Mention should be made here of the misuse of the word non-conductor; the so-called “non-conductors” are properly termed insulators.

The bodies named in the following series possess conducting power in different degrees in the order in which they stand, the most efficient conductor being first, and the most efficient insulator being last in the list.

TABLE OF CONDUCTORS AND INSULATORS

Good conductors
(metals and alloys)[4]
Silver
Copper
Aluminum
Zinc
Brass (according to composition)
Platinum
Iron
Nickel
Tin
Lead
German silver (copper 2 parts, zinc 1, nickel 1)
Platinoid (German silver 49 parts, tungsten 1 part)
Antimony
Mercury
Bismuth.
Fair conductorsCharcoal and coke
Carbon
Plumbago
Acid solutions
Sea water
Saline solutions
Metallic ores
Living vegetable substances
Moist earth.
Partial conductorsWater
The body
Flame
Linen
Cotton
MahoganyDry woods
Pine
Rosewood
Lignum Vitæ }
Teak
Marble.
Insulators, or so-called
non-conductors.
Slate
Oils
Porcelain
Dry leather
Dry paper
Wool
Silk
Sealing wax
Sulphur
Resin
Gutta-percha
Shellac
Ebonite
Mica
Jet
Amber
Paraffin wax
Glass (varies with quality)
Dry air.

The earth is a good conductor; much difficulty is frequently experienced by the wires making contact with some substance that will conduct the electricity to the earth. This is called “grounding.”

Mode of Transmission.—The exact nature of electricity is not known, yet the laws governing its action, under various conditions are well understood, just as the laws of gravitation are known, although the constitution of gravity cannot be defined. Electricity, though not a substance, can be associated with matter, and its transmission requires energy. While it is neither a gas nor a liquid, its behavior sometimes is similar to that of a fluid so that it is said to “flow” through a conductor. This expression of flowing does not really mean that there is an actual movement in the wire, similar to the flow of water in a pipe, but is a convenient expression for the phenomena involved.

Effect of Heat.—The conducting power of bodies is affected in different ways by their temperature. In the metals it is diminished by elevation of temperature; but in all other bodies, and especially in liquids, it is augmented. Some substances which are insulators in the solid state, become conductors when fused.

Sir H. Davy found that glass raised to a red heat became a conductor; and that sealing wax, pitch, amber, shellac, sulphur, and wax, became conductors when liquefied by heat.