VARIATIONS IN THE APPARENT VOLUME OF AIR.
In the earlier form of apparatus the largest variation in the apparent volume of air was due to the fluctuations in the height of the large rubber diaphragms used on the tension equalizer. In the present form of apparatus there is but one rubber diaphragm, and this is small, containing not more than 3 to 4 liters as compared to about 30 liters in the earlier double rubber diaphragms. As now arranged, all fluctuations due to the varying positions of the tension-equalizer are eliminated as each experimental period is ended with the diaphragm in exactly the same position, i. e., filled to a definite tension.
In its passage through the purifiers the air is subjected to more or less pressure, and it is obvious that if these absorbers were coupled to the ventilating system under atmospheric pressure, and then air caused to pass through them, there would be compression in a portion of the purifier system. Thus there would be a contraction in the volume, and air thus compressed would subsequently be released into the open air when the absorbers were uncoupled. The method of testing the system outlined on page 100 equalizes this error, however, in that the system is tested under the same pressure used during an actual experiment, and hence between the surface of the sulphuric acid in the first porcelain vessel and the sulphuric acid in the second porcelain vessel there is a confined volume of air which at the beginning of an experimental period is under identically the same pressure as it is at the end. There is, then, no correction necessary for the rejection of air with the changes in the absorber system.