rising bubbles must belong to the lighter gas. The thing appeared so obvious that I did not give myself
the trouble of looking at the battery, which would at once have told me the nature of the gas. But Faraday
would never have been satisfied with a deduction if he could have reduced it to a fact. And he has taught
me that the fact here is the direct reverse of what I supposed it to be. The small bubbles are oxygen,
and their smallness is due to the perfect cleanness of the surface on which they are liberated. The hydrogen
adhering to the other electrode swells into large bubbles, which rise in much slower succession; but when
the current is reversed, the hydrogen is liberated upon the cleansed wire, and then its bubbles also become
small.
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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