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Royal
Institution<1>
6. Oct.
1835 My
dear Sir I
do not know that much has been published (anterior to my own papers)
respecting the length of time in which a battery can remain in action
Some of the French & Italian philosophers by very weak
solutions
have retained them in force for a long while.<2>
Various causes influence the durability of the action but in the first
place and before referring the phenomenon to any cause it is essential
to observe whether the battery has been open or closed for the whole
time. A closed battery or one in which the circuit is complete is
soon becomes inactive if opened & left for a time it recovers
somewhat but if closed soon falls again. A battery retained open
constantly will almost always shew energetic powers for a
short time
when closed. You will
see in my papers (1000. 1001. 1002. 1120)<3>
&c
a battery described which if the poles
are not retained in
communication will be ready for action after any length of time; but
your battery is not likely to be of such a nature, it is I suppose an
ordinary battery which has been left unclosed, and
in order to
know its present force you should not merely ascertain that it can
decompose water &c but how long it will continue to decompose
it
& how much water it can decompose. Ever Dear Sir Most truly yours
M Faraday H.F. Talbot Esqr
&c &c &c H.F. Talbot Esqr
&c &c &c
Laycock Abbey
Chippenham |
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Note:
1.
Royal Institution, London. 2.
Antoine César Becquerel, “Du
Développement de
l’électricité par le
contact de deux portions d’une métal, dans un
état
suffisamment inégal
de température; des piles voltaïques construites
avec des
fils d’un
meme métal et meme avec un seul fil, et de quelques Effets
électriques
qui naissent dans les combinaisons chimiques”, Annales
de Chimie et
de Physique v.23, pp.135–154.
3.
Michael Faraday, “Experimental Researches in Electricity.
– Fifth
Series. On Electro-chemical Decomposition”, Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society of London, v.123,
pp.23–54.
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