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Carbon halides elemental halogens

Covalent hahdes can be prepared by various synthetic routes. The simplest are direct reactions of elemental halogens (equation 9), or hydrogen halides with elements (equation 10) or oxides (equation 11). In other processes, the oxides are reacted with a halogen halide in the presence of carbon to combine with the oxygen (equation 12) or other reactive carbon-halides (equation 13). Exchange of halogens can also take place (equations 14 16). Anhydrous halides can also be obtained by dehydration of metal halide hydrates, using reactants such as thionyl halide, which react with the hydrated water (equation 17). [Pg.743]

Applications Basic methods for the determination of halogens in polymers are fusion with sodium carbonate (followed by determination of the sodium halide), oxygen flask combustion and XRF. Crompton [21] has reported fusion with sodium bicarbonate for the determination of traces of chlorine in PE (down to 5 ppm), fusion with sodium bisulfate for the analysis of titanium, iron and aluminium in low-pressure polyolefins (at 1 ppm level), and fusion with sodium peroxide for the complexometric determination using EDTA of traces of bromine in PS (down to 100ppm). Determination of halogens in plastics by ICP-MS can be achieved using a carbonate fusion procedure, but this will result in poor recoveries for a number of elements [88]. A sodium peroxide fusion-titration procedure is capable of determining total sulfur in polymers in amounts down to 500 ppm with an accuracy of 5% [89]. [Pg.605]

The (compositionally) simplest mineral class comprises the native elements, that is, those elements, either metals or nonmetals that occur naturally in the native state, uncombined with others. Native gold, silver, and copper, for example, are metals that naturally occur in a ductile and malleable condition, while carbon - in the form of either graphite or diamond -and sulfur are examples of nonmetallic native elements. Next in compositional complexity are the binary minerals composed of two elements a metal or nonmetallic element combined with oxygen in the oxides, with a halogen - either fluorine, chlorine bromine, or iodine - in the halides, or sulfur, in the sulfides. The oxide minerals, for example, are solids that occur either in a somewhat hard, dense, and compact form in mineral ores and in rocks, or as relatively soft, unconsolidated sediments that melt at moderate to... [Pg.36]


See other pages where Carbon halides elemental halogens is mentioned: [Pg.173]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.543]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.738]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.1268]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.888]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.382]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.783]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.92]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.3 , Pg.5 , Pg.14 ]




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