Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Determination indium

Differential pulse polarography is used to determine the concentrations of lead, thallium, and indium in a mixture. ... [Pg.538]

SPEKTROPHOTOMETRIC DETERMINATION OF INDIUM BIS(2,3,4-TRIHYDROXYPHENILAZO)BENZIDINE IN PRESENCE PAPAVERINE, DIBAZOL, UROTROPIN... [Pg.32]

Determine the configuration of indium, first in shorthand form and then in full form. [Pg.525]

Acar 0, Kn ic Z, Turker AR (1999) Determination of bismuth, indium and lead in geological and sea-water samples by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry with nickel containing chemical modifiers. Anal Chim Acta 382 329-338. [Pg.277]

Extended Hiickel molecular-orbital (EHMO) calculations using structural parameters from the X-ray determination of Cp(CO)3Mo 3In (Fig. 29) and ideal symmetry Cih were carried out for this compound in order to investigate the extent of the indium-molybdenum ir-bonding.122 The HOMO of the compound is the 3e molecular orbital, which is In—Mo [Pg.54]

The structure of MeIn(C5H5B-Me)2 has been explored, and it has been determined to be fluxional in solution on the NMR time scale, with average C2V symmetry.29 An X-ray crystallographic investigation has revealed soft structural parameters of the indium-ring coordination, consistent with the solution studies. [Pg.109]

Tris(0-ethyl dithiocarbonato)chromium(III) is obtained as a dark blue crystalline powder which decomposes at 100 to 140°. The indium(III) ethylxanthate complex forms small colorless crystals which decompose at 130 to 150°.16,17 The cobalt (III) ethylxanthate complex is isolated as a dark green crystalline powder whose decomposition temperature determined by use of a thermal balance is 135 to 137° (lit. value, 117° 2 118 to 119°8). These compounds decompose slowly in air and more rapidly when heated in solution. The tripositive chromium, indium, and cobalt complexes are insoluble in water but are soluble in many organic solvents (Table T). [Pg.52]

X-ray powder diagrams obtained by the Guinier method show the tris (O-ethyl dithiocarbonato) complexes of chro-mium(III), indium(III), cobalt(III), iron(III), arsenic(III), and antimony(III) to be isomorphous. Carrai and Gottardi have determined the structure of the arsenic(III)18 and anti-mony(III)19 complexes. Crystallographic data for the cobalt(III) and chromium(III) ethylxanthate complexes are given by Derenzini20 and Franzini and Schiaffino,21 respectively. [Pg.53]

Electrocatalysis in oxidation has apparently first been shown for ascorbic acid oxidation by Prussian blue [60] and later by nickel hexacyanoferrate [61]. More valuable for analytical applications was the discovery in the early 1990s of the oxidation of sulfite [62] and thiosulfate [18, 63] at nickel [62, 63] and also ferric, indium, and cobalt [18] hexacyanoferrates. More recently electrocatalytic activity in thiosulfate oxidation was shown also for zinc [23] hexacyanoferrate. Prussian blue-modified electrodes allowed sulfite determination in wine products [64], which is important for the wine industry. [Pg.440]

Matthews and Riley [336] determined indium in seawater at concentrations down to 1 ng/1. Preconcentration of metals on a cation exchanger was fol-... [Pg.181]

Berndt et al. [740] have shown that traces of bismuth, cadmium, copper, cobalt, indium, nickel, lead, thallium, and zinc could be separated from samples of seawater, mineral water, and drinking water by complexation with the ammonium salt of pyrrolidine- 1-dithiocarboxylic acid, followed by filtration through a filter covered with a layer of active carbon. Sample volumes could range from 100 ml to 10 litres. The elements were dissolved in nitric acid and then determined by atomic absorption or inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry. [Pg.261]

Vandecasteele et al. [745] studied signal suppression in ICP-MS of beryllium, aluminium, zinc, rubidium, indium, and lead in multielement solutions, and in the presence of increasing amounts of sodium chloride (up to 9 g/1). The suppression effects were the same for all of the analyte elements under consideration, and it was therefore possible to use one particular element, 115indium, as an internal standard to correct for the suppressive matrix effect, which significantly improved experimental precision. To study the causes of matrix effect, 0.154 M solutions of ammonium chloride, sodium chloride, and caesium chloride were compared. Ammonium chloride exhibited the least suppressive effect, and caesium chloride the most. The results had implications for trace element determinations in seawater (35 g sodium chloride per litre). [Pg.264]

Torres 112> has separated indium from urine by ion exchange chromatography prior to determination by atomic absorption spectroscopy. [Pg.92]


See other pages where Determination indium is mentioned: [Pg.378]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.523]    [Pg.410]    [Pg.479]    [Pg.484]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.629]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.894]    [Pg.1044]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.19]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.164 , Pg.229 , Pg.244 , Pg.247 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.85 ]




SEARCH



© 2024 chempedia.info