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Fluorides ammonia

Hydrogen bonding aeeounts for the abnormally high boiling points of, e.g., water, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia, and many organie eompounds (see later) sueh as aleohols. [Pg.25]

Emissions from sinter plants are generated from raw material handling, windbox exhaust, sinter discharge (associated sinter crushers and hot screens), and from the cooler and cold screen. The primary source of particulate emissions, mainly irons oxides, magnesium oxide, sulfur oxides, carbonaceous compounds, aliphatic hydrocarbons, and chlorides, are due to the windbox exhaust. Contaminants such as fluorides, ammonia, and arsenic may also be present. At the discharge end,... [Pg.46]

He continued his experiments and discovered even more new gases sulfur dioxide, silicon fluoride, ammonia gas, and nitrogen. However, his most important discovery was oxygen. In June 1774 Priestley got a burning lens with a diameter of 12 inches and immediately began to experiment with it. In one experiment he turned the lens on mercury calx (mercuric oxide) and obtained an air in which candles burned more brightly than they did in ordinary air. At first he did not know what to make of this result, so he continued experimenting. He soon found that he could get the same gas from certain other materials, such as lead oxide. [Pg.104]

Inorganic gases Oxides of nitrogen Oxides of sulfur Other inorganics Nitrogen dioxide, nitric oxide Sulfuric acid, sulfur dioxide Carbon monoxide, chlorine, ozone, hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia One of the principal pollutants is sulfur dioxide, which is a corrosive acid gas that combines with water vapor in the atmosphere to produce acid rain. [Pg.11]

Guanosine Acetic anhydride Phosphorous oxychloride Aniline, N,N-dimethyl-Potassium fluoride Ammonia... [Pg.1640]

Hydrogen Cyanide Sulfur Dioxide Hydrogen Sulfide Nitrogen Dioxide Hydrogen Fluoride Ammonia... [Pg.193]

SAFETY PROFILE Poison by intravenous route. See also FLUORIDES, AMMONIA, and TITANIUM COMPOUNDS. When heated to decomposition it emits very toxic fumes of F and NOx. [Pg.70]

Ion exchangers can be used for removal of Fe " and Mn " " ions from water, as weU as for removal of fluorides, ammonia and oxygen. For water disinfection, silver-impregnated anion exchangers with sterilizing effects can be used. For water dechlorination, resistant cation exchangers in the NH3 form are recommended. Trials of ion exchangers for removal of phenols from water have also been carried out. [Pg.259]

Prqrerdes BIk. powd. with metallic luster or silver-wh. crysL sol. in hot cone, sulfuric or nitric acids insol. in water, HCI, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia, sodium hydroxide, dil. sulfuric acid at.wt. 95.94 dens. 10.28 vapor pressure 1 mm (3102 C) m.p. 2610 C b.p. 4800 C chemically inactive acid resist. [Pg.1210]

Synonyms Acid ammonium fluoride Ammonia white acid Ammonium acid fluoride Ammonium fluoride Ammonium hydrogen fluoride... [Pg.250]

Boric acid Fluor espato Powdered glass Ammonium chloride Ammonium fluoride Ammonia Cadmium chloride Vanadium chloride Sulphuric acid Nitric acid Sodium dichromate Sodium cyanide Copper... [Pg.987]

Salanne M, Simon C, Madden PA (2011) Optical basicity scales in protic solvents water, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia and their mixtures. Phys Chem Chem Phys 13 6305-6308... [Pg.988]

More and more, however, other solvents are coming into use in the laboratory and in industry. Aside from organic solvents such as alcohols, acetone, and hydrocarbons, which have been in use for many years, industrial processes use such solvents as sulfuric acid, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia, molten sodium hexafluoroaluminate (cryolite), various other ionic liquids (Welton, 1999), and liqnid metals, lander and Lafrenz (1970) cite the industrial use of bromine to separate caesium bromide (sol y 19.3g/100g bromine) from the much less soluble rubidium salt. The list of solvents available for preparative and analytical purposes in the laboratory now is long and growing, and though water will still be the first solvent that comes to mind, there is no reason to stop there. [Pg.2]

CHsFN 2 Hydrogen cyanide - hydrogen fluoride - ammonia (1/1/1) Csv ... [Pg.363]

A water molecule can form a maximum of four hydrogen bonds because it can accept two and donate two hydrogen atoms. Other molecules like hydrogen fluoride, ammonia, methanol form hydrogen bonds but they do not show anomalous behavior of thermodynamic, kinetic or structural properties like those observed in water. The answer... [Pg.93]

Hydrofluoric Acid Hydrogen Fluoride Ammonia Oil of Vitriol Sulfuric Acid Potassium Iodide Sodium Acid Sulfate Sodium Bisulfate Sodium Hydrogen Sulfate... [Pg.3488]


See other pages where Fluorides ammonia is mentioned: [Pg.154]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.856]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.759]    [Pg.901]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.41]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.12 ]




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