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Acetic acid, aluminum salt

Acetic acid, allyl ester. See Allyl acetate Acetic acid, aluminum salt. See Aluminum acetate... [Pg.33]

CAS 139-12-8 EINECS/ELINCS 205-354-1 Synonyms Acetic acid, aluminum salt Aluminum acetate, basic Aluminum hydroxide acetate Aluminum subacetate Hydroxyaluminum di (acetate)... [Pg.179]

Aluminum has high resistance to atmospheric conditions as well as to industrial fumes and vapors and fresh, brackish, or salt waters. Many mineral acids attack aluminum, although the metal can be used with concentrated nitric acid (above 82 percent) and glacial acetic acid. Aluminum cannot be used with strong caustic solutions. [Pg.2450]

Synonym Neatsfoot Oil Necatorina Nechexane Neutral Ahhonium Pluoride Neutral Anhydrous Calcium Hypochlorite Neutral Lead Acetate Neutral Nicotine Sulfate Neutral Potassium Chromate Neutral Sodium Chromatetanhydrous Neutral Verdigris Nickel Acetate Nickel Acetate Tetrahyorate Nickel Ammonium Sulfate Nickel Ammonium Sulfate Hexahydrate Nickel Bromide Nickel Bromide Trihydrate Nickel Carbonyl Nickel Chloride Nickel Chloride Nickel Cyanide Nickel Iiu Fluoborate Nickel Fluoroborate Solution Nickel Fluoroborate Nickel Formate Nickel Formate Dihyorate Nickel Nitrate Nickel Nitrate Hexahydrate Nickel Sulfate Nickel Tetracarbokyl Nickelous Acetate Nickelous Sulfate Nicotine Nicotine Sulfate Nifos Nitralin Nitram O-Nitraniline P-Nitraniline Nitric Acid Nitric Acid, Aluminum Salt Nitric Acid, Iron (111) Salt Compound Name Oil Neatsfoot Carbon Tetrachloride Neohexane Ammonium Fluoride Calcium Hypochlorite Lead Acetate Nicotine Sulfate Potassium Chromate Sodium Chromate Copper Acetate Nickel Acetate Nickel Acetate Nickel Ammonium Sulfate Nickel Ammonium Sulfate Nickel Bromide Nickel Bromide Nickel Carbonyl Nickel Chloride Nickel Chloride Nickel Cyanide Nickel Fluoroborate Nickel Fluoroborate Nickel Fluoroborate Nickel Formate Nickel Formate Nickel Nitrate Nickel Nitrate Nickel Sulfate Nickel Carbonyl Nickel Acetate Nickel Sulfate Nicotine Nicotine Sulfate Tetraethyl Pyrophosphate Nitralin Ammonium Nitrate 2-Nitroaniline 4-Nitroaniline Nitric Acid Aluminum Nitrate Ferric Nitrate... [Pg.69]

Copper acetate, ferrous acetate, silver acetate [563-63-3] basic aluminum acetate, nickel acetate [373-02-4] cobalt acetate, and other acetate salts have been reported to furnish anhydride when heated. In principle, these acetates could be obtained from low concentration acetic acid. CompHcations of soHds processing and the scarcity of knowledge about these thermolyses make industrial development of this process expensive. In the eady 1930s, Soviet investigators discovered the reaction of dinitrogen tetroxide [10544-72-6] and sodium acetate [127-09-3] to form anhydride ... [Pg.78]

Metals in contact with timber can be corroded by the acetic acid of the timber and by treatment chemicals present in it. Treatment chemicals include ammonium sulfate and ammonium phosphate flame-retardants. These are particularly corrosive towards steel, aluminum and copper alloys. Preservative treatments include copper salts which, at high timber moisture contents, are corrosive towards steel, aluminum alloys and zinc-coated items. [Pg.903]

Aluminum in solution of its salts is detected by the reaction (1) with ammonium salt of aurin tricarboxylic acid ( aluminon ), which yields a red precipitate persisting in NH4OH solution, (2) with alizarin red S. which yields a bright red precipitate persisting in acetic acid solution. [Pg.65]

For the preparation of MIPM, the above phenol, 2,5-dimethoxyphenol was isopropylated with isopropyl bromide in methanolic KOH giving 2,5-dimethoxy-l-(i)-propoxybenzene as an oil. This formed the benzaldehyde with the standard Vilsmeier conditions, which melted at 77-78 °C from hexane and which gave a yellow malononitrile derivative melting at 171.5-173 °C. The nitrostyrene, from nitroethane in acetic acid was orange colored and melted at 100-101 °C from either methanol or hexane. This was reduced with lithium aluminum hydride in ether to give 2,5-dimethoxy-4-(i)-propoxyamphetamine hydrochloride (MIPM). The properties of the isolated salt were strange (soluble in acetone but not in water) and the microanalysis was low in the carbon value. The molecular structure had a pleasant appeal to it, with a complete reflection symmetry shown by the atoms of the amphetamine side chain and the isopropoxy side chain. But the nature of the actual product in hand had no appeal at all, and no assay was ever started. [Pg.179]

The more common salts of aluminum, such as the nitrate, the sulfate, and the many double sulfates (alums) need not be redescribed here. It should be noted, however, that aluminum hydroxide is such an extremely weak and insoluble base that aluminum salts of weak acids (the acetate, cyanide, and sulfide) are almost completely hydrolyzed in contact with aqueous systems. [Pg.133]

Similarly, the nitride, carbide, cyanide, carboxylate, and carbonate salts of aluminum are unstable in aqueous solution. Aluminum salts of strong acids form solutions of the hydrated cation (see Hydrates). These solutions are acidic owing to the partial dissociation of one of the coordinated water molecules (equation 6), the p/fa of [A1(H20)6] + being 4.95 (see Acidity Constants). Note that this is quite similar to that of acetic acid. The second step in the hydrolysis reaction yields a dihydroxide species that undergoes condensation to form polynuclear cations (see Section 8). Antiperspirants often include an ingredient called aluminum chlorhydrate that is really a mixture of the chloride salts of the monohydroxide and dihydroxide aluminum cations. The aluminum in these compounds causes pores on the surface of the skin to contract leading to a reduction in perspiration. [Pg.132]

Dihydro- (93) and 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinoline Reissert compounds (94) can be the azomethine ylide precursors for the above purpose 93 is readily available from quinolines, acyl chlorides, trimethylsilyl cyanide, and aluminum chloride, and 94 by catalytic hydrogenation of 93. These Reissert compounds are first O-protonated with HBF in acetic acid or CF3SO3H in dichloromethane and the resulting salts, 95 and 95, are then heated... [Pg.268]

Other specialized alloys have also been used to prepare skeletal metal catalysts. Raney ruthenium has been prepared from the ruthenium aluminum alloy. 20 A colloidal platinum has been prepared by the action of acetic acid on a platinum lithium alloy. l Skeletal nickel catalysts have been made from a number of intermetallic compounds of nickel with the rare earth elements, lanthanum and samarium. The rare earth element is removed from the alloy by reaction with diiodoethane or dibromoethane which convert the rare earths to the soluble halide salts. 22 Several multicomponent catalysts have also been prepared from the corresponding aluminum alloys. 23-126... [Pg.250]


See other pages where Acetic acid, aluminum salt is mentioned: [Pg.33]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.2709]    [Pg.2686]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.457]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.556]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.795]    [Pg.1301]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.334]    [Pg.971]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.1265]    [Pg.571]    [Pg.363]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.266 ]




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Acetic acid aluminum acetate

Aluminum Salt

Aluminum acetate

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