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  • strontium formate crystal section in glass jar
  • Images (4)

strontium formate crystal section in glass jar

  • Images (4)

strontium formate crystal section in glass jar

Date: 1946
Inventory Number: 1998-1-1308
Classification: Crystal
Subject:
mineralogy, high-pressure physics,
Maker: Percy Williams Bridgman (1882 - 1961)
Maker: (Box) AKATOS Inc. (1879 - 1944)
User: Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Harvard University (founded 1884)
Cultural Region:
United States,
City of Use:
Cambridge,
Dimensions:
2.1 x 6.7 x 4.2 cm (13/16 x 2 5/8 x 1 5/8 in.)
Overall - Storage: 22 x 12 x 17 cm (8 11/16 x 4 3/4 x 6 11/16 in.)
Material:
wood, glass, cardboard, plastic,
Accessories: small white cardboard box glass jar wooden shipping crate
Description:
Crystal sample stored in a cylindrical glass jar with a black plastic screw on lid. Sample consists of two larger solid, white, powdery crystal sections and many flakes. One of the larger sections has a metal rod attached to it. This piece also has a line drawn on it on one side.

Sample was found in a rectangular wooden shipping box with interlocking faces and a removable lid.

Signedtypewritten in blue and black on off-white label on lid of shipping crate in which object was found: AKATOS, Inc. / SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS AND LABORATORY CHEMICALS / 114-118 LIBERTY STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. / Special Handling / To__Jefferson Physical Laboratory__ / Address__Harvard University__ / __Att. Prof. Bridgeman__ Cambridge, Mass.__ / No.___ Value___
Inscribedhandwritten in black on front of shipping crate: Early Resistance
circular black ink stamped on top of shipping crate: NEW YORK N.Y. / MAY 20 / 7 PM / VARICK ST. STA / 1990
handwritten in pencil on lid of shipping crate: 16 / 137x216
printed in black on white label on outside of jar: QORPAK® BOTTLES / 1998-1-1308 / Strontium formate crystal Sec. / Removed from sm. box & from / Bridgeman box 7/26/00
handwritten in pen on original white cardboard storage box lud (no longer used): Sr(HCOO)2 Strontium Formate Crystal Section (orth[?]) / NRL / July, 1946

FunctionHigh pressure physics.

These samples were likely used in or produced by Prof. Bridgman's early experiments with high pressure apparatuses. They may have been used in experiments testing the high pressure resistance of substances given that the wooden shipping crate in which they were found is labeled "Early Resistance".
Historical AttributesPercy Bridgman's experimental work at Harvard University consisted mainly in the production of very high pressures and the investigation of the effects such pressures have on the properties of matter.

During the 1920s, most of Bridgman's experiments used high pressures between 12 000 and 20 000 atmospheres (12,000-20,000 kg/cm²). In order to produce such high pressures, Bridgman used a hydraulic press in conjunction with two pumps in order to produce the high pressures. See for example, 1997-1-1819a, b, c and d.
During the 1930s, Bridgman increased the pressure, reaching between 30 000 and 50 000 atmospheres using two and even three hand pumps.

Bridgman would put samples of various materials into a chamber of the press, raise the pressure inside the chamber, and then study the material samples or residues that remained afterward. He the effects of high pressures on the specific resistance, temperature coefficients, volume, electrical conductivity, shearing strength, electrical resistance, density, tensile properties, and compression. He studied these effects on all manner of substances from minerals, metals, and chemicals to plastics, glass and egg yolks. Bridgman hoped his experimental results would contribute to theories of the internal structure of atoms and molecules that were gaining attention throughout the first half of the 20th century. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1946 for his research.

Bridgman also did work on the synthesis of diamonds from graphite using very high pressures and temperatures. Early in 1941, the General Electric Company arranged a five year agreement with Bridgman to finance his experimental research in producing diamonds. Bridgman wanted to reverse a known process in which diamonds turn to graphite at atmospheric pressure and 1500°C. His experiments were conducted in the Harvard Geophysical Laboratory. However, Bridgman was ultimately unsuccessful in the synthesis of diamonds, and his continued research was interrupted by the outbreak of the Second World War.
Curatorial RemarksThis object was found in a wooden shipping crate from AKATOS Inc. However it is unknown how many of the objects contained in the crate were originally from AKATOS Inc. The crate, labeled "Early Resistance" was most likely used by Prof. Bridgman as a storage container for samples and devices used in his early experiments on the effects of high pressures on the resistance of materials.

On July 26, 2000 this sample was removed from its original white cardboard storage box and also from the wooden shipping crate in which it was found. It is now stored in a glass jar on its own.

The dimensions provided are for the original white storage box.






Primary SourcesAbbot, C.G. The Experiments of Dr. P. W. Bridgman on the Properties of Matter When Under High Pressure in Smithsonian Report for 1918. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1920. pp. 185 - 204. (Lib. 2912)

Bridgman, Percy W. Mercury resistance as a pressure gauge. Physics Research Thesis at Harvard University (in Harvard University Archives), 1910.

-------------------------- A condensed collection of thermodynamic formulas. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1925.

-------------------------- Physics of High Pressures. London: Bell, 1931.

-------------------------- "Shearing phenomena at high pressure of possible importance for geology" in Journal of Geology, Vol. 44 No. 6 (1936), pp. 653 - 669.

------------------------- Studies in Large Plastic Flow and Fracture. New York: McGraw Hill, 1952.

-------------------------- "Certain Aspects of Plastic Flow under High Stresses" in Studies in Mathematics and Mechanics Presented to Richard von Mises. New York: Academic Press Inc., 1954. pp. 227 - 231. (Lib. 5817)

-------------------------- "Effects of Pressure on Binary Alloys" and "Miscellaneous Effects of Pressure on Miscellaneous Substances" in Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Vol. 84, No. 1 (1955).

-------------------------- "Synthetic Diamonds" in Scientific American, November 1955, pp. 42 - 46. (Lib. 340)

------------------------- Collected Experimental Papers. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1964.
ProvenanceFrom Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Harvard University.
Related WorksKenble, Edwin C. & Francis Birch. Percy Williams Bridgman, 1882 - 1961. A biographical memoir. New York: Columbia University Press, 1970.

Walter, Maila L. Science and cultural crisis: an intellectual biography of Percy Williams Bridgman (1882 - 1961). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1990 [1985].

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