Using multinucleate cells of Nitella 2 or 3 inches in length it is possible to kill one end with chloroform without producing at the other any immediate alteration which can be detected by our present methods.
When a spot in external contact with sap is killed its potential difference falls approximately to zero and it is therefore possible to measure the potential difference across the protoplasm at any desired point merely by leading off from that point to the one where the protoplasm has been killed.
The results indicate that the inner and outer protoplasmic surfaces differ, for when both surfaces are in contact with the same solution (cell sap) there is an electromotive force of about 15.9 millivolts, the inner surface being positive to the outer (i.e. the positive current tends to flow from the inner surface through the electrometer to the outer surface). The situation resembles that in Valonia where the corresponding value (with Valonia sap applied to the outside) has been reported as about 14.5 millivolt (the inner surface being positive to the outer). It would seem appropriate to designate this as radial polarity.