Of Of: Cambridge Massachusetts
Of Of: Cambridge Massachusetts
Of Of: Cambridge Massachusetts
707
Summary
The. results of this investigation may be summarized as follows.
1. The most serious errors in work of this kind were shown t o be ir-
regularity of mixing and presence of carbonate in the hydroxides, besides,
of course, inadequate avoidance of loss of heat by cooling.
2 . Sdutions of uniform molal concentration (4- 100 HzO) of nitric
and the three halogen acids and of three alkaline hydroxides have been
mutually neutralized calorimetrically in all possible pairs over two ranges
ox' temperatures not far apart, and the results interpolated exactly to
20'. The values ranged from 13,750 to 14,085, sodium hydroxide giving
the lowest values among the bajes, and hydriodic acid among the acids.
3. Check determinations based upon different analyses and performed
independently a t various temperatures showed complete agreement with
the values originally obtained.
4. With the help of the heats of dilution of factors and products,
previously determined, the heats of neutralization a t other concentrations
have been determined, and these have been extrapolated in two ways
through a short range t o infinite dilution.
3. The heat of formation of water from its ions at 20" is found by this
short extrapolation to be probably not over 13.69 Cal.sooor 57.22 kilo-
joules, and possibly not under 13.62 Cal. or 56 93 kilojoules.
CAMBRIDGE
38, MASSACHUSETTS
Thermometry
The manganin coils of our thermometer bridge were not kept a t con-
stant temperature, and the fixed points were not as reproducible as some-
times reported by other workers. lo Nevertheless, errors in thermometer
standardization should have affected our final result by less than O.lyc,
since this result is based on temperature differences, and its dependence
upon the absolute temperature is relatively small. The ice-points were
obtained in the usual way, and also by a technique which showed that the
discrepancy between the two thermometers was in no way due t o our ma-
nipulation. The steam and naphthalene points were obtained in series
of measurements which gave bes,t straight lines intersecting the 760 mm.
abscissas. The normal boiling point of naphthalene was taken as 218.04".
The various constants were, for thermometers No. 1 and 2, respectively:
Ro, 25.3543 and 25.3343 ; R I ~ o35.2305
, and 35.2028; R218 46.5210 and
46.4765; fundamental coefficient, 0.00389528 and 0.00389531 ; and
6 value, 1.4452 and 1.4755. So far as the final results are concerned,
the constants of No, 1 do not matter, because of the mode of referring all
ttmperatures to the scale of KO.2 . The 6 value €or No. 2 , although the
higher of the two, is still rather low, but there is no ground for supposing
this t o be significant, since a calculation shows that an assumed variation
in 6, even of 0.05 (or in the form of the correction equation equivalent
to such a variation) would affect the temperature differences by about
0 DOOl", or only 0.01% in the final result.
The thermometers were Leeds anc! Northrup instruments of the Bureau of Stand-
ards pattern l1 The bridge was a modified Leeds and Northrup calorimetric bridge, in
nhich t h e contact resistance a t the slide wire affected equally the two bridge arm5
-
lo Assuming a temperature coefficient for manganin of 2.10-5 ohms per ohm and
per degree, ti difference of 1' in the coils affects their resistance so as to show apparent
variations in really fixed points of 0.005" a t O", and of 0.009" a t 218'.
N o 1 had undergone repairs whkh map have introduced strains.
712 F. G . KEYES, L. J. GILL&SPIE AND SHINROKU MITSUKURI
It reads directly to 0.00025 ohms, corresponding to about 0.0025’, and the galvanometer
sensitivity permits subdivisions to be estimated on the bridge which correspond to 0.001 ’.
In measuring the temperatures during the flow experiments, the resistance of the
coils was always the same, 25.5 ohms, the slide wire being used for the differences be-
tween the two thermometers and for the changes of temperature.
space (between the mixing tip and the thermometer) per minute and per
degree of temperature differen~e.'~ The temperature difference control-
ling the loss of heat varies from DO, the difference between the temperature
immediately developed upon mixing and the temperature of the surround-
ing bath, to D, the measured temperature difference a t the thermometer,
+
and is then the mean of these values, (Do D ) / 2 . The heat lost by every
+
gram is therefore @(DO D ) / 2 , leaving the quantity, Q-qt(Do D)/2 +
calories per gram available for raising the temperature; and if i t requires k
calories per gram to raise the temperature 1O, k being the specific heat of
the salt solution, we shall have
D = -q/i:.t(Do T D)/2 + Qlk (1)
+
\Then t is zero, the heat loss, qt(D0 D ) / 2 , is also zero, so that the corre-
sponding value of D is DO,the initial temperature difference before any
cooling has occurred. Equation 1 can be solved conveniently as follows.
+
The term (Do D ) / 2 is approximately equal to Do,or to D, leading to
the two approximate equations
0 7 - ( D ,qlk).t +
Q/k (2)
and D = - Dt . y/k +Q/k or I/D= - t q / Q + k/Q (3)
I n either case, when t = 0, D = DO= Q / k . Either equation can be used
to obtain a first approximation. With the present data, Equation 2 gives
1 415 for DO, Equation 3 gives 1 417, whereas either of these values,
used in Equation 1, leads to an exact value, 1.4160, by the method of least
squares. All three equations can be represented by a straight line, by
plotting for Equations 1, 2 and 3, respectively, the variables: D, t(D0 +
D ) / 2 ; D , t ; and 1/D,
t.
Fig. 2 shows how Equation 3 represents the data. The line cuts
the axis where t = 0 a t 1/D == 0.706, corresponding to DO = 1.417.
The data are equally well represeJted by the other two Equations, 1 and 2 .
The scale of heat loss in Fig. 2 sliows, for a given time of Aow, the calcu-
lated heat loss as percentage of the total heat liberated. This scale
shows also the effect on the final result of uncertainty in the extrapolation
to zero time of flow. Thus, let us suppose that the limiting value of 1/D
may be 0.709 instead of 0.706. Then the point corresponding to 0.709
on the scale of heat loss is 0.4%, which signifies that the heat of neutral-
ization would be this percentage, 0. 4Yc, lower than the value we actually
find.
l 3 Our t is the time for 1 gram to enter the Erlenmeyer weighing flask, and hence the
time to leave the mixing tips. Then tG is the time t o fill the cooling space of capacity G
grams, i. e . , the time a gram is in the cooling space, on the average. Since the total
liquid occupying this space cools p ailories per minute and per degree temperature
difference, the corresponding cooling for 1 g. is p/G, per minute and per degree tempera-
ture difference. Therefore tG q / G = q t , is the heat lost by the gram, per degree tempera-
ture difference.
714 I?. G. REYES, L. J. GILLESPIE AND SHINROKU MITSUKURI
From Richards and Rowe’s14 figures for the loss of heat capacity on
diluting sodium chloride solutions we obtain, by extrapolation, k = 0.9913.
The two end values in their curve for sodium chloride are possibly irregu-
lar, according to them; we assumed, however, the curvature necessary
to make both end values exact, but the effect upon k of any error in this
assumption is slight, since the molecular heat capacity of our sodium
chloride solution is over 9000.
From the exact value, 1.4160, for Q / k , we find therefore Q = 1.4031
0 .01 .02 03 .OY .OSG . 0 7 calories per gram mixture. Dividing by the ccn-
centration of the solution, 0.00010598 mol. of
sodium chloride per gram, we find the heat of
neutralization t o be 13,245 calories per mol.
749
The method of least squares indicates the “prob-
74719
able error” to be slightly below 0.1% of this
value.
The slope of the line in Fig. 2 gives q / k = 1.C-i,
or q = 1.03,the probable error being about 2C;-
of this value.
The above result for the heat of neutraliza-
tion needs to be corrected finally for the pres-
ence of carbonate in the hydrate. Through
an oversight, the hydrate solution itself was not
used for the carbonate determination. The so-
lution was, however, carefully protected from
atmospheric carbon dioxide by a tube of soda-
lime. From data in Landolt-Bornstein, “Tabel-
len,” 4th edition, i t is calculated that the neu-
tralization of NazCOs t o the stage of NaHCOR
would produce a t 18” only 4,600 calories per
mol, of hydrochloric acid used, instead of 13,700.
The value found above points, therefore, to a
still larger
- value for the heat of neutralization of
Fig. 2.-The reciprocal rise carbonate-free sodium hydroxide, which is found
Of temperature as a linear finally to be 13,280 calories per mol. This
function of the time of flow.
value refers to the isothermal heat of neutrali-
zation a t 32.3”, the mean initial temperature, since the heat capacity of
the products was used in the ca1culation.l5
14 Richards and Rowe, THISJOURNAL, 43,77&796 (1921). We have assumed the
specific heat of 0.1 N NaCl to he the same at 33’ as at 20’. This is equivalent, within
about 0.2%, to the assumption that the temperature coefficient of specific heat is the
same for the solution as for pure water.
15 Richards, ibid., 25, 209-214 (1903). We wish to thatlk Professor Richards
For calling our attention to this point.
A CONTINUOUS-FLOW CALORIMETER, ETC. 71.5
Discussion
Since our data give only one point of temperature and concentration,
only limited comparison is possible with the data of previous workers.
Wormann6 determined the heat of neutralization of the 4 combinations
between sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, hydrochloric acid, and
nitric acid, a t O o , 6 O , lSo, and 32", and his lines are shown in Fig. 3. These
are the best straight lines found by him for the mean values a t concentra-
tions from 0.25 to 0 . 1 N (normality referring to salt solution formed).
13,900
14,700
14,500
14,300
14,100
13,900
13,700
13,500
13,300
13,100
12,900
12,700
12,500
0 4 8 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48
Fig. 3.-Comparison of some heats of neutralization with the heat of ionization calcu-
lated by Noyes, Kato and Sosman.
The values for the potassium salts are higher by about lY0 than those for
sodium. Another line shown in l?ig. 3 for comparison is that for the heat
of ionization of water, calculated by Noyes, Kato, and Sosman.ls Our
point is shown by the mark KGM. Another point, M, is one obtained
by Muller17 for the heat of neutralization a t infinite dilution, obtained
Noyes, Kat0 and Sosman, THISJOURNAL,32, 159-178 (1910).
17 Muller, Bull. SOC. chim., [4] 23, 8-13 (1918).
716 I?. G. KEYES, I.. J. GILLESPIE AND SHINROKU NITSUKURI
X a n y attempts have been made during the past 30 years to account for
the failure of the Ostwald dilution law p i ' p .( p - pII).a = iZ to reproduce
the ionization of strong electrolytes. It has been suggested, for example,
that the degree of ionization is not correctly represented by the conductivity
ratio h / p c Q , that the ionization equilibrium is not correctly represented
by the equation RX * R+ 4- X-, or that the law of mass action is not
applicable to the equilibrium bc tween ions and undissociated molecules.
The only alternative theory that has been received with any great degree
of favor, however, is one recently developed by Ghosh, which rejects
the fundamental assumptions oi -1rrhenius entirely. It is the purpose
ol' the present article to give a critical analysis of the arguments advanced
by Ghosh and others in support of this theory.
The Postulates of Ghosh.-The theory, as applied t o a uni-univalent
salt RX in solution, is based upon the following postulates: (1) the elec-
trolyte is completely dissociated a t all dilutions into oppositely charged
radicals R + and X-; ( 2 ) the arrangement of these charged particles in
the soiution is analogous t o the marshaling of atoms in a simple cubic
crystal lattice; (3) the oppositely charged radicals of a salt-molecule
RX form a completely saturated electrical doublet, and the work necessary
to separate them is the electrical work done in moving them from their
fixed mean distance in the solution to an infinite distance apart; (4) a
radical is free to conduct the current only if its kinetic energy is greater
than half the work required to separate it from its partner; ( 3 ) the dis-
tribution of velocities among the particles is according to Maxwell's law.
For salts of other valence types, and for acids and bases, other postu-
lates are made, which will be referred to later. The essential point in the
theory of Ghosh is that strong electrolytes are wholly dissociated in so-
lution, partly into free and partkJ into bouwd ions, only the former being
capable of conducting the current. The ratio p, p a consequently ex-
1 Presented, in part, a t the St. Lcluis meeting of the American Chemical Society,