Elektronen und Ionen. By M. Knoll, F. Ollendorff, and R. Rompe (with the

Once more the Faraday Society has placed physical chemists under a debt of gratitude. The reports of thediscussions whichthey organize at frequent int...
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chemical properties of nitrogen (a very full account of the spectra being included), and with active nitrogen. The account of the technical production of nitrogen includes patent literature. There is a good discussion of the atomic weight of nitrogen in which analyses of a large number of researches are set out in a very clear and instructive form. This first section of the volumes on nitrogen is very complete and of high standard, and covers a very extensive field of literature. J. R. PARTINQTON.

Free Radicals. A general discussion held by the Faraday Society. 25 x 15.5 cm.; 2 248 pp. London: Gurney and Jackson, 1934. Price: bound, limp cloth, 12/6. Once more the Faraday Society has placed physical chemists under a debt of gratitude. The reports of the discussions which they organize a t frequent intervals are now well-known and highly appreciated, alike by those who are, and those who would be, up-to-date in their knowledge of the latest developments. By bringing together distinguished workers in a special field, hearing and answering questions, they not merely present the subject but present it alive. This volume is most timely and will be most welcome. It indicates how much preparatory work has already been achieved-work on the existence and preparation of free radicals-and these results are discussed by the men who have attained them. It also shows how the application of exact physiochemical methods to the available material may now be expected to lead to important conclusions. The first part (12 papers) deals with free radicals of relatively long life; the second with those of short life, and this is subdivided into chemical aspects (A) general and inorganic (5 papers), B, hydrocarbons (7 papers). The third part deals with the physical aspects of radicals of short life (5 papers). Part I opens with a n account of prevalent carbon radicals, followed by a short paper by Schonberg on a new class of radicals having a free sulfur bond. Sugden gives an account of magnetism in free radicals due to an odd number of electrons. Sulfur monoxide and oxygen are discussed; theoretical papers are contributed by Huckel, Lennard Jones, and Ingold; electronic levels are dealt with by Snow and Allsopp and the C=C double bond is specially considered, P a r t I1 opens with a n account by Norrish of the photochemical production of free radicals, followed by a theoretical paper by Franck and Rabinowitsch. Part I I B contains important contributions by Bone, Rice, Paneth, Hartel, Polanyi, and others. Part 111has a n introductory paper b y Mecke on free radicals and spectroscopy, and an account of the positive ray method of investigating the decomposition of hexane by Conrad (with some excellent photographs). There are papers by Harkins and by Willey on free radicals produced in the electric discharge, and one by Semenoff on the transference of energy in collisions. Taken together, the papers and discussions give a n admirable idea of the state of knowledge and opinion on a subject which has only recently begun t o attract much attention; they are very suggestive of developments in the near future. Much light is being thrown on the problems of molecular stability and molecular change. E. B. LUDLAM.

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Gasentladungstabellen. Tabellen, Formeln und Kurven zur Physik und Technik der Elektronen und Ionen. By M. KNOLL,F. OLLENDORFF, AND R. ROMPE (with the 171 pp. Berlin: Springer, collaboration of A. Roggendorf). 25 x 17 cm.; x 1935. Price: 29RM (in cloth). The authors have attempted to give in this volume, in a s convenient a form as possible, all the data likely to be required by workers with the discharge of ions and

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electrons through gases at moderate down to very low pressures. These are by no means the least coy or elusive of the more out-of-the-way data of physics, and their tracing down, even in relatively simple special cases, taxes or overtaxes the resources even of a large library. I n many sections of the subject, sufficiently precise and extended numerical data were practically nonexistent a few years ago, and all workers-even those favored ones who have enjoyed the help of a more experienced hand in the same laboratory-must have felt acutely the need for tables of the kind now under review. The book therefore undoubtedly fills‘a serious gap in the literature. The completeness of the filling can only properly be judged after prolonged use of the book in the laboratory. The less stringent test of a fairly close inspection reveals no serious omissions or errors in the work, which contains not only a comprehensive summary of the relevant properties of atoms, molecules, electrons, ions, and photons, but also the equivalent of “workshop hints” on the materials in common use in discharge tubes, and on high vacuum technique, together with a useful collection of mathematical formula and tables. Some minor criticisms may be offered, mainly on p a t t e r s of form; for instance, the unjustifiable piling up of unsignificant figures on some of the data, and the habit of referring the more inquisitive reader to the Handbuch der Physik or similar works, and not to the original papers. These points do not however affect the general utility of the book. The price is somewhat high, especially in sterling, but the book, with its elaborate tables and large number of specially drawn curves, cannot have been a cheap one to produce. H. R. ROBINSON. Rontgenoskopie und Elektronoskopie von dispersen Systemen, Faden, Filmen, und Grenzschichten. Sonderheft der Kolloid-Zeitschrift, Bd. 69, H. 3. Edited by Wo. Ostwald (12 contributors). 27 x 19.5 cm.; 138 pp. Dresden and Leipeig: Steinkopff, 1935. Price: 9 RM (stiff paper cover). This volume presents the contributions of Ostwald, Schiebold, Brill, Fricke, Halle, Astbury, Hofmann, Saupe, Wever, Rupp, Trillat, and Bruche t o the General Meeting of the Kolloid-Gesellschaft in Hanover in September, 1934. It provides a useful and authoritative general sketch for those wishing to acquire some familiarity with these comparatively new applications of x-ray and electron optics, with some hundreds of references to original papers which will be invaluable to those whose interests are more specialized. H. R. ROBINSON. Dizionario di Chimica generule e industriale. Volume 11. F-2. By MICHELEGIUA AND CLARA GIUALOLLINI. 29 x 20 cm.; iii, 71 1137 pp. Turin: Unione Tipografico-Editrice Torinese, 1934. Price : 175 lire. This second, and final, volume of the Dictionary of Chemistry, containing 54 more pages of text than the first volume, covers the headings F-Z. Thus it is evident that, even when allowance has been made for the difference in the Italian alphabet, the matter i n this volume has been more condensed than in the previous one. The second volume contains 23 full page plates and 521 illustrations in the text, as against 28, and 565, respectively, in the first. I n addition, the second volume includes 71 pages of comprehensive index t o the whole, 2 pages of corrections, and a list of journals with their quoted abbreviated titles. The dictionary is comprehensive, dealing not only with pure chemistry, but also

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