US2703014A - Capillary manometer - Google Patents

Capillary manometer Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2703014A
US2703014A US215501A US21550151A US2703014A US 2703014 A US2703014 A US 2703014A US 215501 A US215501 A US 215501A US 21550151 A US21550151 A US 21550151A US 2703014 A US2703014 A US 2703014A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
manometer
capillary
tube
rod
bores
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US215501A
Inventor
Koelle Otto
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Bronwill Scientific Inc
Original Assignee
Bronwill Scientific Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bronwill Scientific Inc filed Critical Bronwill Scientific Inc
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2703014A publication Critical patent/US2703014A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01LMEASURING FORCE, STRESS, TORQUE, WORK, MECHANICAL POWER, MECHANICAL EFFICIENCY, OR FLUID PRESSURE
    • G01L7/00Measuring the steady or quasi-steady pressure of a fluid or a fluent solid material by mechanical or fluid pressure-sensitive elements
    • G01L7/18Measuring the steady or quasi-steady pressure of a fluid or a fluent solid material by mechanical or fluid pressure-sensitive elements using liquid as the pressure-sensitive medium, e.g. liquid-column gauges

Definitions

  • This invention relates to capillary manometers.
  • the manometer used in the manometric determination of gas changes with the help of Warburg apparatus consists essentially of a capillary tube bent U-shape of which one end is connected with the reaction chamber.
  • the gas mixtures developed in or used up in the reaction chamber during the experiment undergo a change of pressure whilst maintained at constant volume and constant temperature of the gas system, which change in pressure can be read in the difference in levels of the closure or separating liquid of the U-tube, contained in the manometer in both limbs of the said U.
  • the volume of the volume system limited by the upper surface of a column of separating liquid is kept constant in that for example on gas development so much separating liquid is pressed into the manometer capillaries from a squeezable tube disposed at the deepest part of the U-tube that the rise in pressure arising from the column of liquid introduced into the open topped limb corresponds to the rise in pressure brought about by the gas development in the reaction chamber.
  • the invention chiefly consists therein that two capillary tubes, running preferably parallel to each other, are provided in a rod.
  • the straight rod may consist of any material, e. g. metal or artificial products preferably of glass or transparent artificial products, especially of a methacrylacid-methylester (Plexiglas) or of a polyvinylchloride (Astrolon).
  • the tubes are connected on their lower ends in the usual way, i. e. they may be molten together in such a way that they communicate with each other or a squeezable tube made preferably of rubber is placed over the lower ends of the capillary tubes.
  • the distance between the two capillary tubes is thus chosen that it is easily possible to state the levels of the liquids in both tubes by means of a scale placed between the two capillary tubes.
  • Another possibility instead of applying a field of the mentioned kind to the apparatus consists in observing the change of the electrical resistance of a current running axially through the conductive liquids in the capillaries.
  • Fig. l is an elevation
  • Fig. 2 is an elevation at right-angles to Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 is a cross-section on an enlarged scale on line III-HI of Fig. 2.
  • a double capillary tube in the form of a glass rod a with two capillary tubes k and k running parallel to the longitudinal axis of the glass rod.
  • the capillary tube k is blown out laterally at b at the upper end of the glass rod so as to form a preferably widened orifice and corresponds to the open topped limb of the usual U-tube manometer.
  • the capillary tube k communicates at its upper end in known manner through a cross capillary tube provided with conical grindings with the interior of the reaction chamber which is placed in communication with the smooth surfaced plug 2,703,014 Patented Mar. 1, 1955 s of the manometer.
  • the capillary tube It is also connected with a three-way tap H.
  • the lower outlet openings c, d of the capillary tube a that is to say the glass rod, are not connected by blowing but are formed in the end of the rod a which here is made of smaller diameter than the body of the rod so that the orifices c, d provide communication between the capillary tubes k and k and a flexible or squeezable tube e pushed over this narrow end of the rod 11.
  • the flexible or squeezable tube is filled with separating liquid.
  • the glass rod a can be provided with a backing or deposition of white colour for the better contrasting of liquid level in the capillaries k and k after the manner of a thermometer capillary tube.
  • the glass rod a is provided in front with one etched scale for reading the difference in level of the two liquid columns.
  • the two manometer capillary tubes in the embodiment described can lie close together and thus give rise to a more easier reading in contrast to the usual embodiment.
  • a suitably shaped clamp f for the squeezable tube serves in this present case in the known manner for altering the amount of intercepting liquid present in the capillaries.
  • a Warburg manometer comprising a single straight rod of transparent material having two parallel capillary bores extending longitudinally therein and out through one end thereof, said end being dimensioned for receiving a flexible tube thereover to close said bores while allowing fluid communication therebetween, one of said bores terminating as an aperture near the other end of said rod, and means near said last-mentioned end for connecting the other said bore to a Warburg flask.
  • a Warburg manometer including a flexible tube connected to the first mentioned end of the said rod in free communication with said bores and means for varying the volume of said tube to adjust the level of manometer fluid in said bores.

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Measuring Fluid Pressure (AREA)

Description

March 1, 1955 o. KOELLE 2,703,014
CAPILLARY MANOMETER Filed March 14 1951 INVENTOR OTTO KOELLE BY @WWVZDW ATTORNEY United rates Patent M 2,103,014 CAPILLARY MANOMETER Otto Koelle, Melsungen, Hessia, Germany, assignor to Bronwill Scientific, Inc., a corporation of New York Application March 14, 1951, Serial No. 215,501
Claims priority, application Germany March 20, 1950 2 Claims. (Cl. 73-401) This invention relates to capillary manometers.
The manometer used in the manometric determination of gas changes with the help of Warburg apparatus consists essentially of a capillary tube bent U-shape of which one end is connected with the reaction chamber. The gas mixtures developed in or used up in the reaction chamber during the experiment undergo a change of pressure whilst maintained at constant volume and constant temperature of the gas system, which change in pressure can be read in the difference in levels of the closure or separating liquid of the U-tube, contained in the manometer in both limbs of the said U. The volume of the volume system limited by the upper surface of a column of separating liquid is kept constant in that for example on gas development so much separating liquid is pressed into the manometer capillaries from a squeezable tube disposed at the deepest part of the U-tube that the rise in pressure arising from the column of liquid introduced into the open topped limb corresponds to the rise in pressure brought about by the gas development in the reaction chamber.
The invention chiefly consists therein that two capillary tubes, running preferably parallel to each other, are provided in a rod. The straight rod may consist of any material, e. g. metal or artificial products preferably of glass or transparent artificial products, especially of a methacrylacid-methylester (Plexiglas) or of a polyvinylchloride (Astrolon). The tubes are connected on their lower ends in the usual way, i. e. they may be molten together in such a way that they communicate with each other or a squeezable tube made preferably of rubber is placed over the lower ends of the capillary tubes. Preferably the distance between the two capillary tubes is thus chosen that it is easily possible to state the levels of the liquids in both tubes by means of a scale placed between the two capillary tubes.
In the case of the use of materials which are not transparent the levels of the liquids may be stated in the following way: By the upand down-movement of the liquid columns in the capillary tubes in the case of an electric or magnetic field a certain change of this field will take place which may be observed by means of corresponding measuring instruments, wire-coils or condensers, as all well-known per se.
Another possibility instead of applying a field of the mentioned kind to the apparatus consists in observing the change of the electrical resistance of a current running axially through the conductive liquids in the capillaries.
The accompanying drawings illustrate one embodiment of the invention by way of example merely.
Fig. l is an elevation;
Fig. 2 is an elevation at right-angles to Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a cross-section on an enlarged scale on line III-HI of Fig. 2.
Instead of the U-shaped capillary manometer hitherto employed there is employed a double capillary tube in the form of a glass rod a with two capillary tubes k and k running parallel to the longitudinal axis of the glass rod. The capillary tube k is blown out laterally at b at the upper end of the glass rod so as to form a preferably widened orifice and corresponds to the open topped limb of the usual U-tube manometer. The capillary tube k communicates at its upper end in known manner through a cross capillary tube provided with conical grindings with the interior of the reaction chamber which is placed in communication with the smooth surfaced plug 2,703,014 Patented Mar. 1, 1955 s of the manometer. Through a short vertical piece of simple capillary tube the capillary tube It is also connected with a three-way tap H. The lower outlet openings c, d of the capillary tube a, that is to say the glass rod, are not connected by blowing but are formed in the end of the rod a which here is made of smaller diameter than the body of the rod so that the orifices c, d provide communication between the capillary tubes k and k and a flexible or squeezable tube e pushed over this narrow end of the rod 11. The flexible or squeezable tube is filled with separating liquid. The glass rod a can be provided with a backing or deposition of white colour for the better contrasting of liquid level in the capillaries k and k after the manner of a thermometer capillary tube. The glass rod a is provided in front with one etched scale for reading the difference in level of the two liquid columns.
Besides the advantage obtained owing to the external form in a higher mechanical rigidity, namely a greater security against breakage, owing to the assemblage of the two manometer limbs in a strong glass tube the possibility is also present in the embodiment proposed as distinguished from the embodiments of Warburg manometers hitherto known, of applying a common scale to both manometer columns. By this means contingent in accuracies are avoided which depend on a slight movement upwards of the scales on the left and right hand limbs of the manometer occurring as a possibility in manometers hitherto usual.
The two manometer capillary tubes in the embodiment described can lie close together and thus give rise to a more easier reading in contrast to the usual embodiment.
Owing to the great rigidity of the manometer it is possible to apply the manometer described without a strutting piece to the Warburg apparatus.
A suitably shaped clamp f for the squeezable tube serves in this present case in the known manner for altering the amount of intercepting liquid present in the capillaries.
Owning to the very closely adjacent capillaries k k a further advantage arises in that on rotary motion taking place about the longitudinal axis of the double capillary manometer amongst other things as is necessary in Warburg apparatus for the maintenance of the temporary absorption condition in the fluid of the reaction chamber, a reading of the alteration in pressure during the managerriient or during the motion of the manometer is facilitate Having now particularly described the nature of the invention, what I claim is:
1. A Warburg manometer comprising a single straight rod of transparent material having two parallel capillary bores extending longitudinally therein and out through one end thereof, said end being dimensioned for receiving a flexible tube thereover to close said bores while allowing fluid communication therebetween, one of said bores terminating as an aperture near the other end of said rod, and means near said last-mentioned end for connecting the other said bore to a Warburg flask.
2. A Warburg manometer according to claim 1 including a flexible tube connected to the first mentioned end of the said rod in free communication with said bores and means for varying the volume of said tube to adjust the level of manometer fluid in said bores.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,815,000 Durant July 14, 1931 2,357,638 Dwyer Sept. 5, 1944 2,475,602 Forst July 12, 1949 FOREIGN PATENTS 519,092 Great Britain Mar. 15, 1940 OTHER REFERENCES L llahminco, Catalogue #48, pp. 18 and 21, 1948, Scientific

Claims (1)

1. A WARBURG MANOMETER COMPRISING A SINGLE STRAIGHT ROD OF TRANSPARENT MATERIAL HAVING TWO PARALLEL CAPILLARY BORES EXTENDING LONGITUDINALLY THEREIN AND OUT THROUGH ONE AND THEREOF, SAID END BEING DIMENSIONED FORM RECEIVING A FLEXIBLE TUBE THEREOVER TO CLOSE SAID BORES WHILE ALLOWING FLUID COMMUNICATION THEREBETWEEN, ONE OF SAID BORES TERMINATING AS AN APERTURE NEAR THE OTHER END OF SAID ROD, AND MEANS NEAR SAID LAST-MENTIONED END FOR CONNECTING THE OTHER SAID BORE TO A WARBURG FLASK.
US215501A 1950-03-20 1951-03-14 Capillary manometer Expired - Lifetime US2703014A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE2703014X 1950-03-20

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2703014A true US2703014A (en) 1955-03-01

Family

ID=7996973

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US215501A Expired - Lifetime US2703014A (en) 1950-03-20 1951-03-14 Capillary manometer

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2703014A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2867510A (en) * 1956-11-05 1959-01-06 Will Corp Manometric apparatus
US2894393A (en) * 1955-11-26 1959-07-14 Will Corp Flexible coupled manometer

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1815000A (en) * 1929-03-18 1931-07-14 Gabriel Co Pressure gauge
GB519092A (en) * 1937-09-25 1940-03-15 Wilhelm Wintrich Apparatus for indicating the pressure and level of liquids in vessels
US2357638A (en) * 1940-03-01 1944-09-05 Frank W Dwyer Gas indicator
US2475602A (en) * 1945-05-05 1949-07-12 Albert C Forst Manometer

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1815000A (en) * 1929-03-18 1931-07-14 Gabriel Co Pressure gauge
GB519092A (en) * 1937-09-25 1940-03-15 Wilhelm Wintrich Apparatus for indicating the pressure and level of liquids in vessels
US2357638A (en) * 1940-03-01 1944-09-05 Frank W Dwyer Gas indicator
US2475602A (en) * 1945-05-05 1949-07-12 Albert C Forst Manometer

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2894393A (en) * 1955-11-26 1959-07-14 Will Corp Flexible coupled manometer
US2867510A (en) * 1956-11-05 1959-01-06 Will Corp Manometric apparatus

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2566369A (en) Pressure gauge
US3464273A (en) Surface area apparatus and method
US3302448A (en) Apparatus for supervising the proportion of a magnetically active component in a fluid
US2703014A (en) Capillary manometer
US3513319A (en) Refractometer having spaced light conducting rods
US1487989A (en) Apparatus for measuring the rate of flow of gases
Fisher The Coefficients of Gas Viscosity. II
US2509327A (en) Micromanometer
US2645949A (en) Pressure balance indicator
Vincent The viscosity tonometer-a new method of measuring tension in liquids
US2296030A (en) Gas analysis apparatus
Iwasaki et al. Studies on the transport properties of fluids at high pressure: I. The viscosity of ammonia (The co-operative researches on the fundamental studies of the liquid phase reactions at high pressures)
US2654243A (en) Apparatus for use in measuring surface tension
US2076562A (en) Gauge for indicating the volume of flow of gases
US3434338A (en) Viscometer
US3166934A (en) Liquid displacement strain indicator
US3057204A (en) Gas pressure measurement
US1727254A (en) Apparatus for measurement of the level and flow of liquids and the height or movement of a body
SU113057A1 (en) Pointing Device for Measuring Instruments
SU667891A1 (en) Device for measuring urine specific weight
US2755667A (en) Means for measuring fluid pressure
SU109719A1 (en) Instrument for measuring deflection and subsidence of structural elements
SU794378A1 (en) Microflowmeter
SU563654A1 (en) Process of determining ferroliquid magnetic receptivity
SU54353A1 (en) Manometer