Volume ratio is equal to volume (VA) of one component and volume (VB) of other component’s proportion.
Volumetry consists of adding an equivalent amount of a reagent of exactly known concentration to the analyte. From stechiometrical proportion and added volume of reagent the quantity of matter in question can be calculated.
The Italian physicist Alessandro Giuseppe Antonio Anastasio Volta (1745-1827) was the inventor of the voltaic pile, the first electric battery (1800). In 1775 he invented the electrophorus, a device that, once electrically charged by having been rubbed, could transfer charge to other objects. Between 1776 and 1778, Volta discovered and isolated methane gas (CH4). The electrical unit known as the volt was named in his honor.
Voltaic pile was the first device that produced a continuous electric current. The first piles constructed by the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta (1745-1827) in 1800 comprised alternating silver and zinc discs separated by cardboard soaked in brine. The pile can be stacked as high as you like, and each layer will increase the voltage by a fixed amount.
Volume concentration (σ) is equal to volume (VA) of solute and volume (V) of solution proportion. Volume concentration differs from volume fraction because the sum of solution components volume is almost always different than the solution volume.
Volume fraction (φA) is defined as
where VA is the volume of the specified component and the Vi are the volumes of all the components of a mixture prior to mixing.
Volumetric flasks are bottles made of glass, in a pear like in shape with long thin necks and flat bottoms. All come with a ground glass stopper for a tight seal. Volume marking is cut in glass with fluoride acid around the neck, so that parallax should be avoided (flask is put in front of the eyes so that one can see only a straight horizontal line). A volumetric flask is calibrated to contain (TC or In) the indicated volume of water at 20 °C when the bottom of the meniscus is adjusted to just rest on the center of the line marked on the neck of the flask. They are used for preparing the exactly known volume of sample solution and standard solutions of reagents. On each flask with volume designation a temperature on which the flask has been calibrated is designated.
Volumetric pipettes (transfer or belly pipette) are used in volumetric analysis, when there is a need for taking exact smaller volume of a sample solution or reagent. The upper tube of volumetric pipette has a ringlike marking (mark) which marks its calibrated volume. Pipettes calibrated to deliver (TD or Ex) the indicated volume. By sucking in (with mouth, propipette or a water pump) the liquid is pulled in a little bit above the mark and the opening of the pipet is closed with a forefingertip. Outer wall of pipet is wiped and, with a slight forefinger loosening, the liquid is released until it reaches the mark. Mark must figure as a tangent on a lower edge of the liquid meniscus. A pipette is emptied out by lifting the forefinger off and letting the liquid flow out of the pipette freely. After another 15 s and the tip of the pipette is pulled onto the inner wall of the vessel. It is absolutely forbidden to blow out the contents of the pipette.
Accumulator (secondary cell, storage battery) is a type of voltaic cell or battery that can be recharged by passing current through it from an external D.C. supply. The charging current reverses the chemical reactions in the cell. The common types are the lead-acid accumulator and the nickel-cadmium cell.
Generalic, Eni. "Volt." Croatian-English Chemistry Dictionary & Glossary. 29 June 2022. KTF-Split. {Date of access}. <https://glossary.periodni.com>.
Glossary
Periodic Table