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Ammonium chlorate hydrogen fluoride

Aminobiphenyl, 4-Aminocarb Aminopyridine, 4-Amiton Amitrole Ammonia Ammonia solutions Ammonium acetate Ammonium benzoate Ammonium bicarbonate Ammonium bisulphite Ammonium carbamate Ammonium carbonate Ammonium chlorate Ammonium chloride Ammonium chromate Ammonium citrate Ammonium dichromate Ammonium fluoride Ammonium hydrogen fluoride Ammonium hydrogen sulfate Ammonium hydroxide Ammonium nitrate Ammonium nitrate fertihzers Ammonium oxalate Ammonium phosphates Ammonium picrate Ammonium sulfamate Ammonium sulfate Ammonium sulfide Ammonium sulfite Ammonium tartrate Amyl acetate... [Pg.978]

Colorimetric Methods are used only for the estimation of very small percentages of vanadium, e.g. in vanadium steels and alloys. The most important depend on the intensity of the reddish-brown colour produced by the action of hydrogen peroxide on an acid vanadate solution.3 If chromium is present, an equal amount must be introduced into the standard vanadium solution under the same conditions of temperature, acid concentration, etc. Phosphoric acid is added to destroy any yellow colour due to ferric iron, and either hydrofluoric acid or ammonium fluoride to destroy any colour produced by titanium.4 A colorimetric method for the simultaneous estimation of small quantities of titanium and vanadium has also been worked out.5 Other colorimetric processes are based on (a) the formation of a yellow to black coloration, due to aniline black, in the presence of aniline hydrochloride and potassium chlorate or other oxidising agent,6 and (b) the orange coloration finally produced when an acid solution of a vanadate is brought into contact with strychnine sulphate.7... [Pg.114]

Violent reactions with ammonium salts, chlorate salts, beryllium fluoride, boron diiodophosphide, carbon tetrachloride + methanol, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, 1,2-dibromoethane, halogens or interhalogens (e.g., fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine vapor, chlorine trifluoride, iodine heptafluoride), hydrogen iodide, metal oxides + heat (e.g., beryllium oxide, cadmium oxide, copper oxide, mercury oxide, molybdenum oxide, tin oxide, zinc oxide), nitrogen (when ignited), silicon dioxide powder + heat, polytetrafluoroethylene powder + heat. [Pg.849]

CADMIO (Spanish) or CADMIUM (7440-43-9) Cd Air exposure, especially of powdered form, may cause chemical to self-ignite. Finely divided material reacts violently with strong oxidizers, fused ammonium nitrate, bromine pentafluoride, lithium, nitryl fluoride, phosphorus trichloride, potassium chlorate carbon dioxide + heat, hydrozoic acid (possible explosion), nitric oxide, tellurium. Contact with acid forms explosive hydrogen gas. Contact with hexafluorobenzene forms a heat-sensitive explosive compound. May react with selenium, elemental sulfur, zinc. On small fires, use dry chemical powder (such as Puiple-K-Powder), foam, Halon, or CO2 extinguishers. [Pg.195]

COBALT (7440-48-4) An extreme fire hazard. Pyrophoric particles or dust can self-ignite in air. Violent reaction with acetylene, ammonium nitrate, bromine pentafluoride, bromine trifluoride, cumene hydroperoxide, hydrogen peroxide (90%), nitryl fluoride, organic peroxides forms explosive mixture with potassium chlorate. Incompatible with sodium borohydride. Capable of promoting the decomposition of many organic materials. [Pg.343]


See other pages where Ammonium chlorate hydrogen fluoride is mentioned: [Pg.418]    [Pg.420]    [Pg.934]    [Pg.485]    [Pg.487]    [Pg.590]    [Pg.895]    [Pg.1108]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.940]    [Pg.975]    [Pg.1096]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.724]    [Pg.818]    [Pg.981]    [Pg.984]    [Pg.1101]    [Pg.1103]    [Pg.1104]    [Pg.1114]    [Pg.1114]    [Pg.1120]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.183 ]




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