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Sensitive micro-balances and a new method of weighing minute quantities

In the course of experiments undertaken by the authors with a view to establishing a possible relation between the amount of ionisation produced at the surface of certain heated metals and the amount of oxidation of the metal, it became necessary to be able to measure changes of weight of the order...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing papers of a mathematical and physical character Containing papers of a mathematical and physical character, 1909-09, Vol.82 (558), p.580-594
Main Authors: Steele, Bertram Dillon, Grant, Kerr
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In the course of experiments undertaken by the authors with a view to establishing a possible relation between the amount of ionisation produced at the surface of certain heated metals and the amount of oxidation of the metal, it became necessary to be able to measure changes of weight of the order of one-thousandth of a milligramme (1 X 10 -6gramme). A micro-balance of the Nernst type was accordingly constructed which possessed the requisite sensitiveness, but considerable difficulty was experienced in obtaining consistent readings with it, owing chiefly to the inconstancy of zero and the great variation of sensibility with load. This latter defect is an inevitable consequence of the fact that a restoring couple due to gravity, the magnitude of which varies, as in the ordinary balance, with the position of the centre of gravity of the system relative to its point of suspension, is superposed on the restoring torque of the quartz fibre. Attempts to minimise this trouble led finally to the conclusion that for the purpose in view better results were to be expected from a gravity balance of the ordinary type in which the required degree of sensitiveness should be attained by making the beam very light. As the maximum load which it was intended to use on the balance was less than half a gramme, this could be done without loss of proportionate rigidity.
ISSN:0950-1207
2053-9150
DOI:10.1098/rspa.1909.0063