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Ferrous oxide, decomposition

Beside the tartrate, other organic salts—notably the oxalate and the formate—yield the more easily produced pyrophoric metals, i.e. lead, nickel, and cobalt, if the pyrogenic decomposition is performed at low temperature. These organic salts or the oxides of nickel, cobalt, and iron, under hydrogen at about 300X, also furnish the self-flammable metals, but in the case of iron, a pyrophoric ferrous oxide (FeO) may first appear by reduction with hydrogen as well as by reduction under carbon monoxide. [Pg.31]

The mechanism and rate of hydrogen peroxide decomposition depend on many factors, including temperature, pH, presence or absence of a catalyst (7—10), such as metal ions, oxides, and hydroxides etc. Some common metal ions that actively support homogeneous catalysis of the decomposition include ferrous, ferric, cuprous, cupric, chromate, dichromate, molybdate, tungstate, and vanadate. For combinations, such as iron and... [Pg.471]

Flydrochloric acid regeneration. This process is used to treat the spent pickle liquor containing free hydrochloric acid, ferrous chloride, and water that is obtained from steel finishing operations. The liquor is concentrated by heating to remove some of the water, followed by thermal decomposition in a roaster at temperatures (925 to 1050°C) sufficient for complete evaporation of water and decomposition of ferrous chloride into iron oxide (ferric oxide, Fe203) and hydrogen chloride (HC1) gas.19 The iron oxide is separated for offsite recovery or... [Pg.66]

Catalytic Decomposition of Hydrogen Peroxide by Ferrous Ions Catalysis by Transition Metal Ions and Complexes in Liquid-Phase Oxidation of Hydrocarbons and Aldehydes by Dioxygen... [Pg.11]

Apart from this mathematical aspect I think that the useful concept of critical antioxidant concentration is valid for degenerate chain branching where the effect of the presence of antioxidant on hydroperoxide decomposition is relatively minor but not when it is the predominant initiation reaction. For metals reacting with hydroperoxides the number of radicals formed may even exceed unity. Kolthoff and Medalia [/. Am. Chem. Soc. 71,3777 (1949) ] demonstrated that for the reaction of ferrous ion with hydrogen peroxide as many as six ferrous atoms can be oxidized by one molecule of hydrogen peroxide as a result of this effect. I do not think, therefore, that the critical antioxidant concentration should be applied to those cases in which the so-called antioxidant is the catalyst. [Pg.183]

A well-known example of an oxidation-reduction reaction leading to the formation of radicals is the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide by ferrous ions. Haber and Weiss (36) formulated this decomposition as follows ... [Pg.120]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.261 ]




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Decomposition oxidant

Ferrous oxide

Oxidation decomposition

Oxidative decomposition

Oxides, decompositions

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