Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Arsenic hydrides reactions with

Inorganic As(III) and As(V) were determined by atomic absorption spectrometry using the hydride technique. Total inorganic arsenic, As(III) + As(V), was measured after a prereduction reaction of As(V) to As(III) in acidic solution containing potassium iodide and ascorbic acid. For the selective hydride formation of As(III), samples were maintained at pH 5.0 during the hydride reaction (with 3% NaBH4, 1% NaOH) with a citrate-sodium hydroxide buffer solution (31). As(V) was determined by difference between total As and As(III). The detection limit of As(III) and As(V) was 0.1 nM. The selectivity of this method was checked by additions of As(III) and As(V) to lake water 95-100% recovery of As(III) and As(V) was found (32). [Pg.473]

Certain volatile elements must be analyzed by special analytical procedures as irreproducible losses may occur during sample preparation and atomization. Arsenic, antimony, selenium, and tellurium are determined via the generation of their covalent hydrides by reaction with sodium borohydride. The resulting volatile hydrides are trapped in a liquid nitrogen trap and then passed into an electrically heated silica tube. This tube thermally decomposes these compounds into atoms that can be quantified by AAS. Mercury is determined via the cold-vapor... [Pg.248]

Ignition or explosive reaction with metals (e.g., aluminum, antimony powder, bismuth powder, brass, calcium powder, copper, germanium, iron, manganese, potassium, tin, vanadium powder). Reaction with some metals requires moist CI2 or heat. Ignites with diethyl zinc (on contact), polyisobutylene (at 130°), metal acetylides, metal carbides, metal hydrides (e.g., potassium hydride, sodium hydride, copper hydride), metal phosphides (e.g., copper(II) phosphide), methane + oxygen, hydrazine, hydroxylamine, calcium nitride, nonmetals (e.g., boron, active carbon, silicon, phosphoms), nonmetal hydrides (e.g., arsine, phosphine, silane), steel (above 200° or as low as 50° when impurities are present), sulfides (e.g., arsenic disulfide, boron trisulfide, mercuric sulfide), trialkyl boranes. [Pg.315]

SAFETY PROFILE Poison by ingestion and intraperitoneal routes. A trace mineral added to animal feeds. Potentially explosive reaction with charcoal + ozone, metals (e.g., powdered aluminum, copper), arsenic carbon, phosphoms, sulfur, alkali metal hydrides, alkaline earth metal hydrides, antimony sulfide, arsenic sulfide, copper sulfide, tin sulfide, metal cyanides, metal thiocyanates, manganese dioxide, phosphorus. Violent reaction with organic matter. When heated to decomposition it emits very toxic fumes of I and K2O. See also lODATES. [Pg.1164]

Reaction of arsenic hydrides with trialkyialuminum, -gallium and-indium derivatives... [Pg.846]

Reaction of arsenic hydrides with trialkyialuminum, -gallium and -indium has been useful for preparation of As—Al, As—Ga and As—In compounds with elimination of an alkane as shown in equations 221 , 222 , 223 and 224 . [Pg.846]

The arsenic-transition metal bond has been formed by reaction of arsenic hydrides with Co and Ir compounds (equations 243 , 244 and 245 ). [Pg.849]


See other pages where Arsenic hydrides reactions with is mentioned: [Pg.349]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.508]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.771]    [Pg.525]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.274]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.773]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.508]    [Pg.849]    [Pg.849]   


SEARCH



Arsenic hydrides

Arsenic reactions

Arsenic reactions with

Arsenous hydride

Hydrides reaction with

Hydriding reaction

Reactions hydrides

© 2024 chempedia.info