Talk:Electrical conductivity
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I noticed that the table of SI electromagnetism units was on several entries, so I think I'll make an entry just for it and then put a link to it at the bottom of the entries that it used to be in
Measuring Electrical Conductivity in Fluids
Measuring the conductivity of a metal rod is relatively simple, but how do you measure the conductivity of a fluid? Will a horizontal glas tube with facing(inert)platimum disk-electrodes at each end (so you can calculate the length and area of the fluid column do the trick? One can then apply a AC voltage accross the electrodes and measure the current to calculate the resistance of the fluid column and hence calculate the conductivity of the fluid.
What is the recommended practice?--168.209.98.35 20:24, 9 December 2005 (UTC)G Francois Marais
Electric conductivity measuring instruments for liquids are commercially available from laboratory equipment suppliers. After calibrating the instrument the probe containing the measuring cell is simply immersed in the liquid for a digital readout of the conductivity and the temperature (conductivity varies with temperature).--168.209.98.35 15:41, 14 December 2005 (UTC)G Francois Marais
Electrical expreiments with potatoes
I seem to remember in high school science, something about potatoes being used as conductors or like a primative battery. Am I wrong?209.74.5.35
- You can use a potato as a battery. This should be disussed under battery, if it isn't already. --Heron 15:30, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
Table of conductivity and resistivity
I propose that we combine the tables of conductivity and resistivity onto their own page, because they are fundamentally related. Comments? Fresheneesz 22:44, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed. — Omegatron 19:02, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
Electrical Conductivity: Gas
I have something on my mind that I want to clarify. Is there a gas that can conduct an electrical charge were it will move within that specific gas only/mostly? - Johan1984
Temperature Dependance
The formula seems not quite right. It causes most conductivity to increase with temperature instead of being reduced. As far as I can tell the T and the Tprime are out of order. 63.164.202.130 14:35, 30 August 2007 (UTC)63.164.202.130 14:33, 30 August 2007 (UTC)rfilabs the science is dumFailed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle A=1\2*b} —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.134.72.187 (talk) 22:23, 21 January 2008 (UTC)
Current Density or Free Current Density
I suppose there's an imprecision on the definition of the electrical conductivity:
"The conductivity σ is defined as the ratio of the current density J to the electric field strength E"
I believe it must say: ...the ratio fo the FREE current density etc..
since the total current density depends on the free and the bounded current (see Magnetization).