Abstract
THE experiment of Dufour, in which drops of water were suspended in a mixture of linseed oil and oil of cloves, and heated to 120° C. without boiling, is seldom repeated for class demonstration, presumably owing to the difficulty of preparing a mixture of the oils exactly equal in density to water at the temperature named. The phenomenon may be shown with ease and certainty, however, by employing a mixture of four volumes of ethyl benzoate and one volume of aniline instead of the mixture of oils, the procedure being as follows:—Place 80 c.c. of ethyl benzoate and 20 c.c. of aniline in a beaker, and surround by a bath of glycerine or strong sulphuric acid. Heat the bath until the temperature of the mixture is 125° C., and then add 2 to 5 c.c. of freshly boiled water by means of a pipette. The water will sink at first, and rest on the bottom of the beaker; but on attaining the temperature of the mixed liquids it will break up with some violence into spheres of various sizes, which remain floating in the liquid so long as the equi-density temperature of 125° C. is maintained. It is advisable to place a cover over the beaker to prevent the fuming of the mixture.
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DARLING, C. Overheated Water. Nature 91, 319 (1913). https://doi.org/10.1038/091319d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/091319d0
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