The Standard Electrical Dictionary Part 141

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Schweigger's Multiplier.

An old term for the galvanometer as invented by Schweigger soon after Oerstedt's discovery.

Scratch Brushes.

Brushes for cleaning the surface of articles to be electroplated to give a good metallic surface suitable for deposition. They have often wire instead of bristles.

477 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Fig. 300. WIRE GAUZE ELECTRIC SCREEN.

Screen, Electric.

A large plate or a hollow case or cage of conducting material connected with the earth, and used to protect any body placed within it from electrostatic influences.

If within a hollow conducting sphere an electrified body is placed, the inner surface of the sphere will be charged with electricity of opposite kind to that of the sphere, and the outer surface with the same kind as that of the sphere. Thus the sum of the electricities called into action by induction is zero. The two inner charges are bound to each other. The induced charge on the outer surface of the sphere is all that has any effect on objects in the outer air.

If the outer surface is connected to the earth it becomes discharged, and however highly electrified the body introduced into the sphere and the inner surface of such sphere may be, they produce no external effects, as they are bound one to the other.

If the sphere is connected to the earth and an unelectrified object is placed within it, such object will be perfectly s.h.i.+elded from the effects of an outer electrostatic field. Perforated tinfoil or wire gauze has just as good a result. A large plate of metal connected to the earth has the same effect. The screen whether plane or hollow simply retains a bound charge due to the field of force, thereby neutralizing it, and the electricity of the opposite sign escapes to the earth. Thus a true s.h.i.+elding or screening effect is produced.

In the cut an experiment is shown in which an electric screen is carried by a Leyden jar. Pith b.a.l.l.s are suspended outside and inside of it. By the approach of an electrified body the outer pith b.a.l.l.s will diverge, while no effect is produced upon the inner ones.

Secondary Actions.

In electrolysis the direct products of the electrical decomposition are not always obtained at the electrodes, but products due to their reaction on the water and other chemicals may appear. These const.i.tute secondary actions. Thus if a solution of copper sulphate is electrolyzed with platinum electrodes, metallic copper appears at one pole and sulphuric acid and oxygen gas at the other. But the products of electrolysis by the current are copper (Cu) and sulphion (SO4). The latter reacting on water sets free oxygen gas and forms sulphuric acid.

The latter is a secondary action.

Secondary Generator.

(a) An alternating current converter generating a so-called secondary current.

(b) A secondary battery, q. v., may be thus termed.

Secondary, Movable.

The term movable secondaries has been applied to rings, spheres and discs of conducting material, such as copper, whose behavior when near the pole of an electro-magnet traversed by an alternating current, have been studied by Elihu Thomson. Such ma.s.ses are subjected to very peculiar movements and mutual reactions. As the phenomena are due to induced currents the above term has been applied to the ma.s.ses in which the currents are induced.

478 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Secondary Plates, Colors of.

In a secondary battery of the lead plate type, the color of the plates is a good indication of the condition of the battery. The negative plate should be brown or deep-reddish, the other should be slate-colored.

Secondary Poles.

Poles sometimes found in magnets existing in positions intermediate between the end or true poles.

Synonym--Consequent Poles.

Seebeck Effect.

The production of a current by heating the junction of two different metals forming part of a circuit, or the thermo-electric production of current, is stated as the Seebeck effect, having been discovered by that investigator.

Selenium.

A non-metallic element. It is interesting electrically on account of the changes its electric resistance undergoes when it is subjected to light.

In one set of experiments it was found that diffused light caused the resistance to fall in the ratio of 11 to 9. Full sunlight reduced it to one-half. Of the spectrum colors red was most powerful and the ultra red region still more strongly affected its resistance.

The effect produced by exposure to light is instantaneous, but on removal to the dark only slowly disappears.

A vessel of hot water was found to have no effect, showing that short ether waves are essential to the effect.

Selenium Cell.

A selenium resistance box. Vitreous selenium is made by keeping ordinary selenium for some hours at a temperature of about 220? C. (428? F.) after fusing. It is placed in an electric circuit as part of the conductor.

Its resistance can then be determined. It decreases in sunlight to about one-half its resistance in the dark.

The selenium cell is used in the Photophone, q. v. Otherwise it is little more than a subject of experiment.

Selenium Eye.

A model eye in which selenium in circuit with a battery and galvanometer takes the place of the retina of the human eye.

Self-repulsion.

When a body is electrified each molecule repels its neighbor and the condition in question is thus designated. An electrified soap-bubble expands in virtue of self-repulsion.

Semi-conductors.

Substances which conduct static electricity poorly, but quite appreciably and beyond the extent of leakage. The following are examples: Alcohol and ether, powdered gla.s.s, flowers of sulphur, dry wood, paper, ice at 0? C. (32? F.)

479 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Sensibility.

The measure of the effect of a current upon a galvanometer, or any similar case.

Sensitiveness, Angle of Maximum.

Every galvanometer has its angle of maximum sensitiveness, which is the angle of deflection at which a small increment of current will produce the greatest deflection. For every tangent galvanometer 45? is the angle in question. In using a galvanometer for direct reading methods it is an object to have it work at its angle of maximum sensitiveness.

Separately Excited Dynamo.

The Standard Electrical Dictionary Part 141

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The Standard Electrical Dictionary Part 141 summary

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