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History of Science Museum

Hope's Pattern Eudiometer, English, c. 1825

Inventory Number 49229


Item type
Object
Provenance
From the Daubeny Laboratory. Lent by the Daubeny Curator, Daubeny Laboratory, Magdalen College, Oxford.
Physical material
Glass
Object type
Eudiometer
Dimensions
Diameter: 60mm Height: 335mm Width: 60mm Weight: 534g
Inventory No
49229
Accession Number
1925-46/part

Description

Named after the scottish chemist Thomas Charles Hope, this eudiometer was primarily used for analysing atmospheric air in lecture-demonstrations. It is in two parts; the tube containing the air sample was inserted in the neck of a small bottle filled with an alkali sulphide solution for absorbing the oxygen slowly. Next, the amount of absorption was measured by placing the bottle under water, removing its side stopper and noting the level of water rising into the graduated tube. Hope succeeded Joseph Black as Professor of Chemistry in Edinburgh in 1799.