Received January 11,—Read February 8, 1838.
1318. I Proceed now, according
to my promise, to examine, by the great facts of electrical
science, that theory of induction which I have ventured
to put forth (1165. 1295. &c.). The principle
of induction is so universal that it pervades all
electrical phenomena; but the general case which I
purpose at present to go into consists of insulation
traced into and terminating with discharge, with the
accompanying effects. This case includes the
various modes of discharge, and also the condition
and characters of a current; the elements of magnetic
action being amongst the latter. I shall necessarily
have occasion to speak theoretically, and even hypothetically;
and though these papers profess to be experimental
researches, I hope that, considering the facts and
investigations contained in the last series in support
of the particular view advanced, I shall not be considered
as taking too much liberty on the present occasion,
or as departing too far from the character which they
ought to have, especially as I shall use every opportunity
which presents itself of returning to that strong
test of truth, experiment.
1319. Induction has as yet been
considered in these papers only in cases of insulation;
opposed to insulation is discharge. The
action or effect which may be expressed by the general
term discharge, may take place, as far as we
are aware at present, in several modes. Thus,
that which is called simply conduction involves
no chemical action, and apparently no displacement
of the particles concerned. A second mode may
be called electrolytic discharge; in it chemical
action does occur, and particles must, to a certain
degree, be displaced. A third mode, namely, that
by sparks or brushes, may, because of its violent
displacement of the particles of the dielectric
in its course, be called the disruptive discharge;
and a fourth may, perhaps, be conveniently distinguished
for a time by the words convection, or carrying
discharge, being that in which discharge is effected
either by the carrying power of solid particles, or
those of gases and liquids. Hereafter, perhaps,
all these modes may appear as the result of one common
principle, but at present they require to be considered
apart; and I will now speak of the first mode,
for amongst all the forms of discharge, that which
we express by the term conduction appears the most
simple and the most directly in contrast with insulation.
P vii. Conduction, or conductive discharge.
1320. Though assumed to be essentially
different, yet neither Cavendish nor Poisson attempt
to explain by, or even state in, their theories, what
the essential difference between insulation and conduction
is. Nor have I anything, perhaps, to offer in
this respect, except that, according to my
view of induction, insulation and conduction depend
upon the same molecular action of the dielectrics
concerned; are only extreme degrees of one common
condition or effect; and in any sufficient mathematical
theory of electricity must be taken as cases of the
same kind. Hence the importance of the endeavour
to show the connection between them under my theory
of the electrical relations of contiguous particles.
1321. Though the action of the
insulating dielectric in the charged Leyden jar, and
that of the wire in discharging it, may seem very different,
they may be associated by numerous intermediate links,
which carry us on from one to the other, leaving,
I think, no necessary connection unsupplied. We
may observe some of these in succession for information
respecting the whole case.
1322. Spermnceti has been examined
and found to be a dielectric, through which induction
can take place (1240. 1246.), its specific inductive
capacity being about or above 1.8 (1279.), and the
inductive action has been considered in it, as in
all other substances, an action of contiguous particles.
1323. But spermaceti is also
a conductor, though in so low a degree that
we can trace the process of conduction, as it were,
step by step through the mass (1247.); and even when
the electric force has travelled through it to a certain
distance, we can, by removing the coercitive (which
is at the same time the inductive) force, cause it
to return upon its path and reappear in its first
place (1245. 1246.). Here induction appears to
be a necessary preliminary to conduction. It
of itself brings the contiguous particles of the dielectric
into a certain condition, which, if retained by them,
constitutes insulation, but if lowered by the
communication of power from one particle to another,
constitutes conduction.
1324. If glass or shell-lac
be the substances under consideration, the same capabilities
of suffering either induction or conduction through
them appear (1233. 1239. 1247.), but not in the same
degree. The conduction almost disappears (1239.
1242.); the induction therefore is sustained, i.e.
the polarized state into which the inductive force
has brought the contiguous particles is retained,
there being little discharge action between them,
and therefore the insulation continues.
But, what discharge there is, appears to be consequent
upon that condition of the particles into which the
induction throws them; and thus it is that ordinary
insulation and conduction are closely associated together
or rather are extreme cases of one common condition.
1325. In ice or water we have
a better conductor than spermaceti, and the phenomena
of induction and insulation therefore rapidly disappear,
because conduction quickly follows upon the assumption
of the inductive state. But let a plate of cold
ice have metallic coatings on its sides, and connect
one of these with a good electrical machine in work,
and the other with the ground, and it then becomes
easy to observe the phenomena of induction through
the ice, by the electrical tension which can be obtained
and continued on both the coatings (419. 426.).
For although that portion of power which at one moment
gave the inductive condition to the particles is at
the next lowered by the consequent discharge due to
the conductive act, it is succeeded by another portion
of force from the machine to restore the inductive
state. If the ice be converted into water the
same succession of actions can be just as easily proved,
provided the water be distilled, and (if the machine
be not powerful enough) a voltaic battery be employed.
1326. All these considerations
impress my mind strongly with the conviction, that
insulation and ordinary conduction cannot be properly
separated when we are examining into their nature;
that is, into the general law or laws under which
their phenomena are produced. They appear to
me to consist in an action of contiguous particles
dependent on the forces developed in electrical excitement;
these forces bring the particles into a state of tension
or polarity, which constitutes both induction
and insulation; and being in this state, the
continuous particles have a power or capability of
communicating their forces one to the other, by which
they are lowered, and discharge occurs. Every
body appears to discharge (444. 987.); but the possession
of this capability in a greater or smaller degree
in different bodies, makes them better or worse conductors,
worse or better insulators; and both induction
and conduction appear to be the same in their
principle and action (1320.), except that in the latter
an effect common to both is raised to the highest
degree, whereas in the former it occurs in the best
cases, in only an almost insensible quantity.
1327. That in our attempts to
penetrate into the nature of electrical action, and
to deduce laws more general than those we are at present
acquainted with, we should endeavour to bring apparently
opposite effects to stand side by side in harmonious
arrangement, is an opinion of long standing, and sanctioned
by the ablest philosophers. I hope, therefore,
I may be excused the attempt to look at the highest
cases of conduction as analogous to, or even the same
in kind with, those of induction and insulation.
1328. If we consider the slight
penetration of sulphur (1241. 1242.) or shell-lac
(1234.) by electricity, or the feebler insulation sustained
by spermaceti (1279. 1240.), as essential consequences
and indications of their conducting power,
then may we look on the resistance of metallic wires
to the passage of electricity through them as insulating
power. Of the numerous well-known cases fitted
to show this resistance in what are called the perfect
conductors, the experiments of Professor Wheatstone
best serve my present purpose, since they were carried
to such an extent as to show that time entered
as an element into the conditions of conduction
even in metals. When discharge was made through
a copper wire 2640 feet in length, and 1/15th of an
inch in diameter, so that the luminous sparks at each
end of the wire, and at the middle, could be observed
in the same place, the latter was found to be sensibly
behind the two former in time, they being by the conditions
of the experiment simultaneous. Hence a proof
of retardation; and what reason can be given why this
retardation should not be of the same kind as that
in spermaceti, or in lac, or sulphur? But
as, in them, retardation is insulation, and insulation
is induction, why should we refuse the same relation
to the same exhibitions of force in the metals?
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
.
1329. We learn from the experiment,
that if time be allowed the retardation is
gradually overcome; and the same thing obtains for
the spermaceti, the lac, and glass (1248.); give
but time in proportion to the retardation, and the
latter is at last vanquished. But if that be the
case, and all the results are alike in kind, the only
difference being in the length of time, why should
we refuse to metals the previous inductive action,
which is admitted to occur in the other bodies?
The diminution of time is no negation of the
action; nor is the lower degree of tension requisite
to cause the forces to traverse the metal, as compared
to that necessary in the cases of water, spermaceti,
or lac. These differences would only point
to the conclusion, that in metals the particles under
induction can transfer their forces when at a lower
degree of tension or polarity, and with greater facility
than in the instances of the other bodies.
1330. Let us look at Mr. Wheatstone’s
beautiful experiment in another point of view, If,
leaving the arrangement at the middle and two ends
of the long copper wire unaltered, we remove the two
intervening portions and replace them by wires of
iron or platina, we shall have a much greater retardation
of the middle spark than before. If, removing
the iron, we were to substitute for it only five or
six feet of water in a cylinder of the same diameter
as the metal, we should have still greater retardation.
If from water we passed to spermaceti, either directly
or by gradual steps through other bodies, (even though
we might vastly enlarge the bulk, for the purpose
of evading the occurrence of a spark elsewhere (1331.)
than at the three proper intervals,) we should have
still greater retardation, until at last we might
arrive, by degrees so small as to be inseparable from
each other, at actual and permanent insulation.
What, then, is to separate the principle of these
two extremes, perfect conduction and perfect insulation,
from each other; since the moment we leave in the smallest
degree perfection at either extremity, we involve
the element of perfection at the opposite end?
Especially too, as we have not in nature the case of
perfection either at one extremity or the other, either
of insulation or conduction.
1331. Again, to return to this
beautiful experiment in the various forms which may
be given to it: the forces are not all in the
wire (after they have left the Leyden jar) during
the whole time (1328.) occupied by the discharge;
they are disposed in part through the surrounding dielectric
under the well-known form of induction; and if that
dielectric be air, induction takes place from the
wire through the air to surrounding conductors, until
the ends of the wire are electrically related through
its length, and discharge has occurred, i.e.
for the time during which the middle spark
is retarded beyond the others. This is well shown
by the old experiment, in which a long wire is so
bent that two parts (Plate VIII. fi.), a,
b, near its extremities shall approach within a
short distance, as a quarter of an inch, of each other
in the air. If the discharge of a Leyden jar,
charged to a sufficient degree, be sent through such
a wire, by far the largest portion of the electricity
will pass as a spark across the air at the interval,
and not by the metal. Does not the middle part
of the wire, therefore, act here as an insulating medium,
though it be of metal? and is not the spark through
the air an indication of the tension (simultaneous
with induction) of the electricity in the ends
of this single wire? Why should not the wire and
the air both be regarded as dielectrics; and the action
at its commencement, and whilst there is tension,
as an inductive action? If it acts through the
contorted lines of the wire, so it also does in curved
and contorted lines through air (1219, 1224, 1231.),
and other insulating dielectrics (1228); and we can
apparently go so far in the analogy, whilst limiting
the case to the inductive action only, as to show
that amongst insulating dielectrics some lead away
the lines of force from others (1229.), as the wire
will do from worse conductors, though in it the principal
effect is no doubt due to the ready discharge between
the particles whilst in a low state of tension.
The retardation is for the time insulation; and it
seems to me we may just as fairly compare the air
at the interval a, b (fi.) and the wire
in the circuit, as two bodies of the same kind and
acting upon the same principles, as far as the first
inductive phenomena are concerned, notwithstanding
the different forms of discharge which ultimately
follow, as we may compare, according to Coulomb’s
investigations different lengths of different
insulating bodies required to produce the same amount
of insulating effect.
These will be examined hereafter (1348.
&c.).
Mémoires de l’Academie,
1785, . or Ency. Britann. First
Supp. vol. i. .
1332. This comparison is still
more striking when we take into consideration the
experiment of Mr. Harris, in which he stretched a fine
wire across a glass globe, the air within being rarefied.
On sending a charge through the joint arrangement
of metal and rare air, as much, if not more, electricity
passed by the latter as by the former. In the
air, rarefied as it was, there can be no doubt the
discharge was preceded by induction (1284.); and to
my mind all the circumstances indicate that the same
was the case with the metal; that, in fact, both substances
are dielectrics, exhibiting the same effects in consequence
of the action of the same causes, the only variation
being one of degree in the different substances employed.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
p, 212.
1333. Judging on these principles,
velocity of discharge through the same wire
may be varied greatly by attending to the circumstances
which cause variations of discharge through spermaceti
or sulphur. Thus, for instance, it must vary
with the tension or intensity of the first urging force
(1234. 1240.), which tension is charge and induction.
So if the two ends of the wire, in Professor Wheatstone’s
experiment, were immediately connected with two large
insulated metallic surfaces exposed to the air, so
that the primary act of induction, after making the
contact for discharge, might be in part removed from
the internal portion of the wire at the first instant,
and disposed for the moment on its surface jointly
with the air and surrounding conductors, then I venture
to anticipate that the middle spark would be more
retarded than before; and if these two plates were
the inner and outer coating of a large jar or a Leyden
battery, then the retardation of that spark would
be still greater.
1334. Cavendish was perhaps the
first to show distinctly that discharge was not always
by one channel, but, if several are present, by
many at once. We may make these different channels
of different bodies, and by proportioning their thicknesses
and lengths, may include such substances as air, lac,
spermaceti, water, protoxide of iron, iron and
silver, and by one discharge make each convey
its proportion of the electric force. Perhaps
the air ought to be excepted, as its discharge by conduction
is questionable at present (1336.); but the others
may all be limited in their mode of discharge to pure
conduction. Yet several of them suffer previous
induction, precisely like the induction through the
air, it being a necessary preliminary to their discharging
action. How can we therefore separate any one
of these bodies from the others, as to the principles
and mode of insulating and conducting, except
by mere degree? All seem to me to be dielectrics
acting alike, and under the same common laws.
Philosophical Transactions,
1776, .
1335. I might draw another argument
in favour of the general sameness, in nature and action,
of good and bad conductors (and all the bodies I refer
to are conductors more or less), from the perfect equipoise
in action of very different bodies when opposed to
each other in magneto-electric inductive action, as
formerly described (213.), but am anxious to be as
brief as is consistent with the clear examination of
the probable truth of my views.
1336. With regard to the possession
by the gases of any conducting power of the simple
kind now under consideration, the question is a very
difficult one to determine at present. Experiments
seem to indicate that they do insulate certain low
degrees of tension perfectly, and that the effects
which may have appeared to be occasioned by conduction
have been the result of the carrying power of the
charged particles, either of the air or of dust, in
it. It is equally certain, however, that with
higher degrees of tension or charge the particles
discharge to one another, and that is conduction.
If the gases possess the power of insulating a certain
low degree of tension continuously and perfectly, such
a result may be due to their peculiar physical state,
and the condition of separation under which their
particles are placed. But in that, or in any case,
we must not forget the fine experiments of Cagniard
de la Tour, in which he has shown that liquids
and their vapours can be made to pass gradually into
each other, to the entire removal of any marked distinction
of the two states. Thus, hot dry steam and cold
water pass by insensible gradations into each other;
yet the one is amongst the gases as an insulator, and
the other a comparatively good conductor. As
to conducting power, therefore, the transition from
metals even up to gases is gradual; substances make
but one series in this respect, and the various cases
must come under one condition and law (444.).
The specific differences of bodies as to conducting
power only serves to strengthen the general argument,
that conduction, like insulation, is a result of induction,
and is an action of contiguous particles.
Annales de Chimie,
xxi. p, 178, or Quarterly Journal of
Science, x.
1337. I might go on now to consider
induction and its concomitant, conduction,
through mixed dielectrics, as, for instance, when a
charged body, instead of acting across air to a distant
uninsulated conductor, acts jointly through it and
an interposed insulated conductor. In such a case,
the air and the conducting body are the mixed dielectrics;
and the latter assumes a polarized condition as a
mass, like that which my theory assumes each particle
of the air to possess at the same time (1679).
But I fear to be tedious in the present condition
of the subject, and hasten to the consideration of
other matter.
1338. To sum up, in some degree,
what has been said, I look upon the first effect of
an excited body upon neighbouring matters to be the
production of a polarized state of their particles,
which constitutes induction; and this arises
from its action upon the particles in immediate contact
with it, which again act upon those contiguous to
them, and thus the forces are transferred to a distance.
If the induction remain undiminished, then perfect
insulation is the consequence; and the higher the polarized
condition which the particles can acquire or maintain,
the higher is the intensity which may be given to
the acting forces. If, on the contrary, the contiguous
particles, upon acquiring the polarized state, have
the power to communicate their forces, then conduction
occurs, and the tension is lowered, conduction being
a distinct act of discharge between neighbouring particles.
The lower the state of tension at which this discharge
between the particles of a body takes place, the better
conductor is that body. In this view, insulators
may be said to be bodies whose particles can retain
the polarized state; whilst conductors are those whose
particles cannot be permanently polarized. If
I be right in my view of induction, then I consider
the reduction of these two effects (which have been
so long held distinct) to an action of contiguous
particles obedient to one common law, as a very important
result; and, on the other hand, the identity of character
which the two acquire when viewed by the theory (1326.),
is additional presumptive proof in favour of the correctness
of the latter.
1339. That heat has great influence
over simple conduction is well known (445.), its effect
being, in some cases, almost an entire change of the
characters of the body (432. 1340.). Harris has,
however, shown that it in no respect affects gaseous
bodies, or at least air; and Davy has taught us
that, as a class, metals have their conducting power
diminished by it.
Philosophical Transactions,
1834,
Ibi, .
1340. I formerly described a
substance, sulphuret of silver, whose conducting power
was increased by heat (433. 437. 438.); and I have
since then met with another as strongly affected in
the same way: this is fluoride of lead.
When a piece of that substance, which had been fused
and cooled, was introduced into the circuit of a voltaic
battery, it stopped the current. Being heated,
it acquired conducting powers before it was visibly
red-hot in daylight; and even sparks could be taken
against it whilst still solid. The current alone
then raised its temperature (as in the case of sulphuret
of silver) until it fused, after which it seemed to
conduct as well as the metallic vessel containing it;
for whether the wire used to complete the circuit
touched the fused fluoride only, or was in contact
with the platina on which it was supported, no sensible
difference in the force of the current was observed.
During all the time there was scarcely a trace of
decomposing action of the fluoride, and what did occur,
seemed referable to the air and moisture of the atmosphere,
and not to electrolytic action.
1341. I have now very little
doubt that periodide of mercury (414. 448. 691.) is
a case of the same kind, and also corrosive sublimate
(692.). I am also inclined to think, since making
the above experiments, that the anomalous action of
the protoxide of antimony, formerly observed and described
(693. 801.), may be referred in part to the same cause.
1342. I have no intention at
present of going into the particular relation of heat
and electricity, but we may hope hereafter to discover
by experiment the law which probably holds together
all the above effects with those of the evolution
and the disappearance of heat by the current,
and the striking and beautiful results of thermo-electricity,
in one common bond.
P viii. Electrolytic discharge.
1343. I have already expressed
in a former paper (1164.), the view by which I hope
to associate ordinary induction and electrolyzation.
Under that view, the discharge of electric forces
by electrolyzation is rather an effect superadded,
in a certain class of bodies, to those already described
as constituting induction and insulation, than one
independent of and distinct from these phenomena.
1344. Electrolytes, as respects
their insulating and conducting forces, belong to
the general category of bodies (1320. 1334.); and if
they are in the solid state (as nearly all can assume
that state), they retain their place, presenting then
no new phenomenon (426. &c.); or if one occur, being
in so small a proportion as to be almost unimportant.
When liquefied, they also belong to the same list
whilst the electric intensity is below a certain degree;
but at a given intensity (910. 912. 1007.), fixed for
each, and very low in all known cases, they play a
new part, causing discharge in proportion (783.) to
the development of certain chemical effects of combination
and decomposition; and at this point, move out from
the general class of insulators and conductors, to
form a distinct one by themselves. The former
phenomena have been considered (1320. 1338.); it is
the latter which have now to be revised, and used
as a test of the proposed theory of induction.
1345. The theory assumes, that
the particles of the dielectric (now an electrolyte)
are in the first instance brought, by ordinary inductive
action, into a polarized state, and raised to a certain
degree of tension or intensity before discharge commences;
the inductive state being, in fact, a necessary
preliminary to discharge. By taking advantage
of those circumstances which bear upon the point,
it is not difficult to increase the tension indicative
of this state of induction, and so make the state
itself more evident. Thus, if distilled water
be employed, and a long narrow portion of it placed
between the electrodes of a powerful voltaic battery,
we have at once indications of the intensity which
can be sustained at these electrodes by the inductive
action through the water as a dielectric, for sparks
may be obtained, gold leaves diverged, and Leyden
bottles charged at their wires. The water is in
the condition of the spermaceti (1322. 1323.) a bad
conductor and a bad insulator; but what it does insulate
is by virtue of inductive action, and that induction
is the preparation for and precursor of discharge
(1338.).
1346. The induction and tension
which appear at the limits of the portion of water
in the direction of the current, are only the sums
of the induction and tension of the contiguous particles
between those limits; and the limitation of the inductive
tension, to a certain degree shows (time entering
in each case as an important element of the result),
that when the particles have acquired a certain relative
state, discharge, or a transfer of forces equivalent
to ordinary conduction, takes place.
1347. In the inductive condition
assumed by water before discharge comes on, the particles
polarized are the particles of the water that
being the dielectric used; but the discharge between
particle and particle is not, as before, a mere interchange
of their powers or forces at the polar parts, but
an actual separation of them into their two elementary
particles, the oxygen travelling in one direction,
and carrying with it its amount of the force it had
acquired during the polarization, and the hydrogen
doing the same thing in the other direction, until
they each meet the next approaching particle, which
is in the same electrical state with that they have
left, and by association of their forces with it, produce
what constitutes discharge. This part of the
action may be regarded as a carrying one (1319. 1572.
1622.), performed by the constituent particles of
the dielectric. The latter is always a compound
body (664. 823.); and by those who have considered
the subject and are acquainted with the philosophical
view of transfer which was first put forth by Grotthuss,
its particles may easily be compared to a series of
metallic conductors under inductive action, which,
whilst in that state, are divisible into these elementary
moveable halves.
See 1699-1708.—De
Annales de Chimie,
lvii. and lxiii, 20.
1348. Electrolytic discharge
depends, of necessity, upon the non-conduction of
the dielectric as a whole, and there are two steps
or acts in the process: first a polarization
of the molecules of the substance and then a lowering
of the forces by the separation, advance in opposite
directions, and recombination of the elements of the
molecules, these being, as it were, the halves of
the originally polarized conductors or particles.
1349. These views of the decomposition
of electrolytes and the consequent effect of discharge,
which, as to the particular case, are the same with
those of Grotthuss (481.) and Davy (482.), though they
differ from those of Biot (487.), De la Rive (490.),
and others, seem to me to be fully in accordance not
merely with the theory I have given of induction generally
(1165.), but with all the known facts of common
induction, conduction, and electrolytic discharge;
and in that respect help to confirm in my mind the
truth of the theory set forth. The new mode of
discharge which electrolyzation presents must surely
be an evidence of the action of contiguous particles;
and as this appears to depend directly upon a previous
inductive state, which is the same with common induction,
it greatly strengthens the argument which refers induction
in all cases to an action of contiguous particles
also (1295, &c.).
1350. As an illustration of the
condition of the polarized particles in a dielectric
under induction, I may describe an experiment.
Put into a glass vessel some clear rectified oil of
turpentine, and introduce two wires passing through
glass tubes where they coincide with the surface of
the fluid, and terminating either in balls or points.
Cut some very clean dry white silk into small particles,
and put these also into the liquid: then electrify
one of the wires by an ordinary machine and discharge
by the other. The silk will immediately gather
from all parts of the liquid, and form a band of particles
reaching from wire to wire, and if touched by a glass
rod will show considerable tenacity; yet the moment
the supply of electricity ceases, the band will fall
away and disappear by the dispersion of its parts.
The conduction by the silk is in this case very
small; and after the best examination I could give
to the effects, the impression on my mind is, that
the adhesion of the whole is due to the polarity which
each filament acquires, exactly as the particles of
iron between the poles of a horse-shoe magnet are
held together in one mass by a similar disposition
of forces. The particles of silk therefore represent
to me the condition of the molecules of the dielectric
itself, which I assume to be polar, just as that of
the silk is. In all cases of conductive discharge
the contiguous polarized particles of the body are
able to effect a neutralization of their forces with
greater or less facility, as the silk does also in
a very slight degree. Further we are not able
to carry the parallel, except in imagination; but
if we could divide each particle of silk into two
halves, and let each half travel until it met and united
with the next half in an opposite state, it would
then exert its carrying power (1347.), and so far
represent electrolytic discharge.
1351. Admitting that electrolytic
discharge is a consequence of previous induction,
then how evidently do its numerous cases point to induction
in curved lines (521. 1216.), and to the divergence
or lateral action of the lines of inductive force
(1231.), and so strengthen that part of the general
argument in the former paper! If two balls of
platina, forming the electrodes of a voltaic battery,
are put into a large vessel of dilute sulphuric acid,
the whole of the surfaces are covered with the respective
gases in beautifully regulated proportions, and the
mind has no difficulty in conceiving the direction
of the curved lines of discharge, and even the intensity
of force of the different lines, by the quantity of
gas evolved upon the different parts of the surface.
From this condition of the lines of inductive force
arise the general effects of diffusion; the appearance
of the anions or cathions round the edges and on the
further side of the electrodes when in the form of
plates; and the manner in which the current or discharge
will follow all the forms of the electrolyte, however
contorted. Hence, also, the effects which Nobili
has so well examined and described in his papers
on the distribution of currents in conducting masses.
All these effects indicate the curved direction of
the currents or discharges which occur in and through
the dielectrics, and these are in every case preceded
by equivalent inductive actions of the contiguous
particles.
Bibliothèque Universelle,
1835, li. 416.
1352. Hence also the advantage,
when the exciting forces are weak or require assistance,
of enlarging the mass of the electrolyte; of increasing
the size of the electrodes; of making the coppers surround
the zincs:—all is in harmony with
the view of induction which I am endeavouring to examine;
I do not perceive as yet one fact against it.
1353. There are many points of
electrolytic discharge which ultimately will
require to be very closely considered, though I can
but slightly touch upon them. It is not that,
as far as I have investigated them, they present any
contradiction to the view taken (for I have carefully,
though unsuccessfully, sought for such cases), but
simply want of time as yet to pursue the inquiry,
which prevents me from entering upon them here.
1354. One point is, that different
electrolytes or dielectrics require different initial
intensities for their decomposition (912.). This
may depend upon the degree of polarization which the
particles require before electrolytic discharge commences.
It is in direct relation to the chemical affinity
of the substances concerned; and will probably be found
to have a relation or analogy to the specific inductive
capacity of different bodies (1252. 1296.). It
thus promises to assist in causing the great truths
of those extensive sciences, which are occupied in
considering the forces of the particles of matter,
to fall into much closer order and arrangement than
they have heretofore presented.
1355. Another point is the facilitation
of electrolytic conducting power or discharge by the
addition of substances to the dielectric employed.
This effect is strikingly shown where water is the
body whose qualities are improved, but, as yet, no
general law governing all the phenomena has been detected.
Thus some acids, as the sulphuric, phosphoric, oxalic,
and nitric, increase the power of water enormously;
whilst others, as the tartaric and citric acids, give
but little power; and others, again, as the acetic
and boracic acids, do not produce a change sensible
to the voltameter (739.). Ammonia produces no
effect, but its carbonate does. The caustic alkalies
and their carbonates produce a fair effect. Sulphate
of soda, nitre (753.), and many soluble salts produce
much effect. Percyanide of mercury and corrosive
sublimate produce no effect; nor does iodine, gum,
or sugar, the test being a voltameter. In many
cases the added substance is acted on either directly
or indirectly, and then the phenomena are more complicated;
such substances are muriatic acid (758.), the soluble
protochlorides (766.), and iodides (769.), nitric acid
(752.), &c. In other cases the substance added
is not, when alone, subject to or a conductor of the
powers of the voltaic battery, and yet both gives and
receives power when associated with water. M.
de la Rive has pointed this result out in sulphurous
acid, iodine and bromine; the chloride of arsenic
produces the same effect. A far more striking
case, however, is presented by that very influential
body sulphuric acid (681.): and probably phosphoric
acid also is in the same peculiar relation.
Quarterly Journal, xxvi. or
Bibliothèque Universelle, xl.
205. Kemp says sulphurous acid is
a very good conductor, Quarterly
Journal, 1831, .
Quarterly Journal, xxiv, 465. or Annales
de Chimie, xxx.
1356. It would seem in the cases
of those bodies which suffer no change themselves,
as sulphuric acid (and perhaps in all), that they affect
water in its conducting power only as an electrolyte;
for whether little or much improved, the decomposition
is proportionate to the quantity of electricity passing
(727. 730.), and the transfer is therefore due to electrolytic
discharge. This is in accordance with the fact
already stated as regards water (984.), that the conducting
power is not improved for electricity of force below
the electrolytic intensity of the substance acting
as the dielectric; but both facts (and some others)
are against the opinion which I formerly gave, that
the power of salts, &c. might depend upon their assumption
of the liquid state by solution in the water employed
(410.). It occurs to me that the effect may perhaps
be related to, and have its explanation in differences
of specific inductive capacities.
1357. I have described in the
last paper, cases, where shell-lac was rendered
a conductor by absorption of ammonia (1294.).
The same effect happens with muriatic acid; yet both
these substances, when gaseous, are non-conductors;
and the ammonia, also when in strong solution (718.).
Mr. Harris has mentioned instances in which the
conducting power of metals is seriously altered by
a very little alloy. These may have no relation
to the former cases, but nevertheless should not be
overlooked in the general investigation which the
whole question requires.
Philosophical Transactions, 1827,
.
1358. Nothing is perhaps more
striking in that class of dielectrics which we call
electrolytes, than the extraordinary and almost complete
suspension of their peculiar mode of effecting discharge
when they are rendered solid (380, &c.), even
though the intensity of the induction acting through
them may be increased a hundredfold or more (419.).
It not only establishes a very general relation between
the physical properties of these bodies and electricity
acting by induction through them, but draws both their
physical and chemical relations so near together, as
to make us hope we shall shortly arrive at the full
comprehension of the influence they mutually possess
over each other.
P ix. Disruptive discharge and insulation.
1359. The next form of discharge
has been distinguished by the adjective disruptive
(1319.), as it in every case displaces more or less
the particles amongst and across which it suddenly
breaks. I include under it, discharge in the
form of sparks, brushes, and glow (1405.), but exclude
the cases of currents of air, fluids, &c., which,
though frequently accompanying the former, are essentially
distinct in their nature.
1360. The conditions requisite
for the production of an electric spark in its simplest
form are well-known. An insulating dielectric
must be interposed between two conducting surfaces
in opposite states of electricity, and then if the
actions be continually increased in strength, or otherwise
favoured, either by exalting the electric state of
the two conductors, or bringing them nearer to each
other, or diminishing the density of the dielectric,
a spark at last appears, and the two forces
are for the time annihilated, for discharge
has occurred.
1361. The conductors (which may
be considered as the termini of the inductive action)
are in ordinary cases most generally metals, whilst
the dielectrics usually employed are common air and
glass. In my view of induction, however, every
dielectric becomes of importance, for as the results
are considered essentially dependent on these bodies,
it was to be expected that differences of action never
before suspected would be evident upon close examination,
and so at once give fresh confirmation of the theory,
and open new doors of discovery into the extensive
and varied fields of our science. This hope was
especially entertained with respect to the gases,
because of their high degree of insulation, their uniformity
in physical condition, and great difference in chemical
properties.
1362. All the effects prior to
the discharge are inductive; and the degree of tension
which it is necessary to attain before the spark passes
is therefore, in the examination I am now making of
the new view of induction, a very important point.
It is the limit of the influence which the dielectric
exerts in resisting discharge; it is a measure, consequently,
of the conservative power of the dielectric, which
in its turn may be considered as becoming a measure,
and therefore a representative of the intensity of
the electric forces in activity.
1363. Many philosophers have
examined the circumstances of this limiting action
in air, but, as far as I know, none have come near
Mr. Harris as to the accuracy with, and the extent
to, which he has carried on his investigations.
Some of his results I must very briefly notice, premising
that they are all obtained with the use of air as the
dielectric between the conducting surfaces.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
.
1364. First as to the distance
between the two balls used, or in other words, the
thickness of the dielectric across which the
induction was sustained. The quantity of electricity,
measured by a unit jar, or otherwise on the same principle
with the unit jar, in the charged or inductive ball,
necessary to produce spark discharge, was found to
vary exactly with the distance between the balls,
or between the discharging points, and that under
very varied and exact forms of experiment.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
.
1365. Then with respect to variation
in the pressure or density of the air.
The quantities of electricity required to produce discharge
across a constant interval varied exactly with
variations of the density; the quantity of electricity
and density of the air being in the same simple ratio.
Or, if the quantity was retained the same, whilst the
interval and density of the air were varied, then
these were found in the inverse simple ratio of each
other, the same quantity passing across twice the distance
with air rarefied to one-half.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
.
1366. It must be remembered that
these effects take place without any variation of
the inductive force by condensation or rarefaction
of the air. That force remains the same in air,
and in all gases (1284. 1292.), whatever their rarefaction
may be.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
, 244.
1367. Variation of the temperature
of the air produced no variation of the quantity of
electricity required to cause discharge across a given
interval.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
Such are the general results, which
I have occasion for at present, obtained by Mr. Harris,
and they appear to me to be unexceptionable.
1368. In the theory of induction
founded upon a molecular action of the dielectric,
we have to look to the state of that body principally
for the cause and determination of the above effects.
Whilst the induction continues, it is assumed that
the particles of the dielectric are in a certain polarized
state, the tension of this state rising higher in each
particle as the induction is raised to a higher degree,
either by approximation of the inducing surfaces,
variation of form, increase of the original force,
or other means; until at last, the tension of the particles
having reached the utmost degree which they can sustain
without subversion of the whole arrangement, discharge
immediately after takes place.
1369. The theory does not assume,
however, that all the particles of the dielectric
subject to the inductive action are affected to the
same amount, or acquire the same tension. What
has been called the lateral action of the lines of
inductive force (1231. 1297.), and the diverging and
occasionally curved form of these lines, is against
such a notion. The idea is, that any section
taken through the dielectric across the lines of inductive
force, and including all of them, would be
equal, in the sum of the forces, to the sum of the
forces in any other section; and that, therefore, the
whole amount of tension for each such section would
be the same.
1370. Discharge probably occurs,
not when all the particles have attained to a certain
degree of tension, but when that particle which is
most affected has been exalted to the subverting or
turning point (1410.). For though all
the particles in the line of induction resist charge,
and are associated in their actions so as to give
a sum of resisting force, yet when any one is brought
up to the overturning point, all must give way
in the case of a spark between ball and ball.
The breaking down of that one must of necessity cause
the whole barrier to be overturned, for it was at
its utmost degree of resistance when it possessed the
aiding power of that one particle, in addition to
the power of the rest, and the power of that one is
now lost. Hence tension or intensity
may, according to the theory, be considered as represented
by the particular condition of the particles, or the
amount in them of forced variation from their normal
state (1298. 1368.).
See Harris on proposed particular
meaning of these terms,
Philosophical Transactions, 1834, .
1371. The whole effect produced
by a charged conductor on a distant conductor, insulated
or not, is by my theory assumed to be due to an action
propagated from particle to particle of the intervening
and insulating dielectric, all the particles being
considered as thrown for the time into a forced condition,
from which they endeavour to return to their normal
or natural state. The theory, therefore, seems
to supply an easy explanation of the influence of
distance in affecting induction (1303. 1364.).
As the distance is diminished induction increases;
for there are then fewer particles in the line of
inductive force to oppose their united resistance
to the assumption of the forced or polarized state,
and vice versa. Again, as the distance diminishes,
discharge across happens with a lower charge of electricity;
for if, as in Harris’s experiments (1364), the
interval be diminished to one-half, then half the electricity
required to discharge across the first interval is
sufficient to strike across the second; and it is
evident, also, that at that time there are only half
the number of interposed molecules uniting their forces
to resist the discharge.
1372. The effect of enlarging
the conducting surfaces which are opposed to each
other in the act of induction, is, if the electricity
be limited in its supply, to lower the intensity of
action; and this follows as a very natural consequence
from the increased area of the dielectric across which
the induction is effected. For by diffusing the
inductive action, which at first was exerted through
one square inch of sectional area of the dielectric,
over two or three square inches of such area, twice
or three times the number of molecules of the dielectric
are brought into the polarized condition, and employed
in sustaining the inductive action, and consequently
the tension belonging to the smaller number on which
the limited force was originally accumulated, must
fall in a proportionate degree.
1373. For the same reason diminishing
these opposing surfaces must increase the intensity,
and the effect will increase until the surfaces become
points. But in this case, the tension of the particles
of the dielectric next the points is higher than that
of particles midway, because of the lateral action
and consequent bulging, as it were, of the lines of
inductive force at the middle distance (1369.).
1374. The more exalted effects
of induction on a point p, or any small surface,
as the rounded end of a rod, when it is opposed to
a large surface, as that of a ball or plate, rather
than to another point or end, the distance being in
both cases the same, fall into harmonious relation
with my theory (1302.). For in the latter case,
the small surface p is affected only by those
particles which are brought into the inductive condition
by the equally small surface of the opposed conductor,
whereas when that is a ball or plate the lines of
inductive force from the latter are concentrated,
as it were, upon the end p. Now though
the molecules of the dielectric against the large
surface may have a much lower state of tension than
those against the corresponding smaller surface, yet
they are also far more numerous, and, as the lines
of inductive force converge towards a point, are able
to communicate to the particles contained in any cross
section (1369.) nearer the small surface an amount
of tension equal to their own, and consequently much
higher for each individual particle; so that, at the
surface of the smaller conductor, the tension of a
particle rises much, and if that conductor were to
terminate in a point, the tension would rise to an
infinite degree, except that it is limited, as before
(1368.), by discharge. The nature of the discharge
from small surfaces and points under induction will
be resumed hereafter (1425. &c.)
1375. Rarefaction of the air
does not alter the intensity of inductive action
(1284. 1287.); nor is there any reason, as far as I
can perceive, why it should. If the quantity
of electricity and the distance remain the same, and
the air be rarefied one-half, then, though one-half
of the particles of the dielectric are removed, the
other half assume a double degree of tension in their
polarity, and therefore the inductive forces are balanced,
and the result remains unaltered as long as the induction
and insulation are sustained. But the case of
discharge is very different; for as there are
only half the number of dielectric particles in the
rarefied atmosphere, so these are brought up to the
discharging intensity by half the former quantity
of electricity; discharge, therefore, ensues, and
such a consequence of the theory is in perfect accordance
with Mr. Harris’s results (1365.).
1376. The increase of
electricity required to cause discharge over the same
distance, when the pressure of the air or its density
is increased, flows in a similar manner, and on the
same principle (1375.), from the molecular theory.
1377. Here I think my view of
induction has a decided advantage over others, especially
over that which refers the retention of electricity
on the surface of conductors in air to the pressure
of the atmosphere (1305.). The latter is
the view which, being adopted by Poisson and Biot,
is also, I believe, that generally received; and it
associates two such dissimilar things, as the ponderous
air and the subtile and even hypothetical fluid or
fluids of electricity, by gross mechanical relations;
by the bonds of mere static pressure. My theory,
on the contrary, sets out at once by connecting the
electric forces with the particles of matter; it derives
all its proofs, and even its origin in the first instance,
from experiment; and then, without any further assumption,
seems to offer at once a full explanation of these
and many other singular, peculiar, and, I think, heretofore
unconnected effects.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Supplement,
vol. iv. Article Electricity,
p, 81. &c.
1378. An important assisting
experimental argument may here be adduced, derived
from the difference of specific inductive capacity
of different dielectrics (1269. 1274. 1278.).
Consider an insulated sphere electrified positively
and placed in the centre of another and larger sphere
uninsulated, a uniform dielectric, as air, intervening.
The case is really that of my apparatus (1187.), and
also, in effect, that of any ball electrified in a
room and removed to some distance from irregularly-formed
conductors. Whilst things remain in this state
the electricity is distributed (so to speak) uniformly
over the surface of the electrified sphere. But
introduce such a dielectric as sulphur or lac,
into the space between the two conductors on one side
only, or opposite one part of the inner sphere, and
immediately the electricity on the latter is diffused
unequally (1229. 1270. 1309.), although the form of
the conducting surfaces, their distances, and the
pressure of the atmosphere remain perfectly
unchanged.
1379. Fusinieri took a different
view from that of Poisson, Biot, and others, of the
reason why rarefaction of air caused easy diffusion
of electricity. He considered the effect as due
to the removal of the obstacle which the air
presented to the expansion of the substances from
which the electricity passed. But platina balls
show the phenomena in vacuo as well as volatile
metals and other substances; besides which, when the
rarefaction is very considerable, the electricity passes
with scarcely any resistance, and the production of
no sensible heat; so that I think Fusinieri’s
view of the matter is likely to gain but few assents.
Bib. Uni, xlvii.
1380. I have no need to remark
upon the discharging or collecting power of flame
or hot air. I believe, with Harris, that the mere
heat does nothing (1367.), the rarefaction only being
influential. The effect of rarefaction has been
already considered generally (1375.); and that caused
by the heat of a burning light, with the pointed form
of the wick, and the carrying power of the carbonaceous
particles which for the time are associated with it,
are fully sufficient to account for all the effects.
1381. We have now arrived at
the important question, how will the inductive tension
requisite for insulation and disruptive discharge be
sustained in gases, which, having the same physical
state and also the same pressure and the same
temperature as air, differ from it in specific
gravity, in chemical qualities, and it may be in peculiar
relations, which not being as yet recognized, are
purely electrical (1361.)?
1382. Into this question I can
enter now only as far as is essential for the present
argument, namely, that insulation and inductive tension
do not depend merely upon the charged conductors employed,
but also, and essentially, upon the interposed dielectric,
in consequence of the molecular action of its particles
(1292.).
1383. A glass vessel a
(fi.) was ground at the top and bottom so
as to be closed by two ground brass plates, b
and c; b carried a stuffing-box, with
a sliding rod d terminated by a brass ball s
below, and a ring above. The lower plate was
connected with a foot, stop-cock, and socket, e,
f and g; and also with a brass ball l,
which by means of a stem attached to it and entering
the socket g, could be fixed at various heights.
The metallic parts of this apparatus were not varnished,
but the glass was well-covered with a coat of shell-lac
previously dissolved in alcohol. On exhausting
the vessel at the air-pump it could be filled with
any other gas than air, and, in such cases, the gas
so passed in was dried whilst entering by fused chloride
of calcium.
The drawing is to a scale of 1/6.
1384. The other part of the apparatus
consisted of two insulating pillars, h and
i, to which were fixed two brass balls, and
through these passed two sliding rods, k and
m, terminated at each end by brass balls; n
is the end of an insulated conductor, which could be
rendered either positive or negative from an electrical
machine; o and p are wires connecting
it with the two parts previously described, and q
is a wire which, connecting the two opposite sides
of the collateral arrangements, also communicates
with a good discharging train r (292.).
1385. It is evident that the
discharge from the machine electricity may pass either
between s and l, or S and L. The regulation
adopted in the first experiments was to keep s
and l with their distance unchanged,
but to introduce first one gas and then another into
the vessel a, and then balance the discharge
at the one place against that at the other; for by
making the interval at a sufficiently small,
all the discharge would pass there, or making it sufficiently
large it would all occur at the interval v
in the receiver. On principle it seemed evident,
that in this way the varying interval u might
be taken as a measure, or rather indication of the
resistance to discharge through the gas at the constant
interval v. The following are the constant
dimensions.
Ball s 0.93 of an inch.
Ball S 0.96 of an inch.
Ball l 2.02 of an inch.
Ball L 0.62 of an inch.
Interval v 0.62 of an inch.
1386. On proceeding to experiment
it was found that when air or any gas was in the receiver
a, the interval u was not a fixed one;
it might be altered through a certain range of distance,
and yet sparks pass either there or at v in
the receiver. The extremes were therefore noted,
i.e. the greatest distance short of that at which
the discharge always took place at v
in the gas, and the least distance short of that at
which it always took place at u in the
air. Thus, with air in the receiver, the extremes
at u were 0.56 and 0.79 of an inch, the range
of 0.23 between these distances including intervals
at which sparks passed occasionally either at one
place or the other.
1387. The small balls s
and S could be rendered either positive or negative
from the machine, and as gases were expected and were
found to differ from each other in relation to this
change (1399.), the results obtained under these differences
of charge were also noted.
1388. The following is a Table
of results; the gas named is that in the vessel a.
The smallest, greatest, and mean interval at u
in air is expressed in parts of an inch, the interval
v being constantly 0.62 of an inch.
Smallest.
Greatest. Mean.
_ | Air, s and S, pos.
0.60 0.79 0.695 |_Air, s
and S, neg. 0.59 0.68 0.635
_ | Oxygen, s and S, pos.
0.41 0.60 0.505 |_Oxygen, s and
S, neg. 0.50 0.52 0.510 _
| Nitrogen, s and S, pos. 0.55
0.68 0.615 |_Nitrogen, s and S,
neg. 0.59 0.70 0.645 _ | Hydrogen,
s and S, pos. 0.30 0.44
0.370 |_Hydrogen, s and S, neg.
0.25 0.30 0.275 _ | Carbonic acid,
s and S, pos. 0.56 0.72
0.640 |_Carbonic acid, s and S, neg. 0.58
0.60 0.590 _ | Olefiant gas, s
and S, pos. 0.64 0.86 0.750
|_Olefiant gas, s and S, neg. 0.69
0.77 0.730 _ | Coal gas, s and S,
pos. 0.37 0.61 0.490 |_Coal
gas, s and S, neg. 0.47 0.58
0.525 _ | Muriatic acid gas, s and
S, po.89 1.32 1.105 |_Muriatic
acid gas, s and S, ne.67 0.75
0.710
1389. The above results were
all obtained at one time. On other occasions
other experiments were made, which gave generally the
same results as to order, though not as to numbers.
Thus:
Hydrogen, s and S, pos. 0.23 0.57 0.400
Carbonic acid, s and S, pos. 0.51 1.05 0.780
Olefiant gas, s and S, pos. 0.66 1.27 0.965
I did not notice the difference of
the barometer on the days of experiment.
Similar experiments in different gases
are described at 1507.
1508.—De.
1390. One would have expected
only two distances, one for each interval, for which
the discharge might happen either at one or the other;
and that the least alteration of either would immediately
cause one to predominate constantly over the other.
But that under common circumstances is not the case.
With air in the receiver, the variation amounted to
0.2 of an inch nearly on the smaller interval of 0.6,
and with muriatic acid gas, the variation was above
0.4 on the smaller interval of 0.9. Why is it
that when a fixed interval (the one in the receiver)
will pass a spark that cannot go across 0.6 of air
at one time, it will immediately after, and apparently
under exactly similar circumstances, not pass a spark
that can go across 0.8 of air?
1391. It is probable that part
of this variation will be traced to particles of dust
in the air drawn into and about the circuit (1568.).
I believe also that part depends upon a variable charged
condition of the surface of the glass vessel a.
That the whole of the effect is not traceable to the
influence of circumstances in the vessel a,
may be deduced from the fact, that when sparks occur
between balls in free air they frequently are not
straight, and often pass otherwise than by the shortest
distance. These variations in air itself, and
at different parts of the very same balls, show the
presence and influence of circumstances which are
calculated to produce effects of the kind now under
consideration.
1392. When a spark had passed
at either interval, then, generally, more tended to
appear at the same interval, as if a preparation
had been made for the passing of the latter sparks.
So also on continuing to work the machine quickly
the sparks generally followed at the same place.
This effect is probably due in part to the warmth
of the air heated by the preceding spark, in part
to dust, and I suspect in part, to something unperceived
as yet in the circumstances of discharge.
1393. A very remarkable difference,
which is constant in its direction, occurs
when the electricity communicated to the balls s
and S is changed from positive to negative, or in
the contrary direction. It is that the range
of variation is always greater when the small bulls
are positive than when they are negative. This
is exhibited in the following Table, drawn from the
former experiments.
Pos. Neg.
In Air the range was 0.19 0.09
Oxygen 0.19 0.02
Nitrogen 0.18 0.11
Hydrogen 0.14 0.05
Carbonic acid 0.16 0.02
Olefiant gas 0.22 0.08
Coal gas 0.24 0.12
Muriatic acid 0.43 0.08
I have no doubt these numbers require
considerable correction, but the general result is
striking, and the differences in several cases very
great.
1394. Though, in consequence
of the variation of the striking distance (1386.),
the interval in air fails to be a measure, as yet,
of the insulating or resisting power of the gas in
the vessel, yet we may for present purposes take the
mean interval as representing in some degree that
power. On examining these mean intervals as they
are given in the third column (1388.), it will be
very evident, that gases, when employed as dielectrics,
have peculiar electrical relations to insulation, and
therefore to induction, very distinct from such as
might be supposed to depend upon their mere physical
qualities of specific gravity or pressure.
1395. First, it is clear that
at the same pressure they are not alike, the
difference being as great as 37 and 110. When
the small balls are charged positively, and with the
same surfaces and the same pressure, muriatic acid
gas has three times the insulating or restraining power
(1362.) of hydrogen gas, and nearly twice that of oxygen,
nitrogen, or air.
1396. Yet it is evident that
the difference is not due to specific gravity, for
though hydrogen is the lowest, and therefore lower
than oxygen, oxygen is much beneath nitrogen, or olefiant
gas; and carbonic acid gas, though considerably heavier
than olefiant gas or muriatic acid gas, is lower than
either. Oxygen as a heavy, and olefiant as a light
gas, are in strong contrast with each other; and if
we may reason of olefiant gas from Harris’s
results with air (1365.), then it might be rarefied
to two-thirds its usual density, or to a specific
gravity of 9.3 (hydrogen being 1), and having neither
the same density nor pressure as oxygen, would have
equal insulating powers with it, or equal tendency
to resist discharge.
1397. Experiments have already
been described (1291. 1292.) which show that the gases
are sensibly alike in their inductive capacity.
This result is not in contradiction with the existence
of great differences in their restraining power.
The same point has been observed already in regard
to dense and rare air (1375.).
1398. Hence arises a new argument
proving that it cannot be mere pressure of the atmosphere
which prevents or governs discharge (1377. 1378.),
but a specific electric quality or relation of the
gaseous medium. Hence also additional argument
for the theory of molecular inductive action.
1399. Other specific differences
amongst the gases may be drawn from the preceding
series of experiments, rough and hasty as they are.
Thus the positive and negative series of mean intervals
do not give the same differences. It has been
already noticed that the negative numbers are lower
than the positive (1393.), but, besides that, the order
of the positive and negative results is not the same.
Thus, on comparing the mean numbers (which represent
for the present insulating tension,) it appears that
in air, hydrogen, carbonic acid, olefiant gas and muriatic
acid, the tension rose higher when the smaller ball
was made positive than when rendered negative, whilst
in oxygen, nitrogen, and coal gas, the reverse was
the case. Now though the numbers cannot be trusted
as exact, and though air, oxygen, and nitrogen should
probably be on the same side, yet some of the results,
as, for instance, those with muriatic acid, fully show
a peculiar relation and difference amongst gases in
this respect. This was further proved by making
the interval in air 0.8 of an inch whilst muriatic
acid gas was in the vessel a; for on charging
the small balls s and S positively, all
the discharge took place through the air; but
on charging them negatively, all the discharge
took place through the muriatic acid gas.
1400. So also, when the conductor
n was connected only with the muriatic
acid gas apparatus, it was found that the discharge
was more facile when the small ball s was negative
than when positive; for in the latter case, much of
the electricity passed off as brush discharge through
the air from the connecting wire p but in the
former case, it all seemed to go through the muriatic
acid.
1401. The consideration, however,
of positive and negative discharge across air and
other gases will be resumed in the further part of
this, or in the next paper (1465. 1525.).
1402. Here for the present I
must leave this part of the subject, which had for
its object only to observe how far gases agreed or
differed as to their power of retaining a charge on
bodies acting by induction through them. All
the results conspire to show that Induction is an action
of contiguous molecules (1295. &c.); but besides confirming
this, the first principle placed for proof in the
present inquiry, they greatly assist in developing
the specific properties of each gaseous dielectric,
at the same time showing that further and extensive
experimental investigation is necessary, and holding
out the promise of new discovery as the reward of the
labour required.
1403. When we pass from the consideration
of dielectrics like the gases to that of bodies having
the liquid and solid condition, then our reasonings
in the present state of the subject assume much more
of the character of mere supposition. Still I
do not perceive anything adverse to the theory, in
the phenomena which such bodies present. If we
take three insulating dielectrics, as air, oil of
turpentine, and shell-lac, and use the same balls
or conductors at the same intervals in these three
substances, increasing the intensity of the induction
until discharge take place, we shall find that it
must be raised much higher in the fluid than for the
gas, and higher still in the solid than for the fluid.
Nor is this inconsistent with the theory; for with
the liquid, though its molecules are free to move
almost as easily as those of the gas, there are many
more particles introduced into the given interval;
and such is also the case when the solid body is employed.
Besides that with the solid, the cohesive force of
the body used will produce some effect; for though
the production of the polarized states in the particle
of a solid may not be obstructed, but, on the contrary,
may in some cases be even favoured (1164. 1344.) by
its solidity or other circumstances, yet solidity may
well exert an influence on the point of final subversion,
(just as it prevents discharge in an electrolyte,)
and so enable inductive intensity to rise to a much
higher degree.
1404. In the cases of solids
and liquids too, bodies may, and most probably do,
possess specific differences as to their ability of
assuming the polarized state, and also as to the extent
to which that polarity must rise before discharge
occurs. An analogous difference exists in the
specific inductive capacities already pointed out
in a few substances (1278.) in the last paper.
Such a difference might even account for the various
degrees of insulating and conducting power possessed
by different bodies, and, if it should be found to
exist, would add further strength to the argument in
favour of the molecular theory of inductive action.
1405. Having considered these
various cases of sustained insulation in non-conducting
dielectrics up to the highest point which they can
attain, we find that they terminate at last in disruptive
discharge; the peculiar condition of the molecules
of the dielectric which was necessary to the continuous
induction, being equally essential to the occurrence
of that effect which closes all the phenomena.
This discharge is not only in its appearance and condition
different to the former modes by which the lowering
of the powers was effected (1320. 1343.), but, whilst
really the same in principle, varies much from itself
in certain characters, and thus presents us with the
forms of spark, brush, and glow
(1359.). I will first consider the spark,
limiting it for the present to the case of discharge
between two oppositely electrified conducting surfaces.
The electric spark or flash.
1406. The spark is consequent
upon a discharge or lowering of the polarized inductive
state of many dielectric particles, by a particular
action of a few of the particles occupying a very small
and limited space; all the previously polarized particles
returning to their first or normal condition in the
inverse order in which they left it, and uniting their
powers meanwhile to produce, or rather to continue,
(1417.—1436.) the discharge effect in the
place where the subversion of force first occurred.
My impression is, that the few particles situated where
discharge occurs are not merely pushed apart, but
assume a peculiar state, a highly exulted condition
for the time, i.e. have thrown upon them all the
surrounding forces in succession, and rising up to
a proportionate intensity of condition, perhaps equal
to that of chemically combining atoms, discharge the
powers, possibly in the same manner as they do theirs,
by some operation at present unknown to us; and so
the end of the whole. The ultimate effect is
exactly as if a metallic wire had been put into the
place of the discharging particles; and it does not
seem impossible that the principles of action in both
cases, may, hereafter, prove to be the same.
1407. The path of the spark,
or of the discharge, depends on the degree of tension
acquired by the particles in the line of discharge,
circumstances, which in every common case are very
evident and by the theory easy to understand, rendering
it higher in them than in their neighbours, and, by
exalting them first to the requisite condition, causing
them to determine the course of the discharge.
Hence the selection of the path, and the solution
of the wonder which Harris has so well described
as existing under the old theory. All is prepared
amongst the molecules beforehand, by the prior induction,
for the path either of the electric spark or of lightning
itself.
Nautical Magazine, 1834, p 229.
1408. The same difficulty is
expressed as a principle by Nobili for voltaic electricity,
almost in Mr. Harris’s words, namely, “electricity
directs itself towards the point where it can most
easily discharge itself,” and the results of
this as a principle he has well wrought out for the
case of voltaic currents. But the solution
of the difficulty, or the proximate cause of the effects,
is the same; induction brings the particles up to or
towards a certain degree of tension (1370.); and by
those which first attain it, is the discharge first
and most efficiently performed.
Bibliothèque Universelle,
1835, li.
1409. The moment of discharge
is probably determined by that molecule of the dielectric
which, from the circumstances, has its tension most
quickly raised up to the maximum intensity. In
all cases where the discharge passes from conductor
to conductor this molecule must be on the surface of
one of them; but when it passes between a conductor
and a nonconductor, it is, perhaps, not always so
(1453.). When this particle has acquired its maximum
tension, then the whole barrier of resistance is broken
down in the line or lines of inductive action originating
at it, and disruptive discharge occurs (1370.):
and such an inference, drawn as it is from the theory,
seems to me in accordance with Mr. Harris’s facts
and conclusions respecting the resistance of the atmosphere,
namely, that it is not really greater at any one discharging
distance than another.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
p, 229.
1410. It seems probable, that
the tension of a particle of the same dielectric,
as air, which is requisite to produce discharge, is
a constant quantity, whatever the shape of
the part of the conductor with which it is in contact,
whether ball or point; whatever the thickness or depth
of dielectric throughout which induction is exerted;
perhaps, even, whatever the state, as to rarefaction
or condensation of the dielectric; and whatever the
nature of the conductor, good or bad, with which the
particle is for the moment associated. In saying
so much, I do not mean to exclude small differences
which may be caused by the reaction of neighbouring
particles on the deciding particle, and indeed, it
is evident that the intensity required in a particle
must be related to the condition of those which are
contiguous. But if the expectation should be found
to approximate to truth, what a generality of character
it presents! and, in the definiteness of the power
possessed by a particular molecule, may we not hope
to find an immediate relation to the force which, being
electrical, is equally definite and constitutes chemical
affinity?
1411. Theoretically it would
seem that, at the moment of discharge by the spark
in one line of inductive force, not merely would all
the other lines throw their forces into this one (1406.),
but the lateral effect, equivalent to a repulsion
of these lines (1224. 1297.), would be relieved and,
perhaps, followed by a contrary action, amounting to
a collapse or attraction of these parts. Having
long sought for some transverse force in statical
electricity, which should be the equivalent to magnetism
or the transverse force of current electricity, and
conceiving that it might be connected with the transverse
action of the lines of inductive force, already described
(1297.), I was desirous, by various experiments, of
bringing out the effect of such a force, and making
it tell upon the phenomena of electro-magnetism and
magneto-electricity.
See further investigations of this
subject, 1658-1666.
1709-1735.—De.
1412. Amongst other results,
I expected and sought for the mutual affection, or
even the lateral coalition of two similar sparks, if
they could be obtained simultaneously side by side,
and sufficiently near to each other. For this
purpose, two similar Leyden jars were supplied with
rods of copper projecting from their balls in a horizontal
direction, the rods being about 0.2 of an inch thick,
and rounded at the ends. The jars were placed
upon a sheet of tinfoil, and so adjusted that their
rods, a and b, were near together, in
the position represented in plan at fi:
c and d were two brass balls connected
by a brass rod and insulated: e was also
a brass ball connected, by a wire, with the ground
and with the tinfoil upon which the Leyden jars were
placed. By laying an insulated metal rod across
from a to b, charging the jars, and removing
the rod, both the jars could be brought up to the same
intensity of charge (1370.). Then, making the
ball e approach the ball d, at the moment
the spark passed there, two sparks passed between
the rods n, o, and the ball c;
and as far as the eye could judge, or the conditions
determine, they were simultaneous.
1413. Under these circumstances
two modes of discharge took place; either each end
had its own particular spark to the ball, or else one
end only was associated by a spark with the ball,
but was at the same time related to the other end
by a spark between the two.
1414. When the ball c
was about an inch in diameter, the ends n and
o, about half an inch from it, and about 0.4
of an inch from each other, the two sparks to the
ball could be obtained. When for the purpose of
bringing the sparks nearer together, the ends, n
and o, were brought closer to each other, then,
unless very carefully adjusted, only one end had a
spark with the ball, the other having a spark to it;
and the least variation of position would cause either
n or o to be the end which, giving the
direct spark to the ball, was also the one through,
or by means of which, the other discharged its electricity.
1415. On making the ball c
smaller, I found that then it was needful to make
the interval between the ends n and o
larger in proportion to the distance between them
and the ball c. On making c larger,
I found I could diminish the interval, and so bring
the two simultaneous separate sparks closer together,
until, at last, the distance between them was not
more at the widest part than 0.6 of their whole length.
1416. Numerous sparks were then
passed and carefully observed. They were very
rarely straight, but either curved or bent irregularly.
In the average of cases they were, I think, decidedly
convex towards each other; perhaps two-thirds presented
more or less of this effect, the rest bulging more
or less outwards. I was never able, however,
to obtain sparks which, separately leaving the ends
of the wires n and o, conjoined into
one spark before they reached or communicated with
the ball c. At present, therefore, though
I think I saw a tendency in the sparks to unite, I
cannot assert it as a fact.
1417. But there is one very interesting
effect here, analogous to, and it may be in part the
same with, that I was searching for: I mean the
increased facility of discharge where the spark passes.
For instance, in the cases where one end, as n,
discharged the electricity of both ends to the ball
c, fi, the electricity of the other end
o, had to pass through an interval of air 1.5
times as great as that which it might have taken,
by its direct passage between the end and the ball
itself. In such cases, the eye could not distinguish,
even by the use of Wheatstone’s means, that
the spark from the end n, which contained both
portions of electricity, was a double spark.
It could not have consisted of two sparks taking separate
courses, for such an effect would have been visible
to the eye; but it is just possible, that the spark
of the first end n and its jar, passing at
the smallest interval of time before that of the other
o had heated and expanded the air in its course,
and made it so much more favourable to discharge,
that the electricity of the end o preferred
leaping across to it and taking a very circuitous route,
rather than the more direct one to the ball.
It must, however, be remarked, in answer to this supposition,
that the one spark between d and e would,
by its influence, tend to produce simultaneous discharges
at n and o, and certainly did so, when
no preponderance was given to one wire over the other,
as to the previous inductive effect (1414.).
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
p, 585.
1418. The fact, however, is,
that disruptive discharge is favourable to itself.
It is at the outset a case of tottering equilibrium:
and if time be an element in discharge, in
however minute a proportion (1436.), then the commencement
of the act at any point favours its continuance and
increase there, and portions of power will be discharged
by a course which they would not otherwise have taken.
1419. The mere heating and expansion
of the air itself by the first portion of electricity
which passes, must have a great influence in producing
this result.
1420. As to the result itself,
we see its effect in every electric spark; for it
is not the whole quantity which passes that determines
the discharge, but merely that small portion of force
which brings the deciding molecule (1370.) up to its
maximum tension; then, when its forces are subverted
and discharge begins, all the rest passes by the same
course, from the influence of the favouring circumstances
just referred to; and whether it be the electricity
on a square inch, or a thousand square inches of charged
glass, the discharge is complete. Hereafter we
shall find the influence of this effect in the formation
of brushes (1435.); and it is not impossible that
we may trace it producing the jagged spark and the
forked lightning.
1421. The characters of the electric
spark in different gases vary, and the variation
may be due simply to the effect of the heat
evolved at the moment. But it may also be due
to that specific relation of the particles and the
electric forces which I have assumed as the basis of
a theory of induction; the facts do not oppose such
a view; and in that view the variation strengthens
the argument for molecular action, as it would seem
to show the influence of the latter in every part of
the electrical effect (1423. 1454.).
1422. The appearances of the
sparks in different gases have often been observed
and recorded, but I think it not out of place to
notice briefly the following results; they were obtained
with balls of brass, (platina surfaces would have
been better,) and at common pressures. In air,
the sparks have that intense light and bluish colour
which are so well known, and often have faint or dark
parts in their course, when the quantity of electricity
passing is not great. In nitrogen, they
are very beautiful, having the same general appearance
as in air, but have decidedly more colour of a bluish
or purple character, and I thought were remarkably
sonorous. In oxygen, the sparks were whiter
than in air or nitrogen, and I think not so brilliant.
In hydrogen, they had a very fine crimson colour,
not due to its rarity, for the character passed away
as the atmosphere was rarefied (1459.). Very
little sound was produced in this gas; but that is
a consequence of its physical condition. In
carbonic acid gas, the colour was similar to
that of the spark in air, but with a little green
in it: the sparks were remarkably irregular in
form, more so than in common air: they could
also, under similar circumstances as to size of ball,
&c., be obtained much longer than in air, the gas showing
a singular readiness to cause the discharge in the
form of spark. In muriatic acid gas, the
spark was nearly white: it was always bright
throughout, never presenting those dark parts which
happen in air, nitrogen, and some other gases.
The gas was dry, and during the whole experiment the
surface of the glass globe within remained quite dry
and bright. In coal gas, the spark was
sometimes green, sometimes red, and occasionally one
part was green and another red: black parts also
occur very suddenly in the line of the spark, i.e.
they are not connected by any dull part with bright
portions, but the two seem to join directly one with
the other.
See Van Marum’s description
of the Teylerian machine, vol. i. p.
112, and vol. ii. ; also Ency.
Britan., vol. vi., Article
Electricity, p, 507.
Van Marum says they are about four
times as large in hydrogen as
in air. vol. i. .
Leslie. Cambridge Phil.
Transactions, 267.
1423. These varieties of character
impress my mind with a feeling, that they are due
to a direct relation of the electric powers to the
particles of the dielectric through which the discharge
occurs, and are not the mere results of a casual ignition
or a secondary kind of action of the electricity,
upon the particles which it finds in its course and
thrusts aside in its passage (1454.).
1424. The spark may be obtained
in media which are far denser than air, as in oil
of turpentine, olive oil, resin, glass, &c.: it
may also be obtained in bodies which being denser
likewise approximate to the condition of conductors,
as spermaceti, water, &c. But in these cases,
nothing occurs which, as far as I can perceive, is
at all hostile to the general views I have endeavoured
to advocate.
The electrical brush.
1425. The brush is the
next form of disruptive discharge which I shall consider.
There are many ways of obtaining it, or rather of exalting
its characters; and all these ways illustrate the
principles upon which it is produced. If an insulated
conductor, connected with the positive conductor of
an electrical machine, have a metal rod 0.3 of an inch
in diameter projecting from it outwards from the machine,
and terminating by a rounded end or a small ball,
it will generally give good brushes; or, if the machine
be not in good action, then many ways of assisting
the formation of the brush can be resorted to; thus,
the hand or any large conducting surface may
be approached towards the termination to increase inductive
force (1374.): or the termination may be smaller
and of badly conducting matter, as wood: or sparks
may be taken between the prime conductor of the machine
and the secondary conductor to which the termination
giving brushes belongs: or, which gives to the
brushes exceedingly fine characters and great magnitude,
the air around the termination may be rarefied more
or less, either by heat or the air-pump; the former
favourable circumstances being also continued.
1426. The brush when obtained
by a powerful machine on a ball about 0.7 of an inch
in diameter, at the end of a long brass rod attached
to the positive prime conductor, had the general appearance
as to form represented in fi: a short conical
bright part or root appeared at the middle part of
the ball projecting directly from it, which, at a little
distance from the ball, broke out suddenly into a
wide brush of pale ramifications having a quivering
motion, and being accompanied at the same time with
a low dull chattering sound.
1427. At first the brush seems
continuous, but Professor Wheatstone has shown that
the whole phenomenon consists of successive intermitting
discharges. If the eye be passed rapidly, not
by a motion of the head, but of the eyeball itself,
across the direction of the brush, by first looking
steadfastly about 10 deg. or 15 deg. above,
and then instantly as much below it, the general brush
will be resolved into a number of individual brushes,
standing in a row upon the line which the eye passed
over; each elementary brush being the result of a
single discharge, and the space between them representing
both the time during which the eye was passing over
that space, and that which elapsed between one discharge
and another.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
.
1428. The single brushes could
easily be separated to eight or ten times their own
width, but were not at the same time extended, i.e.
they did not become more indefinite in shape, but,
on the contrary, less so, each being more distinct
in form, ramification, and character, because of its
separation from the others, in its effects upon the
eye. Each, therefore, was instantaneous in its
existence (1436.). Each had the conical root
complete (1426.).
1429. On using a smaller ball,
the general brush was smaller, and the sound, though
weaker, more continuous. On resolving the brush
into its elementary parts, as before, these were found
to occur at much shorter intervals of time than in
the former case, but still the discharge was intermitting.
1430. Employing a wire with a
round end, the brush was still smaller, but, as before,
separable into successive discharges. The sound,
though feebler, was higher in pitch, being a distinct
musical note.
1431. The sound is, in fact,
due to the recurrence of the noise of each separate
discharge, and these, happening at intervals nearly
equal under ordinary circumstances, cause a definite
note to be heard, which, rising in pitch with the
increased rapidity and regularity of the intermitting
discharges, gives a ready and accurate measure of the
intervals, and so may be used in any case when the
discharge is heard, even though the appearances may
not be seen, to determine the element of time.
So when, by bringing the hand towards a projecting
rod or ball, the pitch of the tone produced by a brushy
discharge increases, the effect informs us that we
have increased the induction (1374.), and by that means
increased the rapidity of the alternations of charge
and discharge.
1432. By using wires with finer
terminations, smaller brushes were obtained, until
they could hardly be distinguished as brushes; but
as long as sound was heard, the discharge could
be ascertained by the eye to be intermitting; and
when the sound ceased, the light became continuous
as a glow (1359. 1405. 1526-1543.).
1433. To those not accustomed
to use the eye in the manner I have described, or,
in cases where the recurrence is too quick for any
unassisted eye, the beautiful revolving mirror of Professor
Wheatstone will be useful for such developments
of condition as those mentioned above. Another
excellent process is to produce the brush or other
luminous phenomenon on the end of a rod held in the
hand opposite to a charged positive or negative conductor,
and then move the rod rapidly from side to side whilst
the eye remains still. The successive discharges
occur of course in different places, and the state
of things before, at, and after a single coruscation
or brush can be exceedingly well separated.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
p, 585.
1434. The brush is in
reality a discharge between a bad or a non-conductor
and either a conductor or another non-conductor.
Under common circumstances, the brush is a discharge
between a conductor and air, and I conceive it to
take place in something like the following manner.
When the end of an electrified rod projects into the
middle of a room, induction takes place between it
and the walls of the room, across the dielectric,
air; and the lines of inductive force accumulate upon
the end in greater quantity than elsewhere, or the
particles of air at the end of the rod are more highly
polarized than those at any other part of the rod,
for the reasons already given (1374.). The particles
of air situated in sections across these lines of
force are least polarized in the sections towards the
walls and most polarized in those nearer to the end
of the wires (1369.): thus, it may well happen,
that a particle at the end of the wire is at a tension
that will immediately terminate in discharge, whilst
in those even only a few inches off, the tension is
still beneath that point. But suppose the rod
to be charged positively, a particle of air A, fi, next it, being polarized, and having of course
its negative force directed towards the rod and its
positive force outwards; the instant that discharge
takes place between the positive force of the particle
of the rod opposite the air and the negative force
of the particle of air towards the rod, the whole
particle of air becomes positively electrified; and
when, the next instant, the discharged part of the
rod resumes its positive state by conduction from
the surface of metal behind, it not only acts on the
particles beyond A, by throwing A into a polarized
state again, but A itself, because of its charged
state, exerts a distinct inductive act towards these
further particles, and the tension is consequently
so much exalted between A and B, that discharge takes
place there also, as well as again between the metal
and A.
1435. In addition to this effect,
it has been shown, that, the act of discharge having
once commenced, the whole operation, like a case of
unstable equilibrium, is hastened to a conclusion (1370.
1418.), the rest of the act being facilitated in its
occurrence, and other electricity than that which
caused the first necessary tension hurrying to the
spot. When, therefore, disruptive discharge has
once commenced at the root of a brush, the electric
force which has been accumulating in the conductor
attached to the rod, finds a more ready discharge
there than elsewhere, and will at once follow the
course marked out as it were for it, thus leaving the
conductor in a partially discharged state, and the
air about the end of the wire in a charged condition;
and the time necessary for restoring the full charge
of the conductor, and the dispersion of the charged
air in a greater or smaller degree, by the joint forces
of repulsion from the conductor and attraction towards
the walls of the room, to which its inductive action
is directed, is just that time which forms the interval
between brush and brush (1420. 1427. 1431. 1447.).
1436. The words of this description
are long, but there is nothing in the act or the forces
on which it depends to prevent the discharge being
instantaneous, as far as we can estimate and
measure it. The consideration of time
is, however, important in several points of view (1418.),
and in reference to disruptive discharge, it seemed
from theory far more probable that it might be detected
in a brush than in a spark; for in a brush, the particles
in the line through which the discharge passes are
in very different states as to intensity, and the discharge
is already complete in its act at the root of the
brush, before the particles at the extremity of the
ramifications have yet attained their maximum intensity.
1437. I consider brush
discharge as probably a successive effect in this
way. Discharge begins at the root (1426. 1553.),
and, extending itself in succession to all parts of
the single brush, continues to go on at the root and
the previously formed parts until the whole brush is
complete; then, by the fall in intensity and power
at the conductor, it ceases at once in all parts,
to be renewed, when that power has risen again to a
sufficient degree. But in a spark, the
particles in the line of discharge being, from the
circumstances, nearly alike in their intensity of polarization,
suffer discharge so nearly at the same moment as to
make the time quite insensible to us.
1438. Mr. Wheatstone has already
made experiments which fully illustrate this point.
He found that the brush generally had a sensible duration,
but that with his highest capabilities he could not
detect any such effect in the spark. I repeated
his experiment on the brush, though with more imperfect
means, to ascertain whether I could distinguish a longer
duration in the stem or root of the brush than in
the extremities, and the appearances were such as
to make me think an effect of this kind was produced.
Philosophical Transactions, 1836,
p, 590.
1439. That the discharge breaks
into several ramifications, and by them passes through
portions of air alike, or nearly alike, as to polarization
and the degree of tension the particles there have
acquired, is a very natural result of the previous
state of things, and rather to be expected than that
the discharge should continue to go straight out into
space in a single line amongst those particles which,
being at a distance from the end of the rod, are in
a lower state of tension than those which are near:
and whilst we cannot but conclude, that those parts
where the branches of a single brush appear, are more
favourably circumstanced for discharge than the darker
parts between the ramifications, we may also conclude,
that in those parts where the light of concomitant
discharge is equal, there the circumstances are nearly
equal also. The single successive brushes are
by no means of the same particular shape even when
they are observed without displacement of the rod
or surrounding objects (1427. 1433.), and the successive
discharges may be considered as taking place into the
mass of air around, through different roads at each
brush, according as minute circumstances, such as
dust, &c. (1391. 1392.), may have favoured the course
by one set of particles rather than another.
1440. Brush discharge does not
essentially require any current of the medium in which
the brush appears: the current almost always occurs,
but is a consequence of the brush, and will be considered
hereafter (1562-1610.). On holding a blunt point
positively charged towards uninsulated water, a star
or glow appeared on the point, a current of air passed
from it, and the surface of the water was depressed;
but on bringing the point so near that sonorous brushes
passed, then the current of air instantly ceased, and
the surface of the water became level.
1441. The discharge by a brush
is not to all the particles of air that are near the
electrified conductor from which the brush issues;
only those parts where the ramifications pass are
electrified: the air in the central dark parts
between them receives no charge, and, in fact, at the
time of discharge, has its electric and inductive
tension considerably lowered. For consider fi to represent a single positive brush;—the
induction before the discharge is from the end of
the rod outwards, in diverging lines towards the distant
conductors, as the walls of the room, &c., and a particle
at a has polarity of a certain degree of tension,
and tends with a certain force to become charged;
but at the moment of discharge, the air in the ramifications
b and d, acquiring also a positive state,
opposes its influence to that of the positive conductor
on a, and the tension of the particle at a
is therefore diminished rather than increased.
The charged particles at b and d are
now inductive bodies, but their lines of inductive
action are still outwards towards the walls of the
room; the direction of the polarity and the tendency
of other particles to charge from these, being governed
by, or in conformity with, these lines of force.
1442. The particles that are
charged are probably very highly charged, but, the
medium being a non-conductor, they cannot communicate
that state to their neighbours. They travel,
therefore, under the influence of the repulsive and
attractive forces, from the charged conductor towards
the nearest uninsulated conductor, or the nearest
body in a different state to themselves, just as charged
particles of dust would travel, and are then discharged;
each particle acting, in its course, as a centre of
inductive force upon any bodies near which it may
come. The travelling of these charged particles
when they are numerous, causes wind and currents, but
these will come into consideration under carrying
discharge (1319. 1562. &c.).
1443. When air is said to be
electrified, and it frequently assumes this state
near electrical machines, it consists, according to
my view, of a mixture of electrified and unelectrified
particles, the latter being in very large proportion
to the former. When we gather electricity from
air, by a flame or by wires, it is either by the actual
discharge of these particles, or by effects dependent
on their inductive action, a case of either kind being
produceable at pleasure. That the law of equality
between the two forces or forms of force in inductive
action is as strictly preserved in these as in other
cases, is fully shown by the fact, formerly stated
(1173. 1174.), that, however strongly air in a vessel
might be charged positively, there was an exactly
equal amount of negative force on the inner surface
of the vessel itself, for no residual portion of either
the one or the other electricity could be obtained.
1444. I have nowhere said, nor
does it follow, that the air is charged only where
the luminous brush appears. The charging may extend
beyond those parts which are visible, i.e. particles
to the right or left of the lines of light may receive
electricity, the parts which are luminous being so
only because much electricity is passing by them to
other parts (1437.); just as in a spark discharge
the light is greater as more electricity passes, though
it has no necessary relation to the quantity required
to commence discharge (1370. 1420.). Hence the
form we see in a brush may by no means represent the
whole quantity of air electrified; for an invisible
portion, clothing the visible form to a certain depth,
may, at the same time, receive its charge (1552.).
1445. Several effects which I
have met with in muriatic acid gas tend to make me
believe, that that gaseous body allows of a dark discharge.
At the same time, it is quite clear from theory, that
in some gases, the reverse of this may occur, i.e.
that the charging of the air may not extend even so
far as the light. We do not know as yet enough
of the electric light to be able to state on what
it depends, and it is very possible that, when electricity
bursts forth into air, all the particles of which are
in a state of tension, light may be evolved by such
as, being very near to, are not of, those which actually
receive a charge at the time.
1446. The further a brush extends
in a gas, the further no doubt is the charge or discharge
carried forward; but this may vary between different
gases, and yet the intensity required for the first
moment of discharge not vary in the same, but in some
other proportion. Thus with respect to nitrogen
and muriatic acid gases, the former, as far as my experiments
have proceeded, produces far finer and larger brushes
than the latter (1458. 1462.), but the intensity required
to commence discharge is much higher for the muriatic
acid than the nitrogen (1395.). Here again, therefore,
as in many other qualities, specific differences are
presented by different gaseous dielectrics, and so
prove the special relation of the latter to the act
and the phenomena of induction.
1447. To sum up these considerations
respecting the character and condition of the brush,
I may state that it is a spark to air; a diffusion
of electric force to matter, not by conduction, but
disruptive discharge, a dilute spark which, passing
to very badly conducting matter, frequently discharges
but a small portion of the power stored up in the conductor;
for as the air charged reacts on the conductor, whilst
the conductor, by loss of electricity, sinks in its
force (1435.), the discharge quickly ceases, until
by the dispersion of the charged air and the renewal
of the excited conditions of the conductor, circumstances
have risen up to their first effective condition,
again to cause discharge, and again to fall and rise,
1448. The brush and spark gradually
pass into one another, Making a small ball positive
by a good electrical machine with a large prime conductor,
and approaching a large uninsulated discharging ball
towards it, very beautiful variations from the spark
to the brush may be obtained. The drawings of
long and powerful sparks, given by Van Marum, Harris,
and others, also indicate the same phenomena.
As far as I have observed, whenever the spark has
been brushy in air of common pressures, the whole of
the electricity has not been discharged, but only portions
of it, more or less according to circumstances; whereas,
whenever the effect has been a distinct spark throughout
the whole of its course, the discharge has been perfect,
provided no interruption had been made to it elsewhere,
in the discharging circuit, than where the spark occurred.
Description of the Teylerian machine,
vol. i. p. 32.; vol.
ii. , &c.
Philosophical Transactions, 1834,
.
1449. When an electrical brush
from an inch to six inches in length or more is issuing
into free air, it has the form given, fi.
But if the hand, a ball, of any knobbed conductor
be brought near, the extremities of the coruscations
turn towards it and each other, and the whole assumes
various forms according to circumstances, as in fig, 120, and 121. The influence of the circumstances
in each case is easily traced, and I might describe
it here, but that I should be ashamed to occupy the
time of the Society in things so evident. But
how beautifully does the curvature of the ramifications
illustrate the curved form of the lines of inductive
force existing previous to the discharge! for the
former are consequences of the latter, and take their
course, in each discharge, where the previous inductive
tension had been raised to the proper degree.
They represent these curves just as well as iron filings
represent magnetic curves, the visible effects in
both cases being the consequences of the action of
the forces in the places where the effects
appear. The phenomena, therefore, constitute
additional and powerful testimony (1216. 1230.) to
that already given in favour both of induction through
dielectrics in curved lines (1231.), and of the lateral
relation of these lines, by an effect equivalent to
a repulsion producing divergence, or, as in the cases
figured, the bulging form.
1450. In reference to the theory
of molecular inductive action, I may also add, the
proof deducible from the long brushy ramifying spark
which, may be obtained between a small ball on the
positive conductor of an electrical machine, and a
larger one at a distance (1448. 1504.). What a
fine illustration that spark affords of the previous
condition of all the particles of the dielectric
between the surfaces of discharge, and how unlike
the appearances are to any which would be deduced from
the theory which assumes inductive action to be action
at a distance, in straight lines only; and charge,
as being electricity retained upon the surface of
conductors by the mere pressure of the atmosphere!
1451. When the brush is obtained
in rarefied air, the appearances vary greatly, according
to circumstances, and are exceedingly beautiful.
Sometimes a brush may be formed of only six or seven
branches, these being broad and highly luminous, of
a purple colour, and in some parts an inch or more
apart: by a spark discharge at the prime conductor
(1455.) single brushes may be obtained at pleasure.
Discharge in the form of a brush is favoured by rarefaction
of the air, in the same manner and for the same reason
as discharge in the form of a spark (1375.); but in
every case there is previous induction and charge
through the dielectric, and polarity of its particles
(1437.), the induction being, as in any other instance,
alternately raised by the machine and lowered by the
discharge. In certain experiments the rarefaction
was increased to the utmost degree, and the opposed
conducting surfaces brought as near together as possible
without producing glow (1529.): the brushes then
contracted in their lateral dimensions, and recurred
so rapidly as to form an apparently continuous arc
of light from metal to metal. Still the discharge
could be observed to intermit (1427.), so that even
under these high conditions, induction preceded each
single brush, and the tense polarized condition of
the contiguous particles was a necessary preparation
for the discharge itself.
1452. The brush form of disruptive
discharge may be obtained not only in air and gases,
but also in much denser media. I procured it in
oil of turpentine from the end of a wire going
through a glass tube into the fluid contained in a
metal vessel. The brush was small and very difficult
to obtain; the ramifications were simple, and stretched
out from each other, diverging very much. The
light was exceedingly feeble, a perfectly dark room
being required for its observation. When a few
solid particles, as of dust or silk, were in the liquid,
the brush was produced with much greater facility.
1453. The running together or
coalescence of different lines of discharge (1412.)
is very beautifully shown in the brush in air.
This point may present a little difficulty to those
who are not accustomed to see in every discharge an
equal exertion of power in opposite directions, a positive
brush being considered by such (perhaps in consequence
of the common phrase direction of a current)
as indicating a breaking forth in different directions
of the original force, rather than a tendency to convergence
and union in one line of passage. But the ordinary
case of the brush may be compared, for its illustration,
with that in which, by holding the knuckle opposite
to highly excited glass, a discharge occurs, the ramifications
of a brush then leading from the glass and converging
into a spark on the knuckle. Though a difficult
experiment to make, it is possible to obtain discharge
between highly excited shell-lac and the excited
glass of a machine: when the discharge passes,
it is, from the nature of the charged bodies, brush
at each end and spark in the middle, beautifully illustrating
that tendency of discharge to facilitate like action,
which I have described in a former page (1418.).
1454. The brush has specific
characters in different gases, indicating a relation
to the particles of these bodies even in a stronger
degree than the spark (1422. 1423.). This effect
is in strong contrast with the non-variation caused
by the use of different substances as conductors
from which the brushes are to originate. Thus,
using such bodies as wood, card, charcoal, nitre,
citric acid, oxalic acid, oxide of lead, chloride of
lead, carbonate of potassa, potassa fusa, strong
solution of potash, oil of vitriol, sulphur, sulphuret
of antimony, and haematite, no variation in the character
of the brushes was obtained, except that (dependent
upon their effect as better or worse conductors) of
causing discharge with more or less readiness and
quickness from the machine.
Exception must, of course, be made
of those cases where the root of the brush, becoming
a spark, causes a little diffusion or even decomposition
of the matter there, and so gains more or less of a
particular colour at that part.
1455. The following are a few
of the effects I observed in different gasses at the
positively charged surfaces, and with atmospheres varying
in their pressure. The general effect of rarefaction
was the same for all the gases: at first, sparks
passed; these gradually were converted into brushes,
which became larger and more distinct in their ramifications,
until, upon further rarefaction, the latter began
to collapse and draw in upon each other, till they
formed a stream across from conductor to conductor:
then a few lateral streams shot out towards the glass
of the vessel from the conductors; these became thick
and soft in appearance, and were succeeded by the full
constant glow which covered the discharging wire.
The phenomena varied with the size of the vessel (1477.),
the degree of rarefaction, and the discharge of electricity
from the machine. When the latter was in successive
sparks, they were most beautiful, the effect of a spark
from a small machine being equal to, and often surpassing,
that produced by the constant discharge of
a far more powerful one.
1456. Air.—Fine
positive brushes are easily obtained in air at common
pressures, and possess the well-known purplish light.
When the air is rarefied, the ramifications are very
long, filling the globe (1477.); the light is greatly
increased, and is of a beautiful purple colour, with
an occasional rose tint in it.
1457. Oxygen.—At
common pressures, the brush is very close and compressed,
and of a dull whitish colour. In rarefied oxygen,
the form and appearance are better, the colour somewhat
purplish, but all the characters very poor compared
to those in air.
1458. Nitrogen gives brushes
with great facility at the positive surface, far beyond
any other gas I have tried: they are almost always
fine in form, light, and colour, and in rarefied nitrogen,
are magnificent. They surpass the discharges
in any other gas as to the quantity of light evolved.
1459. Hydrogen, at common pressures,
gave a better brush than oxygen, but did not equal
nitrogen; the colour was greenish gray. In rarefied
hydrogen, the ramifications were very fine in form
and distinctness, but pale in colour, with a soft
and velvety appearance, and not at all equal to those
in nitrogen. In the rarest state of the gas, the
colour of the light was a pale gray green.
1460. Coal gas.—The
brushes were rather difficult to produce, the contrast
with nitrogen being great in this respect. They
were short and strong, generally of a greenish colour,
and possessing much of the spark character: for,
occurring on both the positive and negative terminations,
often when there was a dark interval of some length
between the two brushes, still the quick, sharp sound
of the spark was produced, as if the discharge had
been sudden through this gas, and partaking, in that
respect, of the character of a spark. In rare
coal gas, the brush forms were better, but the light
very poor and the colour gray.
1461. Carbonic acid gas produces
a very poor brush at common pressures, as regards
either size, light, or colour; and this is probably
connected with the tendency which this gas has to
discharge the electricity as a spark (1422.).
In rarefied carbonic acid, the brush is better in form,
but weak as to light, being of a dull greenish or
purplish line, varying with the pressure and other
circumstances.
1462. Muriatic acid gas.—It
is very difficult to obtain the brush in this gas
at common pressures. On gradually increasing the
distance of the rounded ends, the sparks suddenly
ceased when the interval was about an inch, and the
discharge, which was still through the gas in the globe,
was silent and dark. Occasionally a very short
brush could for a few moments be obtained, but it
quickly disappeared. Even when the intermitting
spark current (1455.) from the machine was used, still
I could only with difficulty obtain a brush, and that
very short, though I used rods with rounded terminations
(about 0.25 of an inch in diameter) which had before
given them most freely in air and nitrogen. During
the time of this difficulty with the muriatic gas,
magnificent brushes were passing off from different
parts of the machine into the surrounding air.
On rarefying the gas, the formation of the brush was
facilitated, but it was generally of a low squat form,
very poor in light, and very similar on both the positive
and negative surfaces. On rarefying the gas still
more, a few large ramifications were obtained of a
pale bluish colour, utterly unlike those in nitrogen.
1463. In all the gases, the different
forms of disruptive discharge may be linked together
and gradually traced from one extreme to the other,
i.e. from the spark to the glow (1405. 1526.),
or, it may be, to a still further condition to be
called dark discharge (1544-1560.); but it is, nevertheless,
very surprising to see what a specific character each
keeps whilst under the predominance of the general
law. Thus, in muriatic acid, the brush is very
difficult to obtain, and there comes in its place almost
a dark discharge, partaking of the readiness of the
spark action. Moreover, in muriatic acid, I have
never observed the spark with any dark interval
in it. In nitrogen, the spark readily changes
its character into that of brush. In carbonic
acid gas, there seems to be a facility to occasion
spark discharge, whilst yet that gas is unlike nitrogen
in the facility of the latter to form brushes, and
unlike muriatic acid in its own facility to continue
the spark. These differences add further force,
first to the observations already made respecting
the spark in various gases (1422. 1423.), and then,
to the proofs deducible from it, of the relation of
the electrical forces to the particles of matter.
1464. The peculiar characters
of nitrogen in relation to the electric discharge
(1422. 1458.) must, evidently, have an important influence
over the form and even the occurrence of lightning.
Being that gas which most readily produces coruscations,
and, by them, extends discharge to a greater distance
than any other gas tried, it is also that which constitutes
four-fifths of our atmosphere; and as, in atmospheric
electrical phenomena, one, and sometimes both the
inductive forces are resident on the particles of
the air, which, though probably affected as to conducting
power by the aqueous particles in it, cannot be considered
as a good conductor; so the peculiar power possessed
by nitrogen, to originate and effect discharge in
the form of a brush or of ramifications, has, probably,
an important relation to its electrical service in
nature, as it most seriously affects the character
and condition of the discharge when made. The
whole subject of discharge from and through gases
is of great interest, and, if only in reference to
atmospheric electricity, deserves extensive and close
experimental investigation.
Difference of discharge at the
positive and negative conducting surfaces.
1465. I have avoided speaking
of this well-known phenomenon more than was quite
necessary, that I might bring together here what I
have to say on the subject. When the brush discharge
is observed in air at the positive and negative surfaces,
there is a very remarkable difference, the true and
full comprehension of which would, no doubt, be of
the utmost importance to the physics of electricity;
it would throw great light on our present subject,
i.e. the molecular action of dielectrics under
induction, and its consequences; and seems very open
to, and accessible by, experimental inquiry.
1466. The difference in question
used to be expressed in former times by saying, that
a point charged positively gave brushes into the air,
whilst the same point charged negatively gave a star.
This is true only of bad conductors, or of metallic
conductors charged intermittingly, or otherwise controlled
by collateral induction. If metallic points project
freely into the air, the positive and negative
light upon them differ very little in appearance,
and the difference can be observed only upon close
examination.
1467. The effect varies exceedingly
under different circumstances, but, as we must set
out from some position, may perhaps be stated thus:
if a metallic wire with a rounded termination in free
air be used to produce the brushy discharge, then
the brushes obtained when the wire is charged negatively
are very poor and small, by comparison with those produced
when the charge is positive. Or if a large metal
ball connected with the electrical machine be charged
positively, and a fine uninsulated point be
gradually brought towards it, a star appears on the
point when at a considerable distance, which, though
it becomes brighter, does not change its form of a
star until it is close up to the ball: whereas,
if the ball be charged negatively, the point at a
considerable distance has a star on it as before;
but when brought nearer, (in my case to the distance
of 1-1/2 inch,) a brush formed on it, extending to
the negative ball; and when still nearer, (at 1/8
of an inch distance,) the brush ceased, and bright
sparks passed. These variations, I believe, include
the whole series of differences, and they seem to
show at once, that the negative surface tends to retain
its discharging character unchanged, whilst the positive
surface, under similar circumstances, permits of great
variation.
1468. There are several points
in the character of the negative discharge to air
which it is important to observe. A metal rod,
0.3 of an inch in diameter, with a rounded end projecting
into the air, was charged negatively, and gave a short
noisy brush (fi.). It was ascertained both
by sight (1427. 1433.) and sound (1431.), that the
successive discharges were very rapid in their recurrence,
being seven or eight times more numerous in the same
period, than those produced when the rod was charged
positively to an equal degree. When the rod was
positive, it was easy, by working the machine a little
quicker, to replace the brush by a glow (1405. 1463.),
but when it was negative no efforts could produce this
change. Even by bringing the hand opposite the
wire, the only effect was to increase the number of
brush discharges in a given period, raising at the
same time the sound to a higher pitch.
1469. A point opposite the negative
brush exhibited a star, and as it was approximated
caused the size and sound of the negative brush to
diminish, and, at last, to cease, leaving the negative
end silent and dark, yet effective as to discharge.
1470. When the round end of a
smaller wire (fi.) was advanced towards the
negative brush, it (becoming positive by induction)
exhibited the quiet glow at 8 inches distance, the
negative brush continuing. When nearer, the pitch
of the sound of the negative brush rose, indicating
quicker intermittences (1431.); still nearer,
the positive end threw off ramifications and distinct
brushes; at the same time, the negative brush contracted
in its lateral directions and collected together, giving
a peculiar narrow longish brush, in shape like a hair
pencil, the two brushes existing at once, but very
different in their form and appearance, and especially
in the more rapid recurrence of the negative discharges
than of the positive. On using a smaller positive
wire for the same experiment, the glow first appeared
on it, and then the brush, the negative brush being
affected at the same time; and the two at one distance
became exceedingly alike in appearance, and the sounds,
I thought, were in unison; at all events they were
in harmony, so that the intermissions of discharge
were either isochronous, or a simple ratio existed
between the intervals. With a higher action of
the machine, the wires being retained unaltered, the
negative surface became dark and silent, and a glow
appeared on the positive one. A still higher
action changed the latter into a spark. Finer
positive wires gave other variations of these effects,
the description of which I must not allow myself to
go into here.
1471. A thinner rod was now connected
with the negative conductor in place of the larger
one (1468.), its termination being gradually diminished
to a blunt point, as in fi; and it was beautiful
to observe that, notwithstanding the variation of
the brush, the same general order of effects was produced.
The end gave a small sonorous negative brush, which
the approach of the hand or a large conducting surface
did not alter, until it was so near as to produce
a spark. A fine point opposite to it was luminous
at a distance; being nearer it did not destroy the
light and sound of the negative brush, but only tended
to have a brush produced on itself, which, at a still
less distance, passed into a spark joining the two
surfaces.
1472. When the distinct negative
and positive brushes are produced simultaneously in
relation to each other in air, the former almost always
has a contracted form, as in fi, very much indeed
resembling the figure which the positive brush itself
has when influenced by the lateral vicinity of positive
parts acting by induction. Thus a brush issuing
from a point in the re-entering angle of a positive
conductor has the same compressed form (fi.).
1473. The character of the negative
brush is not affected by the chemical nature of the
substances of the conductors (1454.), but only by their
possession of the conducting power in a greater or
smaller degree.
1474. Rarefaction of common air
about a negative ball or blunt point facilitated the
development of the negative brush, the effect being,
I think, greater than on a positive brush, though
great on both. Extensive ramifications could
be obtained from a ball or end electrified negatively
to the plate of the air-pump on which the jar containing
it stood.
1475. A very important variation
of the relative forms and conditions of the positive
and negative brush takes place on varying the dielectric
in which they are produced. The difference is
so very great that it points to a specific relation
of this form of discharge to the particular gas in
which it takes place, and opposes the idea that gases
are but obstructions to the discharge, acting one
like another and merely in proportion to their pressure
(1377.).
1476. In air, the superiority
of the positive brush is well known (1467. 1472.).
In nitrogen, it is as great or even greater
than in air (1458.). In hydrogen, the
positive brush loses a part of its superiority, not
being so good as in nitrogen or air; whilst the negative
brush does not seem injured (1459.). In oxygen,
the positive brush is compressed and poor (1457);
whilst the negative did not become less: the two
were so alike that the eye frequently could not tell
one from the other, and this similarity continued
when the oxygen was gradually rarefied. In coal
gas, the brushes are difficult of production as
compared to nitrogen (1460.), and the positive not
much superior to the negative in its character, either
at common or low pressures. In carbonic acid
gas, this approximation of character also occurred.
In muriatic acid gas, the positive brush was
very little better than the negative, and both difficult
to produce (1462.) as compared with the facility in
nitrogen or air.
1477. These experiments were
made with rods of brass about a quarter of an inch
thick having rounded ends, these being opposed in a
glass globe 7 inches in diameter, containing the gas
to be experimented with. The electric machine
was used to communicate directly, sometimes the positive,
and sometimes the negative state, to the rod in connection
with it.
1478. Thus we see that, notwithstanding
there is a general difference in favour of the superiority
of the positive brush over the negative, that difference
is at its maximum in nitrogen and air; whilst in carbonic
acid, muriatic acid, coal gas, and oxygen, it diminishes,
and at last almost disappears. So that in this
particular effect, as in all others yet examined,
the evidence is in favour of that view which refers
the results to a direct relation of the electric forces
with the molecules of the matter concerned in the
action (1421. 1423. 1463.). Even when special
phenomena arise under the operation of the general
law, the theory adopted seems fully competent to meet
the case.
1479. Before I proceed further
in tracing the probable cause of the difference between
the positive and negative brush discharge, I wish to
know the results of a few experiments which are in
course of preparation: and thinking this Series
of Researches long enough, I shall here close it with
the expectation of being able in a few weeks to renew
the inquiry, and entirely redeem my pledge (1306.).
Royal Institution, Derd,
1837.