Abstract

When hydrogen is dissociated by an incandescent tungsten filament in a glass tube, some of it is cleaned up if the tube is cooled in liquid air. The amount cleaned up can be greatly increased by coating the inner wall with mercury or copper. In one experiment the amount cleaned up in cold mercury was equivalent to 14 monolayers of atomic hydrogen. The cleanup proceeded at a diminishing rate until the pressure fell to the value at which hydrogen left the mercury as fast as it entered. When hydrogen was cleaned up in a very thin coating of mercury there were 1.5 to 1.8 atoms of mercury per atom of hydrogen. All the cleaned-up gas was recovered when the tube was brought to room temperature. After cleanup in copper there was little recovery until the temperature rose above —150°K.

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