Berkeley and Hartley's Method
Berkeley and Hartley (1904-1909) employed the technique of applying external pressure on the solution just enough to prevent osmosis. The osmometer used by them is shown in Figure. A porcelain tube with copper ferrocyanide membrane deposited in its walls is enclosed in a metallic jacket. The tube is fitted with a reservoir of pure solvent (water) at one end and a capillary tube at the other. Mechanical pressure can be applied on the solution with a piston connected to a pressure gauge.
Procedure The inner porcelain tube is filled with pure solvent and the jacket with the solution whose osmotic pressure is to be determined. The level of the solvent meniscus in the capillary tube will tend to move down as solvent flows into the solution across the membrane. Pressure is then applied through the piston so that the meniscus becomes stationary. It indicates that osmosis has been stopped and now the pressure recorded by the pressure gauge gives the osmotic pressure of the solution.
This method is superior to the older method of pfeffer in as much as:
(a) It is quick and accurate.
(b) It can be used for determining high osmotic pressures. The osmotic pressure being balanced by the external pressure, there is no strain left on the membrane and the danger of its bursting is eliminated.