1. 1884.Journal of the Russian Physico-Chem. Soc., In thefor(and also in the Journal of the Chem. Soc. London, 1884), I stated that the expansion of liquids may be approximately expressed (at a point far removed from their passage into another state and within the range of the ordinary accuracy of determinations) by an equation of the form St=So(1–kt); and although in various quarters doubts were entertained as to the generality of such a law (especially by Avenarius and Grimaldi), on the other hand, not less weighty proofs of its applicability were brought forward (notably by Thorpe and Rücker, Kraiewicz and Konovaloff); so that the question of a general law for the expansion of liquids must be considered as having just entered upon its first phases of historical development. Just as when elaborating my first article (Journal of the Russ. Physico-Chem. Soc. 1884, p. 7), I then considered the question of the expansion of water as unique, and as requiring special determination, so now I maintain that the working out of this problem will advance the very idea of the general law of the expansion of liquids. I trust to return to this subject shortly
2. XX.—On a relation between the critical temperatures of bodies and their thermal expansions as liquids
3. XXVIII. On the liquefaction of oxygen and the critical volumes of fluids