Читать книгу An Account of the Late Improvements in Galvanism - Giovanni Aldini - Страница 19

PROPOSITION XV.

Оглавление

Opium, cinchona, and other stimulants of a similar kind, which exercise a powerful action on the animal machine, contribute also to excite the action of the pile.

EXPERIMENT I.

In the last sitting of the Institute of Bologna, at which I was present, I constructed two piles, each composed of fifteen pieces of silver and zinc, employing for the one an extract of opium, and for the other an infusion of cinchona in alcohol. I covered the piles with two equal receivers; formed an insulated plenum, by pouring mercury around the bottoms of them; and placed weights on the receivers sufficient to prevent the mercury from raising them. At the end of some hours, I found a remarkable elevation of the surface of the mercury, so that the receivers remained fixed without requiring any weight to keep them down. In the bell which covered the pile where extract of opium had been employed, the mercury rose more than an inch; but in that covering the other, where cinchona had been used, the elevation of the mercury was scarcely three lines.

EXPERIMENT II.

Having successively introduced a taper into each of the two receivers before mentioned, it was immediately extinguished in that containing the pile with the extract of opium; but in the other containing the pile with the infusion of cinchona, it continued burning for some time. I found also that four of the plates, at the bottom of the pile where I employed opium, had suffered from the action of the mercury; and that some others, to the height of about three inches and a half, exhibited a few globules of that metal. The pile in which I employed infusion of cinchona showed scarcely any signs of the action of the mercury.

EXPERIMENT III.

As I concluded that the pile in which I had employed the alcoholic extract of opium possessed more activity than the other, I examined it for four or five days successively. I tried the flame of a taper with the same result as before, and assured myself that this pile retained the Galvanic power, though a little weakened, even till the eighth day. On the other hand, twenty-four hours had scarcely elapsed, when the pile in which alcohol and cinchona had been employed exhibited no signs of activity.

EXPERIMENT IV.

I constructed two piles, in the same manner, with pieces of pasteboard interposed, which had been previously moistened with strong solutions of camphor and of castor oil, in pure alcohol. In these two piles the Galvanic effects were much weaker in every respect than those observed in the preceding experiment; for, besides the explosion being less, the elevation of water in the insulated plenum was very small, and the alteration of the flame was scarcely sensible.

EXPERIMENT V.

I was able to convince myself that the effects of the two piles, before mentioned, were the immediate result of the substances dissolved, and not of the alcohol; for, having constructed a pile of thirty plates of silver and zinc, with pieces of pasteboard interposed, moistened with pure alcohol, I observed no signs of Galvanism; and the case was the same when I employed a pile of zinc combined with copper and other metals.

An Account of the Late Improvements in Galvanism

Подняться наверх