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Ammonia, hazards reaction with sodium

EXPLOSION and FIRE CONCERNS noncombustible gas NFPA rating Health 4, Flammability 0, Reactivity 1 hazardous reactions with aluminum, potassium, sodium, and lithium reacts violently with sodium azide, isopropyl aleohol, tert-butyl azido formate, hexadiyn-1,6-diol, and hexfluoroisopropylideneamino lithium emits toxic and corrosive fumes of carbon monoxide and chlorine when heated to decomposition or on contact with water or steam use water spray or neutralize with sodium hydroxide or anhydrous ammonia for firefighting purposes. [Pg.838]

The resistance of the furoxan ring to chemical attack allows derivatives to be prepared via the reactions of the substituents (Section 4.22.3.4). Carboxylic acids are available by permanganate oxidation of methyl derivatives or by hydrolysis of the corresponding esters reaction with ammonia affords carboxamides. Acylfuroxans provide a source of hydroxyalkyl compounds by reduction, and oximes, for example, via nucleophilic addition. Acylation and oxidation of aminofuroxans allows the amide and nitro derivatives to be prepared. Nucleophilic displacements of nitro substituents can take place, but can be somewhat hazardous on account of the explosive nature of these compounds. Alkoxy derivatives are formed with sodium alkoxide, while reaction with thiolate anions yields sulfides, from which sulfones can be synthesized by peracid oxidation. Nitrofuroxans have also been reduced to... [Pg.423]

SULFUROUS OXIDE (7446-09-5) SO, Noncombustible liquefied gas under pressure or liquid. Contact with air forms hydrogen chloride fumes. Violent reaction with water or steam, forming sulfurous acid, a medium-strong acid and corrosion hazard. Reacts violently with acetylene, acrolein, alcohols, aluminum powder alkali metals (i.e., potassium, sodium) amines, ammonia, bromine pentafluoride butadiene caustics, cesium acetylene carbide chlorates, chlorine trifluoride chromium powder copper or copper alloy powders chlorine, diethylzinc, fluorine, ethylene oxide lead dioxide lithium acetylene carbide diamino-, metal powders monolithium acetylide-ammonia nitryl chloride potassium acetylene carbide potassium acetylide, potassium chlorate rubidium carbide silver azide sodium acetylide staimous oxide. Decon oses in... [Pg.981]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.21 ]




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Ammonia reaction

Ammonia with sodium

Ammonia, hazards

Hazardous reactions

Reaction with ammonia

Sodium reaction with

Sodium-ammonia

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