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Barium chlorate hypochlorite

Ammonium dichromate Barium chlorate Calcium chlorate/hypochlorite Chromium trioxide (chromic acid)... [Pg.234]

Ammonium dichromate Ammonium nitrate Ammonium perchlorate Ammonium permanganate Ammonium persulfate Amyl nitrate Barium bromate Barium chlorate Barium hypochlorite Barium perchlorate Barium permanganate Barium peroxide Bromine pentafluoride Bromine trifluoride l-Bromo-3-chloro-5,5-dimethylhydantoin (BCDMH)... [Pg.64]

Hydroxylamine is a powerful reducant, particularly when anhydrous, and if exposed to air on a fibrous extended surface (filter paper) it rapidly heats by aerobic oxidation. It explodes in contact with air above 70°C [1]. Barium peroxide will ignite aqueous hydroxylamine, while the solid ignites in dry contact with barium oxide, barium peroxide, lead dioxide and potassium permanganate, but with chlorates, bromates and perchlorates only when moistened with sulfuric acid. Contact of the anhydrous base with potassium dichromate or sodium dichromate is violently explosive, but less so with ammonium dichromate or chromium trioxide. Ignition occurs in gaseous chlorine, and vigorous oxidation occurs with hypochlorites. [Pg.1664]

In 1815, L. G. Gilbert1 noticed that thoroughly dried calcium oxide or hydroxide does not react chemically with dry chlorine, and similarly, in 1879, J. K. Weisherg showed that the same remark applies to dry barium or strontium oxide. The case is very different if moisture he present. With barium hydroxide two gram-atoms of chlorine are absorbed per gram-atom of the bivalent barium, and barium chloride and chlorate are produced so that if barium hypochlorite is formed as the first product of the reaction, it is immediately decomposed 3Ba(0Cl)2=Ba(C103)2 +2BaCl2 with calcium and strontium hydroxides, the reaction appears to he much... [Pg.258]

P. Grouvelle (1821)10 observed that a mol. of barium hydroxide absorbs two gram-atoms of chlorine, forming a product from which all the chlorine is expelled by carbon dioxide in two days. A. J. Balard (1834) says that the direct combination of hypochlorous acid with the powerful bases is accompanied by the development of much heat, and if the temp, is allowed to rise, the hypochlorite which may be formed changes into chlorate and chloride. By neutralizing a well-cooled soln. of the base with hypochlorous acid, A. J. Balard prepared soln. of calcium, strontium, and barium hypochlorites, the existence of which, he said, is incontestable and added that calcium and barium hypochlorites serve for the preparation of other hypo-... [Pg.272]

BENSULFOID (7704-34-9) Combustible solid (flash point 405°F/207°C). Finely divided dry materia forms explosive mixture with air. The vapor reacts violently with lithium carbide. Reacts violently with many substances, including strong oxidizers, aluminum powders, boron, bromine pentafluoride, bromine trifluoride, calcium hypochlorite, carbides, cesium, chlorates, chlorine dioxide, chlorine trifluoride, chromic acid, chromyl chloride, dichlorine oxide, diethylzinc, fluorine, halogen compounds, hexalithium disilicide, lampblack, lead chlorite, lead dioxide, lithium, powdered nickel, nickel catalysis, red phosphorus, phosphorus trioxide, potassium, potassium chlorite, potassium iodate, potassium peroxoferrate, rubidium acetylide, ruthenium tetraoxide, sodium, sodium chlorite, sodium peroxide, tin, uranium, zinc, zinc(II) nitrate, hexahydrate. Forms heat-, friction-, impact-, and shock-sensitive explosive or pyrophoric mixtures with ammonia, ammonium nitrate, barium bromate, bromates, calcium carbide, charcoal, hydrocarbons, iodates, iodine pentafluoride, iodine penloxide, iron, lead chromate, mercurous oxide, mercury nitrate, mercury oxide, nitryl fluoride, nitrogen dioxide, inorganic perchlorates, potassium bromate, potassium nitride, potassium perchlorate, silver nitrate, sodium hydride, sulfur dichloride. Incompatible with barium carbide, calcium, calcium carbide, calcium phosphide, chromates, chromic acid, chromic... [Pg.156]


See other pages where Barium chlorate hypochlorite is mentioned: [Pg.433]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.1269]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.1735]    [Pg.571]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.724]    [Pg.818]    [Pg.1101]    [Pg.1103]    [Pg.1120]    [Pg.379]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.272 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.272 ]




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Barium chlorate

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