The Vapor Pressures of Metals; a New Experimental Method

Abstract
Quasi-static method of measuring vapor pressures.—The vessel A containing the liquid and surrounded by a furnace for maintaining a uniform temperature, is connected by one tube C to a manometer M and a reservoir containing a neutral gas such as nitrogen at a suitable pressure, and by another tube B to an intermittent pump. Outside the furnace the two tubes are connected to opposite sides of a differential manometer D. Successive portions of the nitrogen are pumped off through B until the manometer D begins to show a permanent difference of pressure; then the reading of M is the vapor pressure desired. The action depends on the fact that when the pressure in M is less than the vapor pressure, nitrogen can get from C to B to equalize any difference of pressure caused by the pump, only by diffusion against the up-streaming vapor in C, and inter-diffusion in the case of a tube 3 to 4 mm in diameter is slow. A test of the method gave values for the vapor pressure of mercury 170° to 203°C only.04 mm greater on the average than those of Smith and Menzies.