Eu`di*om"e*ter (?), n. [Gr. &?; fair,
clear weather, fr. &?; fine, clear ( said of the air or weather) +
-meter: cf. F. ediomètre.] (Chem.)
An instrument for the volumetric measurement of gases; -- so
named because frequently used to determine the purity of the
air.
&fist; It usually consists of a finely graduated and calibrated
glass tube, open at one end, the bottom; and having near the top a
pair of platinum wires fused in, to allow the passage of an electric
spark, as the process involves the explosion and combustion of one of
the ingredients to be determined. The operation is conducted in a
trough of mercury, or sometimes over water. Cf. Burette.
Ure's eudiometer has the tube bent in the form of the letter.
U.