A Technique for Measuring Equilibrium Thermodynamic States of Liquid Metals at High Temperatures and Pressures

1972 
This paper presents a method for overcoming temperature and pressure limitations inherent in conventional techniques for measuring equilibrium thermodynamic data. The method can be applied to conducting materials that can be resistively heated and that do not dissociate in the liquid phase; and it is thus particularly suitable for investigating pure liquid‐metal thermodynamic data. The technique has been applied extensively to lead at temperatures exceeding 5000 K and at pressures up to 2 kilobars. A cylindrical material specimen 1 mm in diameter and 25 mm long is interposed between two current leads and mounted axially concentric with a high‐pressure cell. After the cell is pressurized with helium, a current pulse from the overdamped discharge of a high‐voltage capacitor bank heats the wire at such a rate that its expansion is nearly isobaric. The energy deposited in a central segment of the sample is computed by integrating the product of the current flowing in the segment with the resistive voltage dev...
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