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Ammonium solubility

The solubles weights are summarised in Figure 2. It can be seen that the water/ammonium solubles from the prehydrolysis correspond well to the glucomannan and extractives fraction of wood. [Pg.47]

Girard s reagents Quaternary ammonium salts of the type Me3NCH2CONHNH2 X which form water-soluble compounds with aldehydes and ketones, and are therefore separable from other neutral compounds the aldehyde or ketone may be subsequently regenerated after separation. [Pg.190]

Triton B Trade name for benzyltrimethyl-ammonium hydroxide usually as a 40% solution in methanol. A strong base, soluble in many solvents used as a catalyst. See phase transfer chemistry. [Pg.407]

By analogy, ammonium salts should behave as acids in liquid ammonia, since they produce the cation NH4 (the solvo-cation ), and soluble inorganic amides (for example KNHj, ionic) should act as bases. This idea is borne out by experiment ammonium salts in liquid ammonia react with certain metals and hydrogen is given off. The neutralisation of an ionic amide solution by a solution of an ammonium salt in liquid ammonia can be carried out and followed by an indicator or by the change in the potential of an electrode, just like the reaction of sodium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid in water. The only notable difference is that the salt formed in liquid ammonia is usually insoluble and therefore precipitates. [Pg.90]

Aqueous ammonia can also behave as a weak base giving hydroxide ions in solution. However, addition of aqueous ammonia to a solution of a cation which normally forms an insoluble hydroxide may not always precipitate the latter, because (a) the ammonia may form a complex ammine with the cation and (b) because the concentration of hydroxide ions available in aqueous ammonia may be insufficient to exceed the solubility product of the cation hydroxide. Effects (a) and (b) may operate simultaneously. The hydroxyl ion concentration of aqueous ammonia can be further reduced by the addition of ammonium chloride hence this mixture can be used to precipitate the hydroxides of, for example, aluminium and chrom-ium(III) but not nickel(II) or cobalt(II). [Pg.218]

Ammonium salts. Ammonium salts can be prepared by the direct neutralisation of acid by ammonia. The salts are similar to alkali metal salts and are composed of discrete ions. Most ammonium salts are soluble in water. Since ammonia is volatile and readily oxidisable the behaviour of ammonium salts to heat is particularly interesting. [Pg.221]

These substances, having the formula CjHjNHCONH, and OC(NHCjH6)j respectively, are both formed when an aqueous solution of urea and aniline hydrochloride is heated. Their subsequent separation is based on the fact that diphenylurca is insoluble in boiling water, whereas monophenylurea is readily soluble. The formation of these compounds can be explained as follows. When urea is dissolved in water, a small proportion of it undergoes molecular rearrangement back to ammonium cyanate, an equilibrium thus being formed. [Pg.125]

Caution.—If the ethanol used to extract the methylamine hydrochloride is not absolute, i.e., if it contains traces of water, considerably less than the above suggested quantity will be required for the extraction, because the solubility of the hydrochloride will be markedly increased by the water present. The recrystallised material will now, however, contain traces of ammonium chloride. [Pg.129]

A) Ammonium salts. All colourless solids readily soluble in cold water. [Pg.359]

In the isolation of organic compounds from aqueous solutions, use is frequently made of the fact that the solubility of many organic substances in water is considerably decreased by the presence of dissolved inorganic salts (sodium chloride, calcium chloride, ammonium sulphate, etc.). This is the so-called salting-out effect. A further advantage is that the solubility of partially miscible organic solvents, such as ether, is considerably less in the salt solution, thus reducing the loss of solvent in extractions. [Pg.151]

Dilute hydrochloric or sulphuric acid finds application in the extraction of basic substances from mixtures or in the removal of basic impurities. The dilute acid converts the base e.g., ammonia, amines, etc.) into a water-soluble salt e.g., ammonium chloride, amine hydrochloride). Thus traces of aniline may be separated from impure acetanilide by shaking with dilute hydrochloric acid the aniline is converted into the soluble salt (aniline hydrochloride) whilst the acetanilide remains unaffected. [Pg.151]

The absence of ammonium chloride and methylamine hydrochloride may be shown by the complete solubility of the product in chloroform. [Pg.417]

In aqueous solution at 100° the change is reversible and equilibrium is reached when 95 per cent, of the ammonium cyanate has changed into urea. Urea is less soluble in water than is ammonium sulphate, hence if the solution is evaporated, urea commences to separate, the equilibrium is disturbed, more ammonium cyanate is converted into urea to maintain the equilibrium and evfflitually the change into urea becomes almost complete. The urea is isolated from the residue by extraction with boiling methyl or ethyl alcohol. The mechanism of the reaction which is generally accepted involves the dissociation of the ammonium cyanate into ammonia and cyanic acid, and the addition of ammonia to the latter ... [Pg.441]

The interaction of iodoaobenzene and iodoxybenzene in the presence of aqueous sodium hydroxide yields the soluble diphenyllodonium iodate (IV) upon adding potassium iodide solution, the sparingly soluble diphenyliodonium iodide (V), analogous to ammonium iodide is precipitated ... [Pg.535]

Pheiiyl iso-thiocyanate may be prepared in quantity directly from aniline. Aniline, carbon disulphide and concentrated aqueous ammonia react to form the sparingly soluble ammonium phenyldithiocarbamate this is decomposed by lead nitrate to produce phenyl iso-thiocyanate ... [Pg.643]

The conversion of a carbonyl compound by ammonium polysulphide solution into an amide with the same number of carbon atoms is known as the Willgerodt reaction. The procedure has been improved by the addition of about 40 per cent, of dioxan or of pyridine to increase the mutual solubility of the ketone and aqueous ammonium polysulphide the requisite temperature is lowered to about and the yield is generally better. [Pg.923]

Footnote 4 - The solubility of Ammonium Chloride in absolute Ethanol is 0.6g/100g at 15C. The solubility in n-Butyl Alcohol is neglible, even at its boiling point. If you use n-Butyl Alcohol, you will only need to perform 3 reflux/filter operations to obtain sufficiently pure Methylamine Hydrochloride. [Pg.270]

Other sulfur compounds such as thiourea, ammonium dithiocarbamate, or hydrogen sulfide also lead to 2-mercaptothiazoles. Thus thiourea has been used in the syntheses of 4,5-dimethyl (369) and 4-aryl-2-mercapto-thiazoles (Table 11-30) (519). The reactions were carried out by condensing the ia -thiocyanatoketones with thiourea in alcohol and water acidified with hydrochloric acid. By this procedure, 4-aryl-2-mercaptothiazoles were obtained in yields of 40 to 80% with bis-(4-aryl-2-thiazolyl) sulfides as by-products (519). These latter products (194) have also been observed as a result of the action of thiourea on 2-chloro-4-arylthiazole under the same experimental conditions. They can be separated from 2-mercaptothiazoles because of their different degrees of solubility in sodium hydroxide solution at 5%. In this medium bis-(4-phenyl-2-thiazolyl)sulfide is... [Pg.276]

In spite of being ionic many quaternary ammonium salts dissolve m nonpolar media The four alkyl groups attached to nitrogen shield its positive charge and impart lipophilic character to the tetraalkylammonium ion The following two quaternary ammonium salts for example are soluble m solvents of low polarity such as benzene decane and halo genated hydrocarbons... [Pg.923]

Sodium cyanide does not dissolve m butyl bromide The two reactants contact each other only at the surface of the solid sodium cyanide and the rate of reaction under these con ditions IS too slow to be of synthetic value Dissolving the sodium cyanide m water is of little help because butyl bromide is not soluble m water and reaction can occur only at the interface between the two phases Adding a small amount of benzyltrimethyl ammonium chlonde however causes pentanemtnle to form rapidly even at room temper ature The quaternary ammonium salt is acting as a catalyst it increases the reaction rate How7... [Pg.923]

Sodium, potassium. All sodium, potassium, and ammonium salts are soluble. Exceptions ... [Pg.1182]


See other pages where Ammonium solubility is mentioned: [Pg.571]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.571]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.274]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.375]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.915]    [Pg.976]    [Pg.1059]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.367]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.301 ]




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