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Ammonia anhydrous, incompatibilities with

AMMONIUM OXALATE, ANHYDROUS (1113-38-8) CjHsNj04 (Fire Rating 1). Incompatible with acids, ammonium acetate furfliryl alcohol, silver, sodium chlorite, sodium hypochlorite oxidizers. Attacks many metals. Heat of decomposition or fire produces fumes of ammonia, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, formic acid. Attacks steel. On small fires, use foam, dry powder, water, or CO2 extinguishers. [Pg.73]

AMOIL (131-18-0) see diamyl phthalate. AMONIACO ANHIDRO (Spanish) (7664-41-7) see ammonia, anhydrous. AMORPHOUS SILICA (68855-54-9 61790-53-2 112945-52-5, fumed 7631-86-9, hydrated) (60676-86-0, fused) SiOj Noncombustible solid. Contact with strong oxidizers chlorine trifluoride fluorine, oxygen difluoride, peroxides and hydroperoxides, or chlorine trifluoride may cause fire. Incompatible with strong acids metallic oxides at elevated temperatures. AMOXONE (94-75-7) see 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. [Pg.76]

CARBON OXYCHLORIDE (75-44-5) COCI2 Highly toxic and corrosive gas. Deconqioses slowly with water, producing hydrochloric acid and carbon oxides. Deconqjoses above 572°F/300°C, forming toxic and corrosive gases of hydrogen chloride and carbon monoxide chlorine. Reacts violently with strong oxidizers, amines, alkalis, anhydrous ammonia, isopropanol, chemically active metals aluminum, silicon tetrahydride, sodium. Forms shock-sensitive material with potassium. Incompatible with tert-alcohols. [Pg.219]

COPPER (7440-50-8) Cu The powder forms the friction-, heat-, or shock-sensitive explosive detonator, copper acetylide, with acetylene gas acetylenic compounds and ethylene oxides. The powder forms explosive materials with azides (e.g., sodium azide forms potentially explosive copper azide). Finely divided material forms friction-, heat-, or shock-sensitive explosive with powdered divided bromates, chlorates, and iodates of barimn, calcimn, magnesium, potassium, sodium, or zinc. Violent reaction, possibly explosive, when finely dispersed powder comes in contact with strong oxidizers ammonium nitrate alkynes, bromine vapor, calcium carbide, chlorine, ethylene oxide, hydrazine mononitrate, hydrogen peroxide, hydrogen sulfide, finely divided bromates, iodine, lead azide, potassium peroxide, sodium peroxide (incandescence), sulfuric acid. Incompatible with acids, anhydrous ammonia chemically active metals such as potassium, sodium, magnesium, and zinc, zirconium, strong bases. [Pg.278]

FERROUS SULFATE or FERROUS (II) SULFATE or FERROUS SULFATE, ANHYDROUS (7720-78-7 7782-63-0, heptahydrate) Fei(S04)j Fe2(S04)j 7Hi0 (heptahydrate) Aqueous solution is strongly acidic. Reacts violently with strong bases, amines, amides, and inorganic hydroxides. Inconpatible with strong oxidizers. Aqueous solution is incompatible with sulfuric acid, caustics, alkylene oxides, ammonia, aliphatic amines, alkanolamines, amides, epichlorohydrin, organic anhydrides, isocyanates, methyl isocyanoacetate, vinyl acetate. Corrosive to copper and its copper alloys and to mild and galvanized steels. FERRO YELLOW (1306-23-6) see cadmium sulfide. [Pg.498]

MERCURIC BICHLORIDE (7487-94-7) HgClj Contact with acids or acid fumes evolves chloride and mercury vapors. Possible violent reaction with chlorine nitrate, sodium acetylide. Incompatible with albumin, alkalis, alkaloid salts, anhydrous ammonia, antimony, arsenic, borax, bromides, carbonates, chloric acid, copper, formates, gelatin, hydrozoic acid, infusions of cinchona, iron, lead and silver salts, lime water, light metals, methyl isocyanoacetate, oak bark or senna, phosphates, potassium, reduced iron, sodiiun, sodium peroxyborate, sulfides, sulfites, tannic acids, trinitrobenzoic acid, urea nitrate, vegetable astringents. Decomposed by sunlight. On small fires, use water spray, fog, foam, dry chemical powder, or CO2 extinguishers. [Pg.650]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.189 ]




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Anhydrous ammonia

Incompatability

Incompatibility

Incompatibility Incompatible

Incompatible

Incompatibles

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