380. It was during the progress
of investigations relating to electro-chemical decomposition,
which I still have to submit to the Royal Society,
that I encountered effects due to a very general
law of electric conduction not hitherto recognised;
and though they prevented me from obtaining the condition
I sought for, they afforded abundant compensation
for the momentary disappointment, by the new and important
interest which they gave to an extensive part of electrical
science.
381. I was working with ice,
and the solids resulting from the freezing of solutions,
arranged either as barriers across a substance to be
decomposed, or as the actual poles of a voltaic battery,
that I might trace and catch certain elements in their
transit, when I was suddenly stopped in my progress
by finding that ice was in such circumstances a non-conductor
of electricity; and that as soon as a thin film of
it was interposed, in the circuit of a very powerful
voltaic battery, the transmission of electricity was
prevented, and all decomposition ceased.
382. At first the experiments
were made with common ice, during the cold freezing
weather of the latter end of January 1833; but the
results were fallacious, from the imperfection of
the arrangements, and the following more unexceptionable
form of experiment was adopted.
383. Tin vessels were formed,
five inches deep, one inch and a quarter wide in one
direction, of different widths from three eighths to
five eighths of an inch in the other, and open at
one extremity. Into these were fixed by corks,
plates of platina, so that the latter should not touch
the tin cases; and copper wires having previously
been soldered to the plate, these were easily connected,
when required, with a voltaic pile. Then distilled
water, previously boiled for three hours, was poured
into the vessels, and frozen by a mixture of salt
and snow, so that pure transparent solid ice intervened
between the platina and tin; and finally these metals
were connected with the opposite extremities of the
voltaic apparatus, a galvanometer being at the same
time included in the circuit.
384. In the first experiment,
the platina pole was three inches and a half long,
and seven eighths of an inch wide; it was wholly immersed
in the water or ice, and as the vessel was four eighths
of an inch in width, the average thickness of the
intervening ice was only a quarter of an inch, whilst
the surface of contact with it at both poles was nearly
fourteen square inches. After the water was frozen,
the vessel was still retained in the frigorific mixture,
whilst contact between the tin and platina respectively
was made with the extremities of a well-charged voltaic
battery, consisting of twenty pairs of four-inch plates,
each with double coppers. Not the slightest deflection
of the galvanometer needle occurred.
385. On taking the frozen arrangement
out of the cold mixture, and applying warmth to the
bottom of the tin case, so as to melt part of the ice,
the connexion with the battery being in the mean time
retained, the needle did not at first move; and it
was only when the thawing process had extended so
far as to liquefy part of the ice touching the platina
pole, that conduction took place; but then it occurred
effectually, and the galvanometer needle was permanently
deflected nearly 70 deg..
386. In another experiment, a
platina spatula, five inches in length and seven eighths
of an inch in width, had four inches fixed in the ice,
and the latter was only three sixteenths of an inch
thick between one metallic surface and the other;
yet this arrangement insulated as perfectly as the
former.
387. Upon pouring a little water
in at the top of this vessel on the ice, still the
arrangement did not conduct; yet fluid water was evidently
there. This result was the consequence of the
cold metals having frozen the water where they touched
it, and thus insulating the fluid part; and it well
illustrates the non-conducting power of ice, by showing
how thin a film could prevent the transmission of
the battery current. Upon thawing parts of this
thin film, at both metals, conduction occurred.
388. Upon warming the tin case
and removing the piece of ice, it was found that a
cork having slipped, one of the edges of the platina
had been all but in contact with the inner surface
of the tin vessel; yet, notwithstanding the extreme
thinness of the interfering ice in this place, no
sensible portion of electricity had passed.
389. These experiments were repeated
many times with the same results. At last a battery
of fifteen troughs, or one hundred and fifty pairs
of four-inch plates, powerfully charged, was used;
yet even here no sensible quantity of electricity
passed the thin barrier of ice.
390. It seemed at first as if
occasional departures from these effects occurred;
but they could always be traced to some interfering
circumstances. The water should in every instance
be well-frozen; for though it is not necessary that
the ice should reach from pole to pole, since a barrier
of it about one pole would be quite sufficient to prevent
conduction, yet, if part remain fluid, the mere necessary
exposure of the apparatus to the air or the approximation
of the hands, is sufficient to produce, at the upper
surface of the water and ice, a film of fluid,
extending from the platina to the tin; and then conduction
occurs. Again, if the corks used to block the
platina in its place are damp or wet within, it is
necessary that the cold be sufficiently well applied
to freeze the water in them, or else when the surfaces
of their contact with the tin become slightly warm
by handling, that part will conduct, and the interior
being ready to conduct also, the current will pass.
The water should be pure, not only that unembarrassed
results may be obtained, but also that, as the freezing
proceeds, a minute portion of concentrated saline solution
may not be formed, which remaining fluid, and being
interposed in the ice, or passing into cracks resulting
from contraction, may exhibit conducting powers independent
of the ice itself.
391. On one occasion I was surprised
to find that after thawing much of the ice the conducting
power had not been restored; but I found that a cork
which held the wire just where it joined the platina,
dipped so far into the ice, that with the ice itself
it protected the platina from contact with the melted
part long after that contact was expected.
392. This insulating power of
ice is not effective with electricity of exalted intensity.
On touching a diverged gold-leaf electrometer with
a wire connected with the platina, whilst the tin
case was touched by the hand or another wire, the
electrometer was instantly discharged (419.).
393. But though electricity of
an intensity so low that it cannot diverge the electrometer,
can still pass (though in very limited quantities
(419.),) through ice; the comparative relation of water
and ice to the electricity of the voltaic apparatus
is not less extraordinary on that account, Or less
important in its consequences.
394. As it did not seem likely
that this law of the assumption of conducting power
during liquefaction, and loss of it during congelation,
would be peculiar to water, I immediately proceeded
to ascertain its influence in other cases, and found
it to be very general. For this purpose bodies
were chosen which were solid at common temperatures,
but readily fusible; and of such composition as, for
other reasons connected with electrochemical action,
led to the conclusion that they would be able when
fused to replace water as conductors. A voltaic
battery of two troughs, or twenty pairs of four-inch
plates (384.), was used as the source of electricity,
and a galvanometer introduced into the circuit to indicate
the presence or absence of a current.
395. On fusing a little chloride
of lead by a spirit lamp on a fragment of a Florence
flask, and introducing two platina wires connected
with the poles of the battery, there was instantly
powerful action, the galvanometer was most violently
affected, and the chloride rapidly decomposed.
On removing the lamp, the instant the chloride solidified
all current and consequent effects ceased, though
the platina wires remained inclosed in the chloride
not more than the one-sixteenth of an inch from each
other. On renewing the heat, as soon as the fusion
had proceeded far enough to allow liquid matter to
connect the poles, the electrical current instantly
passed.
396. On fusing the chloride,
with one wire introduced, and then touching the liquid
with the other, the latter being cold, caused a little
knob to concrete on its extremity, and no current
passed; it was only when the wire became so hot as
to be able to admit or allow of contact with the liquid
matter, that conduction took place, and then it was
very powerful.
397. When chloride of silver
and chlorate of potassa were experimented with, in
a similar manner, exactly the same results occurred.
398. Whenever the current passed
in these cases, there was decomposition of the substances;
but the electro-chemical part of this subject I purpose
connecting with more general views in a future paper.
399. Other substances, which
could not be melted on glass, were fused by the lamp
and blowpipe on platina connected with one pole of
the battery, and then a wire, connected with the other,
dipped into them. In this way chloride of sodium,
sulphate of soda, protoxide of lead, mixed carbonates
of potash and soda, &c. &c., exhibited exactly the
same phenomena as those already described: whilst
liquid, they conducted and were decomposed; whilst
solid, though very hot, they insulated the battery
current even when four troughs were used.
400. Occasionally the substances
were contained in small bent tubes of green glass,
and when fused, the platina poles introduced, one on
each side. In such cases the same general results
as those already described were procured; but a further
advantage was obtained, namely, that whilst the substance
was conducting and suffering decomposition, the final
arrangement of the elements could be observed.
Thus, iodides of potassium and lead gave iodine at
the positive pole, and potassium or lead at the negative
pole. Chlorides of lead and silver gave chlorine
at the positive, and metals at the negative pole.
Nitre and chlorate; of potassa gave oxygen, &c., at
the positive, and alkali, or even potassium, at the
negative pole.
401. A fourth arrangement was
used for substances requiring very high temperatures
for their fusion. A platina wire was connected
with one pole of the battery; its extremity bent into
a small ring, in the manner described by Berzelius,
for blowpipe experiments; a little of the salt, glass,
or other substance, was melted on this ring by the
ordinary blowpipe, or even in some cases by the oxy-hydrogen
blowpipe, and when the drop, retained in its place
by the ring, was thoroughly hot and fluid, a platina
wire from the opposite pole of the battery was made
to touch it, and the effects observed.
402. The following are various
substances, taken from very different classes chemically
considered, which are subject to this law. The
list might, no doubt, be enormously extended; but
I have not had time to do more than confirm the law
by a sufficient number of instances.
First, water.
Amongst oxides;—potassa,
protoxide of lead, glass of antimony, protoxide of
antimony, oxide of bismuth.
Chlorides of potassium, sodium,
barium, strontium, calcium, magnesium, manganese,
zinc, copper (proto-), lead, tin (proto-), antimony,
silver.
Iodides of potassium, zinc
and lead, protiodide of tin, periodide of mercury;
fluoride of potassium; cyanide of potassium;
sulpho-cyanide of potassium.
Salts. Chlorate of potassa;
nitrates of potassa, soda, baryta, strontia, lead,
copper, and silver; sulphates of soda and lead, proto-sulphate
of mercury; phosphates of potassa, soda, lead, copper,
phosphoric glass or acid phosphate of lime; carbonates
of potassa and soda, mingled and separate; borax,
borate of lead, per-borate of tin; chromate of potassa,
bi-chromate of potassa, chromate of lead; acetate of
potassa.
Sulphurets. Sulphuret of antimony,
sulphuret of potassium made by reducing sulphate of
potassa by hydrogen; ordinary sulphuret of potassa.
Silicated potassa; chameleon mineral.
403. It is highly interesting
in the instances of those substances which soften
before they liquefy, to observe at what period the
conducting power is acquired, and to what degree it
is exalted by perfect fluidity. Thus, with the
borate of lead, when heated by the lamp upon glass,
it becomes as soft as treacle, but it did not conduct,
and it was only when urged by the blowpipe and brought
to a fair red heat, that it conducted. When rendered
quite liquid, it conducted with extreme facility.
404. I do not mean to deny that
part of the increased conducting power in these cases
of softening was probably due to the elevation of temperature
(432. 445.); but I have no doubt that by far the greater
part was due to the influence of the general law already
demonstrated, and which in these instances came gradually,
instead of suddenly, into operation.
405. The following are bodies
which acquired no conducting power upon assuming the
liquid state:—
Sulphur, phosphorus; iodide of sulphur,
per-iodide of tin; orpiment, realgar; glacial acetic
acid, mixed margaric and oleic acids, artificial camphor;
caffeine, sugar, adipocire, stearine of cocoa-nut oil,
spermaceti, camphor, naphthaline, resin, gum sandarach,
shell lac.
406. Perchloride of tin, chloride
of arsenic, and the hydrated chloride of arsenic,
being liquids, had no sensible conducting power indicated
by the galvanometer, nor were they decomposed.
407. Some of the above substances
are sufficiently remarkable as exceptions to the general
law governing the former cases. These are orpiment,
realgar, acetic acid, artificial camphor, per-iodide
of tin, and the chlorides of tin and arsenic.
I shall have occasion to refer to these cases in the
paper on Electro-chemical Decomposition.
408. Boracic acid was raised
to the highest possible temperature by an oxy-hydrogen
flame (401.), yet it gained no conducting powers sufficient
to affect the galvanometer, and underwent no apparent
voltaic decomposition. It seemed to be quite
as bad a conductor as air. Green bottle-glass,
heated in the same manner, did not gain conducting
power sensible to the galvanometer. Flint glass,
when highly heated, did conduct a little and decompose;
and as the proportion of potash or oxide of lead was
increased in the glass, the effects were more powerful.
Those glasses, consisting of boracic acid on the one
hand, and oxide of lead or potassa on the other, show
the assumption of conducting power upon fusion and
the accompanying decomposition very well.
409. I was very anxious to try
the general experiment with sulphuric acid, of about
specific gravity 1.783, containing that proportion
of water which gives it the power of crystallizing
at 40 deg. Fahr.; but I found it impossible
to obtain it so that I could be sure the whole would
congeal even at 0 deg. Fahr. A ten-thousandth
part of water, more or less than necessary, would,
upon cooling the whole, cause a portion of uncongealable
liquid to separate, and that remaining in the interstices
of the solid mass, and moistening the planes of division,
would prevent the correct observation of the phenomena
due to entire solidification and subsequent liquefaction.
410. With regard to the substances
on which conducting power is thus conferred by liquidity,
the degree of power so given is generally very great.
Water is that body in which this acquired power is
feeblest. In the various oxides, chlorides, salts,
&c. &c., it is given in a much higher degree.
I have not had time to measure the conducting power
in these cases, but it is apparently some hundred
times that of pure water. The increased conducting
power known to be given to water by the addition of
salts, would seem to be in a great degree dependent
upon the high conducting power of these bodies when
in the liquid state, that state being given them for
the time, not by heat but solution in the water.
411. Whether the conducting power
of these liquefied bodies is a consequence of their
decomposition or not (413.), or whether the two actions
of conduction and decomposition are essentially connected
or not, would introduce no difference affecting the
probable accuracy of the preceding statement.
412. This general assumption
of conducting power by bodies as soon as they
pass from the solid to the liquid state, offers a new
and extraordinary character, the existence of which,
as far as I know, has not before been suspected; and
it seems importantly connected with some properties
and relations of the particles of matter which I may
now briefly point out.
413. In almost all the instances,
as yet observed, which are governed by this law, the
substances experimented with have been those which
were not only compound bodies, but such as contain
elements known to arrange themselves at the opposite
poles; and were also such as could be decomposed
by the electrical current. When conduction took
place, decomposition occurred; when decomposition
ceased, conduction ceased also; and it becomes a fair
and an important question, Whether the conduction
itself may not, wherever the law holds good, be a consequence
not merely of the capability, but of the act of decomposition?
And that question may be accompanied by another, namely,
Whether solidification does not prevent conduction,
merely by chaining the particles to their places, under
the influence of aggregation, and preventing their
final separation in the manner necessary for decomposition?
414. But, on the other hand,
there is one substance (and others may occur), the
per-iodide of mercury, which, being experimented
with like the others (400.), was found to insulate
when solid, and to acquire conducting power when fluid;
yet it did not seem to undergo decomposition in the
latter case.
415. Again, there are many substances
which contain elements such as would be expected to
arrange themselves at the opposite poles of the pile,
and therefore in that respect fitted for decomposition,
which yet do not conduct. Amongst these are the
iodide of sulphur, per-iodide of zinc, per-chloride
of tin, chloride of arsenic, hydrated chloride of arsenic,
acetic acid, orpiment, realgar, artificial camphor,
&c.; and from these it might perhaps be assumed that
decomposition is dependent upon conducting power,
and not the latter upon the former. The true relation,
however, of conduction and decomposition in those
bodies governed by the general law which it is the
object of this paper to establish, can only be satisfactorily
made out from a far more extensive series of observations
than those I have yet been able to supply.
416. The relation, under this
law, of the conducting power for electricity to that
for heat, is very remarkable, and seems to imply a
natural dependence of the two. As the solid becomes
a fluid, it loses almost entirely the power of conduction
for heat, but gains in a high degree that for electricity;
but as it reverts hack to the solid state, it gains
the power of conducting heat, and loses that of conducting
electricity. If, therefore, the properties are
not incompatible, still they are most strongly contrasted,
one being lost as the other is gained. We may
hope, perhaps, hereafter to understand the physical
reason of this very extraordinary relation of the
two conducting powers, both of which appear to be
directly connected with the corpuscular condition of
the substances concerned.
417. The assumption of conducting
power and a decomposable condition by liquefaction,
promises new opportunities of, and great facilities
in, voltaic decomposition. Thus, such bodies
as the oxides, chlorides, cyanides, sulpho-cyanides,
fluorides, certain vitreous mixtures, &c. &c., may
be submitted to the action of the voltaic battery under
new circumstances; and indeed I have already been
able, with ten pairs of plates, to decompose common
salt, chloride of magnesium, borax, &c. &c., and to
obtain sodium, magnesium, boron, &c., in their separate
states.
418. It is not my intention here
to enter into an examination of all the circumstances
connected with conducting power, but to record certain
facts and observations which have arisen during recent
inquiries, as additions to the general stock of knowledge
relating to this point of electrical science.
419. I was anxious, in the first
place, to obtain some idea of the conducting power
of ice and solid salts for electricity of high tension
(392.), that a comparison might be made between it
and the large accession of the same power gained upon
liquefaction. For this purpose the large electrical
machine (290.) was brought into excellent action, its
conductor connected with a delicate gold-leaf electrometer,
and also with the platina inclosed in the ice (383.),
whilst the tin case was connected with the discharging
train (292.). On working the machine moderately,
the gold leaves barely separated; on working it rapidly,
they could be opened nearly two inches. In this
instance the tin case was five-eighths of an inch in
width; and as, after the experiment, the platina plate
was found very nearly in the middle of the ice, the
average thickness of the latter had been five-sixteenths
of an inch, and the extent of surface of contact with
tin and platina fourteen square inches (384.).
Yet, under these circumstances, it was but just able
to conduct the small quantity of electricity which
this machine could evolve (371.), even when of a tension
competent to open the leaves two inches; no wonder,
therefore, that it could not conduct any sensible
portion of the electricity of the troughs (384.),
which, though almost infinitely surpassing that of
the machine in quantity, had a tension so low as not
to be sensible to an electrometer.
420. In another experiment, the
tin case was only four-eighths of an inch in width,
and it was found afterwards that the platina had been
not quite one-eighth of an inch distant in the ice
from one side of the tin vessel. When this was
introduced into the course of the electricity from
the machine (419.), the gold leaves could be opened,
but not more than half an inch; the thinness of the
ice favouring the conduction of the electricity, and
permitting the same quantity to pass in the same time,
though of a much lower tension.
421. Iodide of potassium which
had been fused and cooled was introduced into the
course of the electricity from the machine. There
were two pieces, each about a quarter of an inch in
thickness, and exposing a surface on each side equal
to about half a square inch; these were placed upon
platina plates, one connected with the machine and
electrometer (419.), and the other with the discharging
train, whilst a fine platina wire connected the two
pieces, resting upon them by its two points. On
working the electrical machine, it was possible to
open the electrometer leaves about two-thirds of an
inch.
422. As the platina wire touched
only by points, the facts show that this salt is a
far better conductor than ice; but as the leaves of
the electrometer opened, it is also evident with what
difficulty conduction, even of the small portion of
electricity produced by the machine, is effected by
this body in the solid state, when compared to the
facility with which enormous quantities at very low
tensions are transmitted by it when in the fluid state.
423. In order to confirm these
results by others, obtained from the voltaic apparatus,
a battery of one hundred and fifty plates, four inches
square, was well-charged: its action was good;
the shock from it strong; the discharge would continue
from copper to copper through four-tenths of an inch
of air, and the gold-leaf electrometer before used
could be opened nearly a quarter of an inch.
424. The ice vessel employed
(420.) was half an inch in width; as the extent of
contact of the ice with the tin and platina was nearly
fourteen square inches, the whole was equivalent to
a plate of ice having a surface of seven square inches,
of perfect contact at each side, and only one fourth
of an inch thick. It was retained in a freezing
mixture during the experiment.
425. The order of arrangement
in the course of the electric current was as follows.
The positive pole of the battery was connected by a
wire with the platina plate in the ice; the plate
was in contact with the ice, the ice with the tin
jacket, the jacket with a wire, which communicated
with a piece of tin foil, on which rested one end
of a bent platina wire (312.), the other or decomposing
end being supported on paper moistened with solution
of iodide of potassium (316.): the paper was laid
flat on a platina spatula connected with the negative
end of the battery. All that part of the arrangement
between the ice vessel and the decomposing wire point,
including both these, was insulated, so that no electricity
might pass through the latter which had not traversed
the former also.
426. Under these circumstances,
it was found that, a pale brown spot of iodine was
slowly formed under the decomposing platina point,
thus indicating that ice could conduct a little of
the electricity evolved by a voltaic battery charged
up to the degree of intensity indicated by the electrometer.
But it is quite evident that notwithstanding the enormous
quantity of electricity which the battery could furnish,
it was, under present circumstances, a very inferior
instrument to the ordinary machine; for the latter
could send as much through the ice as it could carry,
being of a far higher intensity, i.e. able to
open the electrometer leaves half an inch or more
(419. 420.).
427. The decomposing wire and
solution of iodide of potassium were then removed,
and replaced by a very delicate galvanometer (205.);
it was so nearly astatic, that it vibrated to and
fro in about sixty-three beats of a watch giving one
hundred and fifty beats in a minute. The same
feebleness of current as before was still indicated;
the galvanometer needle was deflected, but it required
to break and make contact three or four times (297.),
before the effect was decided.
428. The galvanometer being removed,
two platina plates were connected with the extremities
of the wires, and the tongue placed between them, so
that the whole charge of the battery, so far as the
ice would let it pass, was free to go through the
tongue. Whilst standing on the stone floor, there
was shock, &c., but when insulated, I could feel no
sensation. I think a frog would have been scarcely,
if at all, affected.
429. The ice was now removed,
and experiments made with other solid bodies, for
which purpose they were placed under the end of the
decomposing wire instead of the solution of iodide
of potassium (125.). For instance, a piece of
dry iodide of potassium was placed on the spatula connected
with the negative pole of the battery, and the point
of the decomposing wire placed upon it, whilst the
positive end of the battery communicated with the
latter. A brown spot of iodine very slowly appeared,
indicating the passage of a little electricity, and
agreeing in that respect with the results obtained
by the use of the electrical machine (421.). When
the galvanometer was introduced into the circuit at
the same time with the iodide, it was with difficulty
that the action of the current on it could be rendered
sensible.
430. A piece of common salt previously
fused and solidified being introduced into the circuit
was sufficient almost entirely to destroy the action
on the galvanometer. Fused and cooled chloride
of lead produced the same effect. The conducting
power of these bodies, when fluid, is very
great (395. 402.).
431. These effects, produced
by using the common machine and the voltaic battery,
agree therefore with each other, and with the law laid
down in this paper (394.); and also with the opinion
I have supported, in the Third Series of these Researches,
of the identity of electricity derived from different
sources (360.).
432. The effect of heat in increasing
the conducting power of many substances, especially
for electricity of high tension, is well known.
I have lately met with an extraordinary case of this
kind, for electricity of low tension, or that of the
voltaic pile, and which is in direct contrast with
the influence of heat upon metallic bodies, as observed
and described by Sir Humphry Davy.
433. The substance presenting
this effect is sulphuret of silver. It was made
by fusing a mixture of precipitated silver and sublimed
sulphur, removing the film of silver by a file from
the exterior of the fused mass, pulverizing the sulphuret,
mingling it with more sulphur, and fusing it again
in a green glass tube, so that no air should obtain
access during the process. The surface of the
sulphuret being again removed by a file or knife,
it was considered quite free from uncombined silver.
434. When a piece of this sulphuret,
half an inch in thickness, was put between surfaces
of platina, terminating the poles of a voltaic battery
of twenty pairs of four-inch plates, a galvanometer
being also included in the circuit, the needle was
slightly deflected, indicating a feeble conducting
power. On pressing the platina poles and sulphuret
together with the fingers, the conducting power increased
as the whole became warm. On applying a lamp
under the sulphuret between the poles, the conducting
power rose rapidly with the heat, and at last-the
galvanometer needle jumped into a fixed position,
and the sulphuret was found conducting in the manner
of a metal. On removing the lamp and allowing
the heat to fall, the effects were reversed, the needle
at first began to vibrate a little, then gradually
left its transverse direction, and at last returned
to a position very nearly that which it would take
when no current was passing through the galvanometer.
435. Occasionally, when the contact
of the sulphuret with the platina poles was good,
the battery freshly charged, and the commencing temperature
not too low, the mere current of electricity from
the battery was sufficient to raise the temperature
of the sulphuret; and then, without any application
of extraneous heat, it went on increasing conjointly
in temperature and conducting power, until the cooling
influence of the air limited the effects. In
such cases it was generally necessary to cool the whole
purposely, to show the returning series of phenomena.
436. Occasionally, also, the
effects would sink of themselves, and could not be
renewed until a fresh surface of the sulphuret had
been applied to the positive pole. This was in
consequence of peculiar results of decomposition,
to which I shall have occasion to revert in the section
on Electro-chemical Decomposition, and was conveniently
avoided by inserting the ends of two pieces of platina
wire into the opposite extremities of a portion of
sulphuret fused in a glass tube, and placing this arrangement
between the poles of the battery.
437. The hot sulphuret of silver
conducts sufficiently well to give a bright spark
with charcoal, &c. &c., in the manner of a metal.
438. The native grey sulphuret
of silver, and the ruby silver ore, both presented
the same phenomena. The native malleable sulphuret
of silver presented precisely the same appearances
as the artificial sulphuret.
439. There is no other body with
which I am acquainted, that, like sulphuret of silver,
can compare with metals in conducting power for electricity
of low tension when hot, but which, unlike them, during
cooling, loses in power, whilst they, on the contrary,
gain. Probably, however, many others may, when
sought for, be found.
440. The proto-sulphuret of iron,
the native per-sulphuret of iron, arsenical sulphuret
of iron, native yellow sulphuret of copper and iron,
grey artificial sulphuret of copper, artificial sulphuret
of bismuth, and artificial grey sulphuret of tin,
all conduct the voltaic battery current when cold,
more or less, some giving sparks like the metals, others
not being sufficient for that high effect. They
did not seem to conduct better when heated, than before;
but I had not time to enter accurately into the investigation
of this point. Almost all of them became much
heated by the transmission of the current, and present
some very interesting phenomena in that respect.
The sulphuret of antimony does not conduct the same
current sensibly either hot or cold, but is amongst
those bodies acquiring conducting power when fused
(402.). The sulphuret of silver and perhaps some
others decompose whilst in the solid state; but the
phenomena of this decomposition will be reserved for
its proper place in the next series of these Researches.
441. Notwithstanding the extreme
dissimilarity between sulphuret of silver and gases
or vapours, I cannot help suspecting the action of
heat upon them to be the same, bringing them all into
the same class as conductors of electricity, although
with those great differences in degree, which are
found to exist under common circumstances. When
gases are heated, they increase in conducting power,
both for common and voltaic electricity (271.); and
it is probable that if we could compress and condense
them at the same time, we should still further increase
their conducting power. Cagniard de la Tour has
shown that a substance, for instance water, may be
so expanded by heat whilst in the liquid state, or
condensed whilst in the vaporous state, that the two
states shall coincide at one point, and the transition
from one to the other be so gradual that no line of
demarcation can be pointed out; that, in fact,
the two states shall become one;—which
one state presents us at different times with differences
in degree as to certain properties and relations;
and which differences are, under ordinary circumstances,
so great as to be equivalent to two different states.
442. I cannot but suppose at
present that at that point where the liquid and the
gaseous state coincide, the conducting properties are
the same for both; but that they diminish as the expansion
of the matter into a rarer form takes place by the
removal of the necessary pressure; still, however,
retaining, as might be expected, the capability of
having what feeble conducting power remains, increased
by the action of heat.
443. I venture to give the following
summary of the conditions of electric conduction in
bodies, not however without fearing that I may have
omitted some important points.
444. All bodies conduct electricity
in the same manner from metals to lac and gases,
but in very different degrees.
445. Conducting power is in some
bodies powerfully increased by heat, and in others
diminished, yet without our perceiving any accompanying
essential electrical difference, either in the bodies
or in the changes occasioned by the electricity conducted.
446. A numerous class of bodies,
insulating electricity of low intensity, when solid,
conduct it very freely when fluid, and are then decomposed
by it.
447. But there are many fluid
bodies which do not sensibly conduct electricity of
this low intensity; there are some which conduct it
and are not decomposed; nor is fluidity essential
to decomposition.
448. There is but one body yet
discovered which, insulating a voltaic current
when solid, and conducting it when fluid, is not decomposed
in the latter case (414.).
449. There is no strict electrical
distinction of conduction which can, as yet, be drawn
between bodies supposed to be elementary, and those
known to be compounds.
Royal Institution, April 15, 1833.