Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Silver absorption

I he methyl iodide is transferred quantitatively (by means of a stream of a carrier gas such as carbon dioxide) to an absorption vessel where it either reacts with alcoholic silver nitrate solution and is finally estimated gravimetrically as Agl, or it is absorbed in an acetic acid solution containing bromine. In the latter case, iodine monobromide is first formed, further oxidation yielding iodic acid, which on subsequent treatment with acid KI solution liberates iodine which is finally estimated with thiosulphate (c/. p. 501). The advantage of this latter method is that six times the original quantity of iodine is finally liberated. [Pg.497]

Sensitizers as well as desensitizers form a reversal oxidoreduction system with silver halides, according to both pH and pAg of the photographic emulsion. But besides the specific influence of the emulsion, the efficiency of a sensitizing dye depends on many other factors such as its adsorption, its spectral absorption, the energetic transfer yield, the dye aggregate to the silver halide, and finally on its desensitizing property in... [Pg.78]

The attenuated total reflectance (ATR) technique is used commonly in the near-infrared for obtaining absorption spectra of thin Aims and opaque materials. The sample, of refractive index i, is placed in direct contact with a material which is transparent in the region of interest, such as thallium bromide/thallium iodide (known as KRS-5), silver chloride or germanium, of relatively high refractive index so that Then, as Figure 3.f8... [Pg.64]

Carbonate is measured by evolution of carbon dioxide on treating the sample with sulfuric acid. The gas train should iaclude a silver acetate absorber to remove hydrogen sulfide, a magnesium perchlorate drying unit, and a CO2-absorption bulb. Sulfide is determined by distilling hydrogen sulfide from an acidified slurry of the sample iato an ammoniacal cadmium chloride solution, and titrating the precipitated cadmium sulfide iodimetrically. [Pg.175]

Acetylene can be deterrnined volumetricaHy by absorption in Aiming sulfuric acid (or more conveniently in sulfuric acid activated with silver sulfate) or by reaction with silver nitrate in solution and titration of the nitric acid formed ... [Pg.377]

Spectral Sensitization. The intrinsic absorption, and therefore the intrinsic photographic sensitivity, of silver bromide and silver iodobromide microcrystals falls off rapidly for wavelengths greater than 500 nm (see Fig. 2). In fact, silver chloride crystals have almost no sensitivity in the visible... [Pg.448]

Some properties of silver are summarized in Table 1. The solar energy transmittance and neutron-absorption characteristics of silver are shown in Eigures 1 and 2, respectively. Thermal properties are given in Table 2. Other properties are given in References 1,3, and 4. [Pg.80]

Hydrogen and Nitrogen. Silver dissolves about 0.02 mL of hydrogen per mL of Ag at 600° C, and 0.05 mL at 900°C. Nitrogen, insoluble in silver, is a suitable atmosphere for casting and melting silver to avoid oxygen absorption. [Pg.83]

Highly sensitive iastmmental techniques, such as x-ray fluorescence, atomic absorption spectrometry, and iaductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry, have wide appHcation for the analysis of silver ia a multitude of materials. In order to minimize the effects of various matrices ia which silver may exist, samples are treated with perchloric or nitric acid. Direct-aspiration atomic absorption (25) and iaductively coupled plasma (26) have silver detection limits of 10 and 7 l-lg/L, respectively. The use of a graphic furnace ia an atomic absorption spectrograph lowers the silver detection limit to 0.2 l-ig/L. [Pg.91]

The side-chain chlorine contents of benzyl chloride, benzal chloride, and benzotrichlorides are determined by hydrolysis with methanolic sodium hydroxide followed by titration with silver nitrate. Total chlorine determination, including ring chlorine, is made by standard combustion methods (55). Several procedures for the gas chromatographic analysis of chlorotoluene mixtures have been described (56,57). Proton and nuclear magnetic resonance shifts, characteristic iafrared absorption bands, and principal mass spectral peaks have been summarized including sources of reference spectra (58). Procedures for measuring trace benzyl chloride ia air (59) and ia water (60) have been described. [Pg.61]


See other pages where Silver absorption is mentioned: [Pg.160]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.473]    [Pg.480]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.493]    [Pg.494]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.440]    [Pg.441]    [Pg.443]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.450]    [Pg.450]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.403]    [Pg.410]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.420]    [Pg.468]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.103 , Pg.104 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.566 ]




SEARCH



Absorption gold-silver complexes

Absorption silver bromide

Absorption silver chloride

Silver compounds absorption

Silver thiocyanate absorption

© 2024 chempedia.info