The Earliest Electromagnetic Instruments - Part 1
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Part 1

The Earliest Electromagnetic Instruments.

by Robert A. Chipman.

THE EARLIEST ELECTROMAGNETIC INSTRUMENTS

_The history of the early stages of electromagnetic instrumentation is traced here through the men who devised the theories and constructed the instruments._

_Despite the many uses made of voltaic cells after Volta's announcement of his "pile" invention in 1800, two decades pa.s.sed before Oersted discovered the magnetic effects of a voltaic circuit.

As a result of this and within a five-month period, three men, apparently independently, announced the invention of the "first"

electromagnetic instrument. This article details the merits of their claims to priority._

THE AUTHOR: _Robert A. Chipman is chairman of the Department of Electrical Engineering at the University of Toledo in Toledo, Ohio, and consultant to the Smithsonian Inst.i.tution._

Electrostatic Instruments before 1800

It is the fundamental premise of instrument-science that a device for detecting or measuring a physical quant.i.ty can be based on any phenomenon a.s.sociated with that physical quant.i.ty. Although the instrumentation of electrostatics in the 18th century, for example, relied mainly on the phenomena of attraction and repulsion and the ubiquitous sparks and other luminosities of frictional electricity, even the physiological sensation of electric shock was exploited semiquant.i.tatively by Henry Cavendish in his well-known antic.i.p.ation of Ohm's researches. Likewise, Volta in 1800[1] described at length how the application of his pile to suitably placed electrodes on the eyelids, on the tongue, or in the ear, caused stimulation of the senses of sight, taste and hearing; on the other hand, he reported that electrodes in the nose merely produced a "more or less painful" p.r.i.c.king feeling, with no impression of smell. The discharges from the Leyden jars of some of the bigger frictional machines, such as van Marum's at Leyden, were found by 1785 to magnetize pieces of iron and to melt long pieces of metal wire.[2]

The useful instruments that emerged from all of this experience were various deflecting "electrometers" and "electroscopes" (the words were not carefully distinguished in use), including the important goldleaf electroscope ascribed to Abraham Bennet in 1787.[3]

In 1786, Galvani first observed the twitching of the legs of a dissected frog produced by discharges of a nearby electrostatic machine, thereby revealing still another "effect" of electricity. He then discovered that certain arrangements of metals in contact with the frog nerves produced the same twitching, implying something electrical in the frog-metal situation as a whole. Although Galvani and his nephew Aldini drew from these experiments erroneous conclusions involving "animal electricity,"

which were disputed by Volta in his metal-contact theory, it is significant from the instrumentation point of view that the frog's legs were unquestionably by far the most sensitive detector of metal-contact electrical effects available at the time. Without their intervention the development of this entire subject-area, including the creation of chemical cells, might have been delayed many years. Volta himself realized that the crucial test between his theory and that of Galvani required confirming the existence of metal-contact electricity by some electrical but nonphysiological detector. He performed this test successfully with an electroscope, using the "condensing" technique he had invented more than a decade earlier.

Instrumenting Voltaic or Galvanic Electricity, 1800-1820

In his famous letter of March 20, 1800, written in French from Como, Italy, to the president of the Royal Society in London, Volta made the first public announcement of both his "pile" (the first English translator used the word "column"), and his "crown of cups" (the same translator used "chain of cups" for Volta's "couronne de ta.s.ses"). The former consisted of a vertical pile of circular disks, in which the sequence copper-zinc-pasteboard, was repeated 10 or 20 or even as many as 60 times, the pasteboard being moistened with salt water. The "crown of cups" could be most conveniently made with drinking gla.s.ses, said Volta, with separated inch-square plates of copper and zinc in salt water in each gla.s.s, the copper sheet in one gla.s.s being joined by some intermediate conductor and soldered joints to the zinc in the next gla.s.s.

Volta considered the "crown of cups" and the "pile" to be essentially identical, and as evidences of the electrical nature of the latter, said:

... if it contains about 20 of these stories or couples of metal, it will be capable not only of emitting signs of electricity by Cavallo's electrometer, a.s.sisted by a condenser, beyond 10 or 15, and of charging this condenser by mere contact so as to make it emit a spark, etc., but of giving to the fingers with which its extremities (the bottom and top of the column) have been touched several small shocks, more or less frequent, according as the touching has been repeated. Each of these shocks has a perfect resemblance to that slight shock experienced from a Leyden flask weakly charged, or a battery still more weakly charged, or a torpedo in an exceedingly languishing state, which imitates still better the effects of my apparatus by the series of repeated shocks which it can continually communicate.[4]

The "effects" provided by Volta's pile and crown-of-cups are therefore electroscope deflection, sparks, and shocks. Later in the letter, he describes the stimulation of sight, taste, and hearing as noted earlier, but nowhere does he mention chemical phenomena of any kind, or the heating of a wire joining the terminals of either device. Hence, except for the additional physiological responses, he adds nothing to the catalog of observations on which instruments might be based. His familiarity with the moods of the torpedo (electric eel) seems to be intimate.

The reading of Volta's letter to the Royal Society on June 26, 1800, its publication in the Society's _Philosophical Transactions_ (in French) immediately thereafter, and its publication in English in the _Philosophical Magazine_ for September 1800,[5] gave scientists throughout Europe an easily constructed and continuously operating electric generator with which innumerable new physical, chemical, and physiological experiments could be made. Editor-engineer William Nicholson read Volta's letter before its publication and, by the end of April, he and surgeon Anthony Carlisle had built a voltaic pile.

Applying a drop of water to improve the "connection" of a wire lying on a metal plate, they happened to notice gas bubbles forming on the wire, and pursued the observation to the point of identifying the electrical decomposition of water into hydrogen and oxygen.

Within two or three years innumerable electrochemical reactions had been described, some of which, one might think, could have served as operating principles for electrical instruments. Although the phenomena of gas formation and metal deposition were in fact widely used as crude indicators of the polarity and relative strength of voltaic piles and chemical cells during the period 1800-1820 (and the gas bubbles were made the basis of a telegraph receiver by S. T. Soemmering), the quant.i.tative laws of electrolysis were not worked out by Faraday until after 1830, and not until 1834 was he satisfied that the electrolytic decomposition of water was sufficiently well understood to be made the basis for a useful measuring instrument. Describing his water-electrolysis device in that year, he wrote:

The instrument offers the only _actual measurer_ [italics his] of voltaic electricity which we at present possess. For without being at all affected by variations in time or intensity, or alterations in the current itself, of any kind, or from any cause, or even of intermissions of actions, it takes note with accuracy of the quant.i.ty of electricity which has pa.s.sed through it, and reveals that quant.i.ty by inspection; I have therefore named it a VOLTAELECTROMETER.[6]

In pa.s.sing, Faraday commented that the efforts by Gay-Lussac and Thenard to use chemical decomposition as a "measure of the electricity of the voltaic pile" in 1811 had been premature because the "principles and precautions" involved were not then known. He also noted that the details of _metal deposition_ in electrolysis were still not sufficiently understood to permit its use in an instrument.[7]

The heating of the wires in electric circuits must have been observed so early and so often with both electrostatic and voltaic apparatus, that no one has bothered to claim or trace priorities for this "effect." The production of incandescence, however, and the even more dramatic combustion or "explosion" of metal-foil strips and fine wires has a good deal of recorded history. Among the first to burn leaf metal with a voltaic pile was J. B. Tromsdorff of Erfurt who noted in 1801 the distinctly different colors of the flames produced by the various common metals. In the succeeding few years, Humphry Davy at the Royal Inst.i.tution frequently, in his public lectures, showed wires glowing from electric current.

Early electrical instrumentation based on the heating effect took an unusual form. Shortly after 1800, W. H. Wollaston, an English M.D., learned a method for producing malleable platinum. He kept the process secret, and for several years enjoyed an extremely profitable monopoly in the sale of platinum crucibles, wire, and other objects. About 1810, he invented a technique for producing platinum wire as fine as a few millionths of an inch in diameter, that has since been known as "Wollaston wire." For several years preceding 1820, no other instrument could compare the "strengths" of two voltaic cells better than the test of the respective maximum lengths of this wire that they could heat to fusion. One can sympathize with c.u.mming's comment in 1821 about "the difficulty in soldering wires that are barely visible."[8]

Electrical Instrumentation, 1800-1820

The 20 years following the announcement of the voltaic-pile invention were years of intense experimental activity with this device. Many new chemical elements were discovered, beginnings were made on the electrochemical series of the elements, the electric arc and incandescent platinum wires suggested the possibilities of electric lighting, and various electrochemical observations gave promise of other practical applications such as metal-refining, electroplating, and quant.i.ty production of certain gases. Investigators were keenly aware that all of the available means for measuring and comparing the _electrical_ aspects of their experiments (however vaguely these "electrical aspects" may have been conceived), were slow, awkward, imprecise, and unreliable.

The atmosphere was such that prominent scientists everywhere were ready to pounce immediately on any reported discovery of a new electrical "effect," to explore its potentialities for instrumental purposes. Into this receptive environment came H. C. Oersted's announcement of the magnetic effects of a voltaic circuit, on July 21, 1820.[9]

[Ill.u.s.tration: Figure 2.--"GALVANOMETER" WAS THE NAME given by Bischof to this goldleaf electrostatic instrument in 1802, 18 years before Ampere coupled the word with the use of Oersted's electromagnetic experiment as an indicating device.]

Oersted's Discovery

Many writers have expressed surprise that with all the use made of voltaic cells after 1800, including the enormous cells that produced the electric arc and vaporized wires, no one for 20 years happened to see a deflection of any of the inevitable nearby compa.s.s needles, which were a basic component of the scientific apparatus kept by any experimenter at this time. Yet so it happened. The surprise is still greater when one realizes that many of the contemporary natural philosophers were firmly persuaded, even in the absence of positive evidence, that there _must_ be a connection between electricity and magnetism. Oersted himself held this latter opinion, and had been seeking electromagnetic relationships more or less deliberately for several years before he made his decisive observations.

His familiarity with the subject was such that he fully appreciated the immense importance of his discovery. This accounts for his employing a rather uncommon method of publication. Instead of submitting a letter to a scientific society or a report to the editor of a journal, he had privately printed a four-page pamphlet describing his results. This, he forwarded simultaneously to the learned societies and outstanding scientists all over Europe. Written in Latin, the paper was published in various journals in English, French, German, Italian and Danish during the next few weeks.[10]

In summary, he reported that a compa.s.s needle experienced deviations when placed near a wire connecting the terminals of a voltaic battery.

He described fully how the direction and magnitude of the needle deflections varied with the relative position of the wire, and the polarity of the battery, and stated "From the preceding facts, we may likewise collect that this conflict performs circles...." Oersted's comment that the voltaic apparatus used should "be strong enough to heat a metallic wire red hot" does not excuse the 20-year delay of the discovery.

Beginnings of Electromagnetic Instrumentation

The mere locating of a compa.s.s needle above or below a suitably oriented portion of a voltaic circuit created an electrical instrument, the moment Oersted's "effect" became known, and it was to this basic juxtaposition that Ampere quickly gave the name of galvanometer.[11] It cannot be said that the scientists of the day agreed that this instrument detected or measured "electric current," however. Volta himself had referred to the "current" in his original circuits, and Ampere used the word freely and confidently in his electrodynamic researches of 1820-1822, but Oersted did not use it first and many of the German physicists who followed up his work avoided it for several years. As late as 1832, Faraday could make only the rather noncommittal statement: "By current I mean anything progressive, whether it be a fluid of electricity or vibrations or generally progressive forces."[12]

Nevertheless, whatever the words or concepts they used, experimenters agreed that Oersted's apparatus provided a method of monitoring the "strength" of a voltaic circuit and a means of comparing, for example, one voltaic battery or circuit with another.

It was perfectly clear, from Oersted's pamphlet, that if a compa.s.s needle was deflected clockwise when the wire of a particular voltaic circuit lay above it in the magnetic meridian, the same needle would _also_ be deflected clockwise if the wire was turned end-for-end and placed _below_ the compa.s.s needle, without changing the rest of the circuit. Anyone perceiving this fact might deduce, as a matter of logic, that if the wire of the circuit was first pa.s.sed above the needle, in the magnetic meridian, then folded and returned in a parallel path below the needle, the deflecting effect on the needle would be repeated, and a more sensitive indicator would result, a.s.suming that any additional wire introduced has not affected the "circuit" excessively.

Since 1821, historical accounts of the origins of electromagnetism seem to have limited their credit a.s.signments for the conception and observation of this electromagnetic "doubling" effect (or "multiplying"

effect, if the folding is repeated) to three persons. Almost without exception, however, these accounts have given no specific information as to precisely what each of these three accomplished, what physical form their respective creations took, what experiments they performed, and what functional understanding they apparently had of the situation. The usual statement is simply that a compa.s.s needle was placed in a coil of wire.[13] The main purpose of the present review is to recount some of these details.

The following are the three candidates whose names are variously a.s.sociated with the "invention" of the first constructed electromagnetic instrument, or "multiplier," or primitive galvanometer.

JOHANN SALOMO CHRISTOPH SCHWEIGGER (1779-1857) in 1820 had already been editor for several years of the _Journal fur Chemie und Physik_, and was professor of chemistry at the University of Halle.