[The New Physics and Its Evolution by Lucien Poincare]@TWC D-Link bookThe New Physics and Its Evolution CHAPTER IV 15/40
But liquid air is costly, and if one were content to evaporate it for the purpose of collecting a part of the oxygen in the residuum, the process would have a very poor result from the commercial point of view.
As early as 1892, Mr Parkinson thought of improving the output by recovering the cold produced by liquid air during its evaporation; but an incorrect idea, which seems to have resulted from certain experiments of Dewar--the idea that the phenomenon of the liquefaction of air would not be, owing to certain peculiarities, the exact converse of that of vaporization--led to the employment of very imperfect apparatus.
M. Claude, however, by making use of a method which he calls the reversal[8] method, obtains a complete rectification in a remarkably simple manner and under extremely advantageous economic conditions. Apparatus, of surprisingly reduced dimensions but of great efficiency, is now in daily work, which easily enables more than a thousand cubic metres of oxygen to be obtained at the rate, per horse-power, of more than a cubic metre per hour. [Footnote 8: Methode avec retour en arriere .-- ED] It is in England, thanks to the skill of Sir James Dewar and his pupils--thanks also, it must be said, to the generosity of the Royal Institution, which has devoted considerable sums to these costly experiments--that the most numerous and systematic researches have been effected on the production of intense cold.
I shall here note only the more important results, especially those relating to the properties of bodies at low temperatures. Their electrical properties, in particular, undergo some interesting modifications.
The order which metals assume in point of conductivity is no longer the same as at ordinary temperatures.
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