International Electrical Congress
The International Electrical Congress was a series of international meetings, from 1881 to 1904, in the then new field of applied electricity. The first meeting was initiated by the French government, including official national representatives, leading scientists, and others. Subsequent meetings also included official representatives, leading scientists, and others. Primary aims were to develop reliable standards, both in relation to electrical units and electrical apparatus.
Historical background
In 1881, both within and across countries, different electrical units were being used. There were at least 12 different units of electromotive force, 10 different units of electric current and 15 different units of resistance.[1]
A number of international Congresses were held, and sometimes referred to as International Electrical Congress, Electrical Conference, and similar variations. Secondary sources make different judgments about how to classify the Congresses. In this article, the Congresses with representatives from national governments are identified as International Electrical Congress. Other Congresses — often addressing the same issues — are identified here as Concurrent Related International Electrical Congresses. Some of these related conferences were devoted to preparing for an International Electrical Congress.
In 1906 the International Electrotechnical Commission was created.[2] Congresses were organised under its auspices were also sometimes referred to as International Electrical Congress. In this article, Congresses organized by the Commission are listed under International Electrotechnical Congresses, while other related Congresses are listed under Related International Electrotechnical Conferences.
International Electrical Congress
Source:[3]
1881 in Paris
Held from 15 September-5 October 1881, in connection with the
Important events
The three main topics for the Congress were: electrical units, improvements in international telegraphy, and various applications of electricity. It also resolved that an international committee should conduct new tests to determine the length of the column of mercury for measuring the ohm.
1893 in Chicago
Held from 21 to 25 August, in connection with the World's Columbian Exposition, with almost 500 participants.[9] Elisha Gray was the Congress president. A proceedings was published.[10]
- Refinements to the units of measurement, including the CGS electromagnetic system.[3] The units were named international to distinguish them from the 1881 proposal, hence International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units.[citation needed]
1900 in Paris
Held in 18–25 August in connection with the
- Dealt mainly with magnetic units.flux density (B).[14] This mistake has been reproduced in contemporary texts,[12] which have cited a mistaken report.[15] It is relevant to note that the Congress's official formulation for the gauss was in French, champ magnetique,[16] which would be translated into English as magnetic field, which has been used to refer both to (B) and (H), noted in magnetic field. In 1930 the International Electrotechnical Commission decided that the magnetic field strength (H) was different from the magnetic flux density (B), but now assigned the gauss to refer to magnetic flux density (B), in contrast to the decision from this Congress.[17]
1904 in St.Louis, Missouri
Held from 12 to 17 September 1904, in connection with the Louisiana Purchase Exposition[18][19]
- Recommended two permanent international commissions, one about electrical units and standards, the other about unification of nomenclature and characteristics of electrical machines and apparatus.[3] These recommendations are considered the seed that initiated the creation of the International Electrotechnical Commission in 1906.[20]
Concurrent Related International Electrical Congresses
During the period that the Electrical Congresses were held, other conferences and international Congresses were held, sometimes in preparation to the official Electrical Congresses. These events are listed here.
1882 in Paris
Conférence international pour la détermination des unités électriques (International Conference for Determination of Electrical Units)
Held 16–26 October. Was motivated by a resolution from the 1881 International Electrical Congress. A verbal transcript of the conference was published.[21]
1884 in Paris
International Conference for Determination of Electrical Units
1889 in Paris
International Congress of Electricians Held 24–31 August, in connection with
- Adopted several units, including practical units of power (watt) and work (joule),[22][23] where 1 watt = 107 erg/second, and 1 joule = 107 erg.[24] Considered practical magnetic units, but did not make any resolutions or recommendations.[14]
1891 in Frankfurt
Held 7–12 September,[25] in connection with the International Electrotechnical Exhibition[23] (Die Internationale Elektrotechnische Ausstellung 1891), organized by Elektrotechnische Gesellschaft.[4] Galileo Ferraris was a vice-president at the conference.[26] There were 715 participants (473 from Germany and 243 from other countries, including Austria, United Kingdom, USA, and France).[27] An official report of the conference was published.[28]
- Papers and discussions were organised in five main areas: Theory and Measuring Science; Strong Current Technology; Signalling, Telegraphy, and Telephony; Electrochemistry and Electric Current Applications; and Legislation to Mediate Conflicts between Cities around different currents used for electric lights, telephones, and telegraphs.[27][29]
1892 in Edinburgh
Held in connection with the
1896 in Geneva
Held 4–9 August, in connection with the Swiss National Exposition . Insufficient and late communication about the organization of the Congress hampered widespread participation, so that the conference had about 200 participants, mostly from Switzerland, Austria, Germany and Belgium.[31]
- Topics for discussion were magnetic units, photometric units, the long-distance transmission of power, the protection of high-tension lines against atmospheric discharge, and the problems and challenges of electric railway operation.[31]
International Electrotechnical Congress
1908 in London
International Conference on Electric Units and Standards. Held in October. Organized by the Commission on Electric Units and Standards of the International Electrotechnical Commission[20]
- Formal adoption of the "international units" (e.g., international ohm, international ampere), which were proposed originally in the 1893 meeting of the International Electrical Congress in Chicago.[32]
1911 in Turin
Held 10–17 September, organized by Associazione elettrotecnica italiana and the Italian Electrotechnical Committee of the International Electrotechnical Commission[33]
1915 in San Francisco
Was to be held 13–18 September, and organized by the American Institute of Electrical Engineers,[34] but was cancelled because of the outbreak of World War I.[35]
Related International Electrotechnical Conferences
1905 in Berlin
Internationale Konferenz über Elektrische Masseinheiten (International Conference on Electrical Units)
Held 23–25 October at
- Concentrated on the redefinition of the ohm, ampere, and volt, as resolved in the 1904 Congress. The aim was to attain true international uniformity in definitions of these concepts.international ampere.[40] It also adopted the Western Cadmium Cell as the standard cell,[40] and added rules about the preparation and use of the mercury tube, whose geometry was specified at the 1893 Congress.[41] The conference resolved that another international conference in the course of a year should be held to establish an agreement about the electric standards in use, because different countries had different laws about electrical units.[40]
1908 in Marseille
Held 14–19 September, in connection with the L'exposition internationale des applications de l'électricité.[33] A three-volume proceedings was published.[42]
References
- ^ a b Petley, B.W. (1994–95). "A Brief History of the Electrical Units to 1964". Metrologia. 31: 483.
- ^ "Overview: Summary". IEC History. International Electrotechnical Commission. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
- ^ a b c d e "Historical background". International Electrotechnical Commission. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
- ^ a b c d Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley.p. 77
- ^ Congrès International des électriciens, Paris 1881. Paris: G. Masson. 1882. (in French)
- ISBN 978-0-86341-237-0.
- ^ First Report of the Committee for the Selection and Nomenclature of Dynamical and Electrical Units. Forty-third Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. London: John Murray. 1874. p. 223. Retrieved 8 April 2018. (Committee members: Professor Joseph David Everett (reporter), Sir W Thomson, Professor GC Foster, Professor JC Maxwell, Mr GJ Stoney, Professor Flemming Jenkin, Dr. CW Siemens, Mr FJ Bramwell)
- ^ ISBN 978-0-86341-237-0.
- ^ Martin, T.C. (1894). "History of the Congress". Proceedings of the International Electrical Congress held in the City of Chicago August 21st to 25th, 1893. New York: American Institute of Electrical Engineers. p. xxii.
- ^ Proceedings of the International Electrical Congress. New York: American Institute of Electrical Engineers. 1894.
- .
- ^ ISBN 978-0-86341-237-0.
- ^ Congrès International d'électricité (in French). Paris: Gauthier-Villars. 1901.
- ^ PMID 16587728.
- ^ Kennelly, Arthur E. (5 March 1904). "A historical sketch of International Electrical Congresses". Electrical World and Engineer. Vol. 43. p. 468. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- ^ "Rapport de la Commission des Unités". Congrès International d'électricité (in French). Paris: Paris, Gauthier-Villars. 1901. p. 384.
- PMID 16587728.
- PMID 17740824.
- ^ Transactions of the Transactions of the International Electrical Congress, St. Louis, 1904. Albany, NY: J.B. Lyon. 1905.
- ^ a b "Founding of the IEC". International Electrotechnical Commission. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ^ Ministère des Affaires Étrangères (1882). Conférence international pour la détermination des unités électriques. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale. Retrieved 17 April 2018. (in French).
- ^ "Congress". Report of the United States Commissioners to the Universal Exposition of 1889 at Paris. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. 1891. pp. 18–20. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-86341-237-0.
- S2CID 119278961.
- S2CID 51638823.
- arXiv:1412.6981 [physics.hist-ph].
- ^ a b Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley. p. 134
- ^ International Elektrotechniker-Congress. Bericht uber die Verbandlungen der Hauptversammlungen. Frankfurt am Main: Johannes Alt, 1892.
- ^ "Table of Contents of papers presented in the sections" (PDF) (in German). Retrieved 21 April 2018.
- ^ "System of measurement units". Engineering and Technology History Wiki. 24 April 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ^ a b Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley. pp. 198–200.
- ^ Fleming, John Ambrose (1911). . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 738–745, see page 742.
An Electrical Congress was held in Chicago, U.S.A. in August 1893, to consider....after deliberation for six days, was a unanimous agreement to recommend the following resolutions as the definition of practical international units...
- ^ .
- .
- ISBN 978-0-86341-237-0.
- ^ a b Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley.pp. 243-244
- ^ Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley.p. 245
- ^ Internationale Konferenz über Elektrische Masseinheiten (1906). Verhandlungen der Internationalen konferenz über elektrische masseinheiten abgehalten in der Physikalischtechnischen reichsanstalt zu Charlottenburg vom 23. bis 25. oktober 1905. Reichsdruckerei. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley.p. 351
- ^ ISBN 978-0-86341-237-0.
- ^ Lagerstrom, L.R. (1992). Constructing uniformity: The standardization of international electromagnetic measures, 1860-1912 (doctoral dissertation). University of California, Berkeley.p. 247
- ^ Congrès international des applications de l'électricité Marseille (3 vol.) (in French). Paris: Gauthier-Villars. 1909.