Lexicographical Neighbors of Eutropic
Literary usage of Eutropic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mineralogy: An Introduction to the Scientific Study of Minerals by Henry Alexander Miers (1902)
"199), ie three elements giving rise to eutropic compounds, and they act as vicarious
... There can be little doubt that in an isomorphous series of eutropic ..."
2. Appletons' Annual Cyclopædia and Register of Important Events of the Year (1899)
"lions to each other as the molecular weight ; the volumes in a eutropic series
increase with increasing molecular or atomic weights; the weights of ..."
3. The School of Mines Quarterly by Columbia University School of Chemistry (1899)
"Members of eutropic (regular change) series are only distinguished in that they
contain different elements similar according to periodic system. eg, ..."
4. A Popular Guide to Minerals by Louis Pope Gratacap (1912)
"(8) In the combinations of K. Rb. Cs. with Cl, Br, and I forming 6 series, the
3 members of a series are never eutropic. (9) The four salts KG, KBr, RbCl, ..."
5. The School of Mines Quarterly by Columbia University School of Chemistry (1899)
"Members of eutropic (regular change) series are only distinguished in that they
contain different elements similar according to periodic system. eg, ..."
6. Iron and Steel (a Pocket Encyclopedia): Including Allied Industries and Sciences by Hugh Philip Tiemann (1919)
"The terms eutropic mixture and eutropic point (Rinne) were proposed to distinguish
changes going on during cooling after solidification from the eutectic ..."
7. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1910)
"The more exclusive " eutropic series " within each of these isomorphous series,
that is to say, the series in which the members exhibit the progression of ..."
8. Meteorites: Their Structure, Composition, and Terrestrial Relations by Oliver Cummings Farrington (1915)
"Hence he proposes the term eutropic instead of eutectic as it avoids the conception
of fusion. It is evident that further study of these points is desirable ..."