In his 1749 " Elemens de Chymie Theorique ", Macquer builds on Geoffroy s 1718 affinity table, by devoting a whole chapter to the topic of chemical affinity:
22.
Electrodes'ability to produce pseudocapacitance strongly depends on the electrode materials'chemical affinity to the ions adsorbed on the electrode surface as well as on the electrode pore structure and dimension.
23.
The German writer Goethe was a friend of D�bereiner, attended his lectures weekly, and used his theories of chemical affinities as a basis for his famous 1809 novella Elective Affinities
24.
Sylvius also introduced the concept of chemical affinity as a way to understand the way the human body uses salts and contributed greatly to the understanding of digestion and of bodily fluids.
25.
It may appear, according to circumstances, as motion, chemical affinity, cohesion, electricity, light and magnetism; and from any one of these forms it can be transformed into any of the others ."
26.
Wilhelm Ostwald, 1909 Nobel Laureate, started his experimental work in 1875, with an investigation on the law of mass action of water in relation to the problems of chemical affinity, with special emphasis on electrochemistry and chemical dynamics.
27.
The novel is based on the metaphor of human laws of chemical affinity, and examines whether or not the science and laws of chemistry undermine or uphold the institution of marriage, as well as other human social relations.
28.
The Intercaldera Sequence comprises formations that crop out from overlying flows in triangularly shaped area, and includes thick volcanic ash ( tuff ), thick breccia layers, and intermediate to felsic igneous rocks that tend to hotspot ) type chemical affinities.
29.
The ability of electrodes to accomplish pseudocapacitance effects by redox reactions, intercalation or electrosorption strongly depends on the chemical affinity of electrode materials to the ions adsorbed on the electrode surface as well as on the structure and dimension of the electrode pores.
30.
Although flies and butterflies diverged from a common ancestor some 200 million years ago, the DNA structure of their genes is still similar enough that fragments of fruit-fly genes could be used to tag, through chemical affinity, their long lost cousins in butterfly cells.