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FUSION

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 373 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FUSION , the See also:

term generally applied to the melting of a solid substance, or the See also:change of See also:state of See also:aggregation from the solid to the liquid. The term "liquefaction" is frequently employed in the same sense, but is often restricted to the condensation of a See also:gas or vapour. The converse See also:process of freezing or solidification, the change from the liquid to the solid state, is subject to the same See also:laws, and must be considered together with fusion. The See also:solution of a solid in a See also:foreign liquid, and the deposition or See also:crystallization of a solid from a solution, are so closely related to the fusion of a pure substance, that it will also be necessary to consider some of the analogies which they See also:present. 1. See also:General Phenomena.—There are two See also:chief varieties of the process of fusion, namely, crystalline and amorphous, which are in many ways distinct, although it is possible to find intermediate cases which partake of the characteristics of both. The melting of See also:ice may be taken as a typical See also:case of crystalline fusion. The passage from rigid solid to See also:mobile liquid occurs at a definite See also:surface without any intermediate See also:stage or plastic See also:condition. The change takes See also:place at a definite temperature, the fusing or freezing point (abbreviated F.P.), and requires the addition of a definite quantity of See also:heat to the solid, which is called the latent heat of fusion. There is also in general a considerable• change of See also:volume during fusion, which amounts in the case of ice to a contraction of 9 %. Typical cases of amorphous solidification are-those of See also:silica, See also:glass, plastic See also:sulphur, See also:pitch, See also:alcohol and many organic liquids. In this type the liquid gradually becomes more and more viscous as the temperature falls, and ultimately attains the rigidity characteristic of a solid, without any definite freezing point or latent heat.

The condition of the substance remains See also:

uniform thrcughout, if its temperature is uniform; there is no separation into the two distinct phases of solid and liquid, and there is no sudden change of volume at any temperature. A change or transition from one crystalline See also:form to another may occur in the solid state with See also:evolution or absorption of heat at a definite temperature, and is analogous to the change from solid to liquid, but usually takes place more slowly owing to the small molecular mobility of the solid state. Thus rhombic sulphur when heated passes slowly at 95.6° C. into the monosymmetric form which melts at 120°, but if heated rapidly point of greatest constancy of temperature in the case of the rhombic form melts at 114.5. The two forms, rhombic and geneous crystalline solids. homo- monosymmetric, can exist in See also:equilibrium at 95.6°, the transition point at which they have the same vapour pressure. Similarly a solid solution of See also:carbon in See also:iron, when cooled slowly, passes at about 700° C., with considerable evolution of heat, into the form of " pearlite," which is soft when See also:cold, but if rapidly chilled the carbon remains in solution and the See also:steel is very hard (see also See also:ALLOYS). In the case of crystalline fusion it is necessary to distinguish two cases, the homogeneous and the heterogeneous. In the first case the See also:composition of the solid and liquid phases are the same, and the temperature remains See also:constant during the whole process of fusion. In the second case the solid and liquid phases differ in composition; that of the liquid phase changes continuously, and the temperature does not remain constant during the fusion. The first case comprises the fusion of pure substances, and that of eutectics, or cryohydrates; the second is the general case of an alloy or a solution. These have been very fully studied and their phenomena greatly elucidated in See also:recent years. There is also a sub-variety of amorphous fusion, which may be styled colloid or gelatinous, and may be illustrated by the behaviour of solutions of See also:water in See also:gelatin.

Many of these jellies melt at a fairly definite temperature on See also:

heating, and coagulate or set at a definite temperature on cooling. But in some cases the process is not reversible, and there is generally marked See also:hysteresis, the temperature of setting and other phenomena depending on the See also:rate of cooling. This case has not yet been fully worked out; but it appears probable that in many cases the jelly possesses a spongy framework of solid, holding liquid in its meshes or interstices. It might be regarded as a case of " heterogeneous " amorphous fusion, in which the liquid separates into two phases of different composition, one of which solidifies before the other. The two phases cannot, as a See also:rule, be distinguished optically, but it is generally possible to squeeze out some of the liquid phase when the jelly has set, which proves that the substance is not really homogeneous. In very complicated mixtures, such as See also:acid lavas or slags containing a large proportion of silica, amorphous and crystalline solidification may occur together. In this case the crystals See also:separate first during the process of cooling, the See also:mother liquor increases gradually in viscosity, and finally sets as an amorphous ground-See also:mass or See also:matrix, in which crystals of different kinds and sizes, formed at different stages of the cooling, remain embedded. The formation of crystals in an amorphous solid after it has set is also of frequent occurrence. It is termed devitrification, but is a very slow process unless the solid is in a plastic state. 2. Homogeneous Crystalline Fusion.—The fusion of a solid of this type is characterized most clearly by the perfect constancy of temperature during the process. In fact, the See also:law of constant temperature, which is generally stated as the first of the so-called " laws of fusion," does not strictly apply except to this case.

The constancy of the F.P. of .a pure substance is so characteristic that change of the F.P. is often one of the most convenient tests of the presence of foreign material. In the case of substances like ice, which melt at a See also:

low temperature and are easily obtained in large quantities in a state of purity, the point of fusion may be very accurately determined by observing the temperature of an intimate mixture of the solid and liquid while slowly melting as it absorbs heat from surrounding bodies. But in the majori.ty of cases it is more convenient to observe the freezing point as the liquid is cooled. By this method it is possible to ensure perfect uniformity of temperature throughout the mass by stirring the liquid continuously during the process of freezing,' whereas it is difficult to ensure uniformity of temperature in melting a solid, however gradually the heat is supplied, unless the solid can be mixed with the liquid. It is also possible to observe the F.P. in other ways, as by noting the temperature at the moment of the breaking of a See also:wire, of the stoppage of a stirrer, or of the maximum rate of change of volume, but these methods are generally less certain in their indications than the Fusing Points of See also:Common Metals. See also:Mercury . . . -38.8° See also:Antimony . . . 63o° See also:Potassium . . . 62.5° See also:Aluminium .

. 635° See also:

Sodium 95.6° See also:Silver . 962° See also:Tin. . 231.9° See also:Gold . to64° See also:Bismuth . . 269.2° See also:Copper . . . 1082° See also:Cadmium . . 320.7° See also:Nickel 1427° See also:Lead . . . 327.7° See also:Palladium 1535° See also:Zinc . . . . 419.0° See also:Platinum . 1710° The above table contains some of the most recent values of fusing points of metals determined (except the first three and the last three) with platinum thermometers.

The last three values are those obtained by extrapolation with platinum-See also:

rhodium and platinum-See also:iridium couples. (See Harker, Proc. See also:Roy. See also:Soc. A 76, p. 235, 1905.) Some doubt has recently been raised with regard to the value for platinum, which is much See also:lower than that previously accepted, namely 1775°. 3. Superfusion, Supersaturation.—It is generally possible to cool a liquid several degrees below its normal freezing point without a separation of crystals, especially if it is protected from agitation, which would assist the molecules to rearrange themselves. A liquid in this state is said to be " undercooled " or " superfused." The phenomenon is even more See also:familiar in the case of solutions (e.g. sodium sulphate or acetate) which may remain in the " metastable " condition for an indefinite See also:time if protected from dust, &c. The introduction into the liquid under this condition of the smallest fragment of the crystal, with respect to which the solution is supersaturated, will See also:pro-duce immediate crystallization, which will continue until the temperature is raised to the saturation point by the liberation of the latent heat of fusion. The constancy of temperature at the normal freezing point is due to the equilibrium of See also:exchange existing between the liquid and solid. Unless both solid and liquid are present, there is no condition of equilibrium, and the temperature is indeterminate.

It has been shown by H. A. Miers (Jour. Chem. Soc., 1906, 89, p. 413) that for a supersaturated solution in metastable equilibrium there is an inferior limit of temperature, at which it passes into the " labile " state, i.e. spontaneous crystallization occurs throughout the mass in a See also:

fine shower. This seems to be analogous to the fine misty condensation which occurs in a supersaturated vapour in the See also:absence of nuclei (see See also:VAPORIZATION) when the supersaturation exceeds a certain limit. 4. Effect of Pressure on the F.P.—The effect of pressure on the fusing-point depends on the change of volume during fusion. Sub-stances which expand on freezing, like ice, have their freezing points lowered by increase of pressure; substances which expand on fusing, like See also:wax, have their melting points raised by pressure. In each case the effect of pressure is to retard increase of volume. This effect was first predicted by See also:James See also:Thomson on the See also:analogy of the effect of pressure on the boiling point, and was numerically verified by See also:Lord See also:Kelvin in the case of ice, and later by See also:Bunsen in the case of See also:paraffin and See also:spermaceti.

The See also:

equation by which the change of the F.P. is calculated may be proved by a See also:simple application of the See also:Carnot See also:cycle, exactly as in the case of vapour and liquid. (See See also:THERMODYNAMICS.) If L be the latent heat of fusion in See also:mechanical See also:units, v' the volume of unit mass of the solid, and v" that of the liquid, the See also:work done in an elementary Carnot cycle of range dB will be dp(v"—v'), if dp is the increase of pressure required to produce a change d8 in the F.P. Since the ratio of the work-difference or cycle-See also:area to the heat-transferred L must be equal to dB/B, we have the relation dB/dp=B(v"—v')/L• (I) The sign of dB, the change of the F.P., is the same as that of the change of volume (v"—v'). Since the change of volume seldom exceeds o•1 c.c. per gramme, the change of the F.P. per See also:atmosphere is so small that it is not as a rule necessary to take See also:account of See also:variations of atmospheric pressure in observing a freezing point. A variation of 1 cm. in the height of the See also:barometer would correspond to a change of •000t ° C. only in the F.P. of ice. This is far beyond the limits of accuracy of most observations. Although the effect of pressure is so small, it produces, as is well known, remarkable results in the See also:motion of glaciers, the moulding and regelation of ice, and many other phenomena. It has also been employed to explain the apparent See also:inversion of the See also:order of crystallization in rocks like See also:granite, in which the arrangement of the crystals indicates that the "See also:quartz matrix solidified subsequently to the crystals of See also:felspar, See also:mica or See also:hornblende embedded in it, although the quartz See also:vertical See also:line ND, a point D is generally reached at which the solution becomes " saturated." The dissolved substance or " solute " then separates out as the solution is further cooled, and the concentration diminishes with fall of temperature in a definite relation, as indicated by the See also:curve CB, which is called the solubility curve. Though often called by different names, the two curves AC and CB are essentially of a similar nature. To take the case of an aqueous solution of See also:salt as an example, along CB the solution is saturated with respect to salt, along AC the solution is saturated with respect to ice. When the point C is reached along either curve, the solution is saturated with respect to both salt and ice. The concentration cannot vary further, and the temperature zo oa n" B" Pom.tq"r M.LiG.lnmv11 o, & diatom remains constant, while the salt FIG. r.—F.P. or Solubility and ice crystallize out together, Curve: simple case.

maintaining the exact proportions in which they exist in the solution. The resulting solid was termed a cryohydrate by F. See also:

Guthrie, but it is really an intimate mixture of two kinds of crystals, and not a .chemical See also:compound or See also:hydrate containing the constituents in chemically See also:equivalent proportions. The lowest temperature attainable by means of a freezing mixture is the temperature of the F.P. of the corresponding cryohydrate. In a mixture of salt and ice with the least trace of water a saturated brine is quickly formed, which dissolves the ice and falls rapidly in temperature, owing to the absorption of the latent heat of fusion. So See also:long as both ice and salt are present, if the mixture is well stirred, the solution must necessarily become saturated with respect to both ice and salt, and this can only occur at the cryohydric temperature, at which the two curves of solubility intersect. The curves in fig. i also illustrate the simplest type of freezing point curve in the case of alloys of two metals A and B which do not form mixed crystals or chemical compounds. The alloy corresponding to the cryohydrate, possessing the lowest melting point, is called the eutectic alloy, as it is most easily See also:cast and worked. It generally possesses a very fine-grained structure, and is not a chemical compound. (See ALLOYS.) To obtain a See also:complete F.P. curve even for a binary alloy is a laborious and complicated process, but the See also:information contained . in such a curve is often very valuable. It is necessary to operate with a number of different alloys of suitably chosen composition, and to observe the freezing points of each separately. Each alloy should also be analysed after the process if there is any See also:risk of its composition having been altered by oxidation or otherwise.

The freezing points are generally best determined by observing the See also:

gradual cooling of a considerable mass, which is well stirred so long as it remains liquid. The curve of cooling may most conveniently be recorded, either photo-graphically, using a thermocouple and See also:galvanometer, as in the method of See also:Sir W. See also:Roberts-See also:Austen, or with See also:pen and See also:ink, if a platinum thermometer is avail-able, according to the method put in practice by C. T. Heycock and F. H. See also:Neville. A typical set of curves obtained in this manner is shown in fig. 2. When the pure See also:metal A in cooling reaches its F.P. the temperature suddenly becomes stationary, and remains accurately constant for a considerable See also:period. Often it falls slightly below the F.P. owing to super-fusion, but rises to the F.P. and remains constant as soon as freezing begins. The second curve shows the cooling of A with so% of another metal B added.

The freezing begins at a lower temperature with the separation of pure A. The temperature has a higher melting point. It is contended that under enormous pressure the freezing points of the more fusible constituents might be raised above that of the quartz, if the latter is less affected by pressure. Thus Bunsen found the F.P. of paraffin wax 1.4° C. below that of spermaceti at atmospheric pressure. At too atmospheres the two melted at the same temperature. At higher pressures the paraffin would solidify first. The effect of pressure on the silicates, however, is much smaller, and it is not so easy to explain a change of several See also:

hundred degrees in the F.P. It seems more likely in this particular case that the order of crystallization depends on the See also:action of superheated water or See also:steam at high temperatures and pressures, which is well known to exert a highly solvent and metamorphic action on silicates. 5. Variation of Latent Heat.—C. C. See also:Person in 1847 endeavoured to show by the application of the first law of thermodynamics that the increase of the latent heat per degree should be equal to the difference (s" —s') between the specific heats of the liquid and solid.

If, for instance, water at 0° C. were first frozen and then cooled to —t° C., the heat abstracted per gramme would be (L'+s't) calories. But if the water were first cooled to —t° C., and then frozen at —t° C., by abstracting heat L", the heat abstracted would be L"+s"t. Assuming that the heat abstracted should be the same in the two cases, we evidently obtain L'—L"=(s"—s')t. This theory has been approximately verified by Petterson, by observing the freezing of a liquid cooled below its normal F.P. (Jour. Chem. Soc. 24, p. 151). But his method does not represent the true variation of the latent heat with temperature, since the freezing, in the case of a superfused liquid, really takes place at the normal freezing point. A quantity of heat s"t is abstracted in cooling to —t, (L'—s"t) in raising to o° and freezing at o°, and s't in cooling the ice to —t. The latent heat L" at —t does not really enter into the experiment.

In order to make the liquid freeze at a different temperature, it is necessary to subject it to pressure, and the effect of the pressure on the latent heat cannot be neglected. The entropy of a liquid 0" at its F.P. reckoned from any convenient zero ¢0 in the solid state may be represented by the expression ¢"— 4o = fs'de/9+L/e. (2) Since ed4"lde=s", we obtain by differentiation the relation dL/de =s"—s'+L/a, (3) which is exactly similar to the equation for the specific heat of a vapour maintained in the saturated condition. If we suppose that the specific heats s' and s" of the solid and liquid at equilibrium pressure are nearly the same as those ordinarily observed at constant pressure, the relation (3) differs from that of Person only by the addition of the term L/e. Since s" is greater than s' in all cases hitherto investigated, and L/e is necessarily See also:

positive, it is clear that the latent heat of fusion must increase with rise of temperature, or diminish with fall of temperature. It is possible to imagine the F.P. so lowered by pressure (positive or negative) that the latent heat should vanish, in which case we should probably obtain a continuous passage from the liquid to the solid state similar to that which occurs in the case of amorphous substances. According to equation (3), the rate of change of the latent heat of water is approximately o•8o calorie per degree at o° C. (as, compared with 0.50, Person), if we assume s"=1, and s'=0.5. Putting (s"—s') =o.5 in equation (2), we find L=o at —t6o° C. approximately, but no stress can be laid on this estimate, as the variation of (s"—s') is so uncertain. 6. Freezing of Solutions and Alloys.—The phenomena of freezing of heterogeneous crystalline mixtures may be illustrated by the case of aqueous solutions and of metallic solutions or alloys, which have been most widely studied. The usual effect of an impurity, such as salt or See also:sugar in solution in water, is to lower the freezing point, so that no crystallization occurs until the temperature has fallen below the normal F.P. of the pure solvent, the depression of F.P. being nearly proportional to the concentration of the solution.

When freezing begins, the solvent generally separates out from the solution in the pure state. This separation of the solvent involves an increase in the strength of the remaining solution, so that the temperature does not remain constant during the freezing, but continues to fall as more of the solvent is separated. There is a perfectly definite relation between temperature and concentration at each stage of the process, which may be represented in the form of a curve as AC in fig. 1, called the freezing point curve. The equilibrium temperature, at the surface of contact between the solid and liquid, depends only on the composition of the liquid phase and not at all on the quantity of solid present. The See also:

abscissa of the F.P. curve represents the composition of that portion of the See also:original solution which remains liquid at any temperature. If instead of starting with a dilute solution we start with a strong solution represented by a point N, and cool it as shown by the .0. "00 5 J no. too.. Al.00 . F1c. 2.—Cooling Curves of Alloys: typical case. no longer remains constant during freezing, but falls more and more rapidly as the proportion of B in the liquid increases.

When the eutectic temperature is reached there is a second F.P. or See also:

arrest at which the whole of the remaining liquid solidifies. With 2o% of B the first F.P. is further lowered, and the temperature falls faster. The eutectic F.P. is of longer duration, but still at the same temperature. For an alloy of the composition of the eutectic itself there is no arrest until the eutectic temperature is reached, at which the whole solidifies without change of temperature. There is a See also:great See also:advantage in recording these curves automatically, as the See also:primary arrest is often very slight, and difficult to observe in any other way. 7. Change of Solubility with Temperature.—The lowering of the F.P. of a solution with increase of concentration, as shown by the F.P. or solubility curves, may be explained and calculated by equation (I) in terms of the osmotic pressure of the dissolved sub-stance by analogy with the effect of mechanical pressure. It is possible in salt solutions to See also:strain out the salt mechanically by a suitable See also:filter or " semi-permeable membrane," which permits the water to pass, but retains the salt. To separate I gramme of salt requires the performance of work PV against the osmotic pressure P, where V is the corresponding diminution in the volume of the solution. In dilute solutions, to which alone the following calculation can be applied, the volume V is the reciprocal of the concentration C of the solution in grammes per unit volume, and the osmotic pressure P is equal to that of an equal number of molecules of gas in the same space, and may be deduced from the usual equation of a gas, P=Ro/VM=See also:ROC/M, (4) where M is the molecular See also:weight of the salt in solution, 0 the See also:absolute temperature, and R a constant which has the value 8.32 joules, or nearly 2 calories, per degree C. It is necessary to consider two cases, corresponding to the curves CB and AB in fig, I, in which the solution is saturated with respect to salt and water respectively. To facilitate description we take the case of a salt dissolved in water, but similar results apply to solutions in other liquids and alloys of metals.

(a) If unit mass of salt is separated in the solid state from a saturated solution of salt (curve CB) by forcing out through a semi-permeable membrane against the osmotic pressure P the corresponding volume of water V in which it is dissolved, the heat evolved is the latent heat of saturated solution of the salt Q together with the work done PV. See also:

Writing (Q+PV) for L, and V for (v"—v') in equation (I), and substituting P for p, we obtain Q+PV= VOdP/d0, (5) which is equivalent to equation (I), and may be established by similar reasoning. Substituting for P and V in terms of C from equation (4), if Q is measured in calories, R=2, and we obtain QC= 202dC/d0, (6) which may be integrated, assuming Q constant, with the result 2 See also:log,C"/C' =Q/O' -Q/0", (7)solution or the molecular See also:dissociation changes. The most uncertain See also:factor in the See also:formula is the molecular weight M, since the See also:molecule in solution may be quite different from that denoted by the chemical formula of the solid. In many cases the molecule of a metal in dilute solution in another metal is either monatomic, or forms a compound molecule with the solvent containing one See also:atom of the dissolved metal, in which case the molecular depression is given by putting the atomic weight for M. In other cases, as Cu, Hg, Zn, in solution in cadmium, the depression of the F.P. per atom, according to Heycock and Neville, is only See also:half as great, which would imply a diatomic molecule. Similarly As and Au in Cd appear to be triatomic, and Sn in Pb tetratomic. Intermediate cases may occur in which different molecules exist together in equilibrium in proportions which vary according to the temperature and concentration. The. most familiar case is that of an electrolyte, in which the molecule of the dissolved substance is partly dissociated into ions. In such cases the degree of dissociation may be estimated by observing the depression of the F.P., but the results obtained cannot always be reconciled with those deduced by other methods, such as measurement of See also:electrical conductivity, and there are many difficulties which await satisfactory See also:interpretation. Exactly similar relations to (8) and (9) apply to changes of boiling point or vapour pressure produced by substances in solution (see VAPORIZATION), the laws of which are very closely connected with the corresponding phenomena of fusion; but the See also:consideration of the vapour phase may generally be omitted in dealing with the fusion of mixtures where the vapour pressure of either constituent is small. 8.

Hydrates.—The simple case of a freezing point curve, illustrated in fig. i, is generally modified by the occurrence of compounds of a See also:

character analogous to hydrates of soluble salts, in which the dissolved substance combines with one or more molecules of the solvent. These hydrates may exist as compound molecules in the solution, but their composition cannot be demonstrated unless they can be separated in the solid state. Corresponding to each crystalline hydrate there is generally a separate See also:branch of the solubility curve along which the crystals of the hydrate are in equilibrium with the saturated solution. At any given temperature the hydrate possessing the least solubility is the most See also:stable. If two are present in contact with the same solution, the more soluble will dissolve, and the less soluble will be formed at its expense until the See also:conversion is complete. The two hydrates cannot be in equilibrium with the same solution except at the temperature at which their solubilities are equal, i.e. at the point where the corresponding curves of solubility intersect. This temperature is called the " Transition Point." In the case of ZnSO4i as shown in fig. 3, the heptahydrate, with seven molecules of water, is the least soluble hydrate at See also:ordinary tem- peratures, and is generally deposited from saturated solutions. Above 390 C., however, the hexahydrate, with six molecules, is less soluble, and a rapid conversion of the hepta- into the hexahydrate occurs if the former is heated above the transition point. The solubility of the hexahydrate is greater than that of the heptahydrate below 39°O, but increases more slowly with rise of temperature. At about 8o° C. the hexahydrate gives place to the monohydrate, which dissolves in water with evolution of heat, and diminishes in solubility with rise of temperature. Intermediate hydrates exist, but they are more soluble, and cannot be readily isolated.

Both the mono- and hexahydrates are capable of existing in equilibrium with saturated solutions at temperatures far below their transition points, provided that the less soluble hydrate is not present in the crystalline form. The solubility curves can therefore be traced, as in fig. 3, over an extei ded range of temperature. The equilibrium of each hydrate with the solvent, considered separately, would present a See also:

diagram of two branches similar to fig. I, but as a rule only a small portion of each curve can be realized, and the complete solubility curve, as experimentally determined, is composed of a number of separate pieces corresponding to the ranges of minimum solubility of different hydrates. Failure to recognize this. coupled with the where C', C" are the concentrations of the saturated solution corresponding to the temperatures 0' and 0". This equation may be employed to calculate the latent heat of solution Q from two observations of the solubility. It follows from these equations that Q is of the same sign as dC/d0, that is to say, the solubility increases with rise of temperature if heat is absorbed in the formation of the saturated solution, which is the usual case. If, on the other See also:hand, heat is liberated on solution, as in the case of See also:caustic potash or sulphate of See also:calcium, the solubility diminishes with rise of temperature. (b) In the case of a solution saturated with respect to ice (curve AC), if one gramme of water having a volume v is separated by freezing, we obtain a precisely similar equation to (5), but with L the latent heat of fusion of water instead of Q, and v instead of V. If the solution is dilute, we may neglect the See also:external work Pv in comparison with L, and also the heat of dilution, and may write P/t for dP/dO, where t is the depression of the F.P. below that of the pure solvent. Substituting for P in terms of V from equation (4), we obtain t= 202v/L V M =202w/LWM, (8) where W is the weight of water and w that of salt in a given volume of solution.

If M grammes of salt are dissolved in See also:

ioo of water, w=-- M and W.= See also:loo. The depression of the F.P. in this case is called by See also:van t' Hoff the " Molecular Depression of the F.P." and is given by the simple formula t = .0202/L. (9) Equation (8) may be used to calculate L or M, if either is known, from observations of t, 0 and w/W. The results obtained are sufficiently approximate to be of use in many cases in spite of the rather liberal assumptions and approximations effected in the course of the reasoning. In any case the equations give a simple theoretical basis with which to compare experimental data in order to estimate the order of See also:error involved in the assumptions. We may thus estimate the variation of the osmotic pressure from the value given by the gaseous equation, as the concentration of the -sr----M-40 . 0 e0 20 8B 40 50 60 4mmmta olsauraa/pw in/006nwtmo r w8elWi* . Hydrates. fact that in strong and viscous solutions the state of equilibrium is but slowly attained, is the probable explanation of the remark-able discrepancies existing in many recorded data of solubility. Transition Points of Hydrates. Na2CrO4.10H20. . 19.9° NaBr•2H2O .50.70 Na2SO4.10H2O .

. 32.4° MnCl2.4H20 . . 57.8° Na2COa• 10H2O 35.1 ° Na3PO4.12H2O . 73.4° Na2S2O3.5HzO . . 48•o° Ba(OH)z.8H2O . . 77.9° The transition points of the hydrates given in the above See also:

list See also:Richards, Proc. Amer. Acad., 1899, 34, p. 277) afford well-'larked constant temperatures which can be utilized as fixed points for experimental purposes. 9. Formation of Mixed Crystals.—An important exception to the general type already described, in which the addition of a dissolved substance lowers the F.P. of the solvent, is presented by the formation of mixed crystals, or " solid solutions," in which the solvent and solute occur mixed in varying proportions. This isomorphous replacement of one substance by another, in the same crystal with little or no change of form, has long been known and studied in the case of minerals and salts, but the relations between composition and melting-point have seldom been investigated, and much still remains obscure. In this case the process of freezing does not necessitate the performance of work of separation of the constituents of the solution, the F.P. is not necessarily depressed, and the effect cannot be calculated by the usual formula for dilute solutions.

One of the simplest types of F.P. curve which may result from the occurrence of mixed crystals is illustrated by the case of alloys of gold and silver, or gold and platinum, in which the F.P. curve is nearly a straight line joining the freezing-points of the constituents. The equilibrium between the solid and liquid, in both of which the two metals are capable of mixing in all proportions, bears in this case an obvious and See also:

close analogy to the equilibrium between a mixed liquid (e.g. alcohol and water) and its vapour. In the latter case, as is well known, the vapour will contain a larger proportion of the more volatile constituent. Similarly in the case of the formati n of mixed crystals, the liquid should contain a larger proportion of the more fusible constituent than the solid with which it is in equilibrium. The composition of the crystals which are being deposited at any moment will, therefore, necessarily change as solidification proceeds, following the change in the composition of the liquid, and the temperature will fall until the last portions of the liquid to solidify will consist chiefly of the more fusible constituent, at the F.P. of which the solidification will be complete. If, however, as seems to be frequently the case, the composition of the solid and liquid phases do not greatly differ from each other, the greater See also:part of the solidification will occur within a comparatively small range of temperature, and the initial F.P. of the alloy will be well marked. It is possible in this case to draw a second curve representing the composition of the solid phase which is in equilibrium with the liquid at any temperature. This curve will not represent the See also:average composition of the crystals, but that of the See also:outer coating only which is in equilibrium with the liquid at the moment. H. W. B. Roozeboom (Zeit.

Phys. Chem. See also:

xxx. p. 385) has attempted to classify some of the possible cases which may occur in the formation of mixed crystals on the basis of J. W. See also:Gibbs's thermodynamic potential, the general properties of which may be qualitatively deduced from a consideration of observed phenomena. But although this method may enable us to classify different types, and even to predict results in a qualitative manner, it does not admit of numerical calculation similar to equation (8), as the Gibbs's See also:function itself is of a purely abstract nature and its form is unknown. There is no doubt that the formation of mixed crystals may explain many apparent anomalies in the study of F.P. curves. The whole subject has been most fruitful of results in recent years, and appears full of promise for the future. For further details in this particular branch the reader may consult a See also:report by Neville (Brit. Assoc. See also:Rep.,1900), which contains numerous references to original papers by Roberts-Austen, Le Chatelier, Roozeboom and others. For the properties of solutions see Sot.u-TION.

(H. L.

End of Article: FUSION

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