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Copper chief

Tyrone Grant, N.M. Phelps Dodge Corp. and Burro Chief Copper Co. copper ore, concentrated and leached 160... [Pg.193]

Although estimates of their abundances vary considerably, Pd and Pt (approximately 0.015 and 0.01 ppm respectively) are much rarer than Ni. They are generally associated with the other platinum metals and occur either native in placer (i.e. alluvial) deposits or as sulfides or arsenides in Ni, Cu and Fe sulfide ores. Until the 1820s all platinum metals came from South America, but in 1819 the first of a series of rich placer deposits which were to make Russia the chief source of the metals for the next century, was discovered in the Urals. More recently however, the copper-nickel ores in South Africa and Russia (where the Noril sk-Talnakh deposits are well inside the Arctic Circle) have become the major sources, supplemented by supplies from Sudbury. [Pg.1145]

About one-third of the copper used is secondary copper (i.e. scrap) but the annual production of new metal is nearly 8 million tonnes, the chief sources (1993) being Chile (22%), the USA (20%), the former Soviet Union (9%), Canada and China (7.5% each) and Zambia (5%). The major use is as an electrical conductor but it is also widely employed in coinage alloys as well as the traditional bronze (Cu plus 7-10% Sn), brass (Cu-Zn), and special alloys such as Monel (Ni-Cu). [Pg.1175]

Corrosion resistance The corrosion resistance of a copper deposit varies with the conditions under which it is deposited and may be influenced by co-deposited addition agents (see, for example, Raub ). Copper is, however, plated as a protective coating only in specialised applications, and the chief interest lies in its behaviour as an undercoating for nickel-chromium on steel and on zinc-base alloy. Its value for this purpose has long been a controversial issue. [Pg.520]

This element occurs in nature in the uncombined state as native copper and in the combined state as various oxides, sulfides, and carbonates. The chief mineral is chalcopyrite, CuFeS2, from which the element is extracted by roasting (heating in air) followed by reduction. The roasting reaction can be written... [Pg.408]

The method has been applied to the determination of boron in river water and sewage,16 the chief sources of interference being copper(II) and zinc ions, and anionic detergents. The latter interfere by forming ion-association complexes with ferroin which are extracted by chloroform this property... [Pg.175]

Flame Photometry, Atomic Absorption, and Neutron Activation. Comparatively few substances amenable to measurement by these techniques are used therapeutically chief among those that are being sodium, potassium, lithium, calcium, magnesium, zinc, copper, and iron, for all of which one or other of the techniques is the method of choice. [Pg.68]

As the result of hydrolysis a complex mixture of all, or nearly all, the previously mentioned units is obtained. These have been isolated by various methods based upon the fractional crystallisation of the compounds themselves, or of their copper, silver and other salts. Only when one or more of the amino acids occurred in somewhat large amounts was their isolation and characterisation effected their amount seldom reached a value higher than 20 per cent, of the total quantity and the remainder was represented by uncrystallisable syrups of unknown nature. A great advance was made when Drechsel discovered that the protein molecule contained diamino acids as well as monoamino acids, and to Kossel and Kutscher we owe our chief knowledge concerning their isolation and estimation. Emil Fischer, in igoi, by his... [Pg.5]

Two polarographic methods have been developed for the determination of cohalt(II) at concentrations ranging from approximately 1 to 80 mM in an aqueous sample. For the first method [15], which is suitable for samples containing large amounts of nickel]11), the cobalt(II) is oxidized to Co(NH3)6 in an ammoniacal medium with the aid of sodium perborate, after which the cobalt(III) species is determined. A second procedure [16] entails the use of lead dioxide in an acetic acid-acetate buffer containing oxalate to convert cobalt(II) to the 0(0204)3 ion, which can be subjected to polarographic reduction. This latter approach is well suited to the determination of cobalt in the presence of copper(II), iron(III), nickel(II), tin(IV), and zinc(II), whereas the chief interferences are cerium, chromium, manganese, and vanadium. [Pg.534]

Francisco Vazquez de Coronado observes a copper ornament worn by an Indian chief, in what is now the southwestern part of the United States. [Pg.886]

The chief contamination of carefully filtered mercury is dissolved metals, notably copper, zinc, cadmium, lead, gold, or silver. The last two will not be present in more than traces unless the mercury has been used for certain... [Pg.41]

Sulphates occur abundantly in nature, the chief being those of calcium, barium, strontium, magnesium, aluminium, iron, zinc, copper, sodium and potassium. [Pg.148]

J. Tafel electrolyzed a soln. of 0-4 grm. of nitric acid and 20 c.c. of 50 per cent, sulphuric acid, using 10 sq. ems. of cathode surface and 2-4 amps, at 0°. The product of the reduction is largely dependent on the nature of the metal used as electrode. Some results are indicated in Table XXVII. With platinum, no ammonia or hydroxylamine was formed, and with palladium the reduction is extremely slow. Hie chief products of the reduction are hydroxylamine and ammonia. The largest proportion of the hydroxylamine is formed when mercury is used as cathode, and the conversion of the nitric acid into this can be carried out almost quantitatively. With lead electrodes, about 40 per cent, of the nitric acid is converted into hydroxylamine, and with copper electrodes only about 15 per cent. if the copper be in the form of a spongy mass, only about one per cent, of the acid is transformed into hydroxylamine, the remainder being reduced to ammonia. When... [Pg.281]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.125 ]




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