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Mercuric bromate chlorate

LEAD SULFIDE (1314-87-0) PbS Noncombustible solid. Reacts violentiy with iodine monochloride, hydrogen peroxide. Incompatible with bromates, chlorates, hydrazinium nitrate, iodates, mercurous chloride, silver azide, zinc(II) nitrate, hexahydrate. [Pg.632]

Lead dioxide Lead perchlorate Lithium chlorate Lithium hypochlorite Lithium perchlorate Lithium peroxide Magnesium bromate Magnesium chlorate Magnesium perchlorate Magnesium peroxide Manganese dioxide Mercurous chlorate Mono-(trichloro)-tetra-(mono-potassium dichloro)-penta-s-triazinetrione... [Pg.64]

Hydrofluoric acid like water is an associated liquid, and even the gas, as we shall soon see, is associated. It has the power of uniting with fluorides. It also seems to be an ionizing solvent for a soln. of potassium fluoride in liquid hydrogen fluoride is an excellent conductor it also possesses marked solvent powers. According to E. C. Franklin,7 the liquid readily dissolves potassium fluoride, ehloride, and sulphate sodium fluoride, bromide, nitrate, chlorate, and bromate acetamide and urea. The solvent action is not so marked with barium fluoride, cupric chloride, and silver cyanide while calcium and lead fluorides copper sulphate and nitrate ferric chloride, mercuric oxide, and magnesium metal, are virtually insoluble in this menstruum. Glass also is not affected by the liquid if moisture be absent. The liquid scarcely acts on most of the metals or non-metals at ordinary temp., though it does act on the alkali metals at ordinary temp., much the same as does water, with the simultaneous production of flame. [Pg.130]

Mercury(II) nitrate solution white precipitate of mercury(II) iodate (difference from chlorate and bromate). Lead acetate solution similarly gives a precipitate of lead iodate. Mercury(II) chloride solution, which is practically un-ionized (as mercuric chloride is covalent) gives no precipitate. [Pg.341]

BENSULFOID (7704-34-9) Combustible solid (flash point 405°F/207°C). Finely divided dry materia forms explosive mixture with air. The vapor reacts violently with lithium carbide. Reacts violently with many substances, including strong oxidizers, aluminum powders, boron, bromine pentafluoride, bromine trifluoride, calcium hypochlorite, carbides, cesium, chlorates, chlorine dioxide, chlorine trifluoride, chromic acid, chromyl chloride, dichlorine oxide, diethylzinc, fluorine, halogen compounds, hexalithium disilicide, lampblack, lead chlorite, lead dioxide, lithium, powdered nickel, nickel catalysis, red phosphorus, phosphorus trioxide, potassium, potassium chlorite, potassium iodate, potassium peroxoferrate, rubidium acetylide, ruthenium tetraoxide, sodium, sodium chlorite, sodium peroxide, tin, uranium, zinc, zinc(II) nitrate, hexahydrate. Forms heat-, friction-, impact-, and shock-sensitive explosive or pyrophoric mixtures with ammonia, ammonium nitrate, barium bromate, bromates, calcium carbide, charcoal, hydrocarbons, iodates, iodine pentafluoride, iodine penloxide, iron, lead chromate, mercurous oxide, mercury nitrate, mercury oxide, nitryl fluoride, nitrogen dioxide, inorganic perchlorates, potassium bromate, potassium nitride, potassium perchlorate, silver nitrate, sodium hydride, sulfur dichloride. Incompatible with barium carbide, calcium, calcium carbide, calcium phosphide, chromates, chromic acid, chromic... [Pg.156]


See other pages where Mercuric bromate chlorate is mentioned: [Pg.319]    [Pg.471]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.827]    [Pg.603]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.1390]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.871]    [Pg.940]    [Pg.975]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.724]    [Pg.818]    [Pg.981]    [Pg.984]    [Pg.1051]    [Pg.1091]    [Pg.1101]    [Pg.1103]    [Pg.1104]    [Pg.1113]    [Pg.1114]    [Pg.1120]    [Pg.510]    [Pg.72]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.351 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.351 ]




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Bromat

Bromate

Bromates

Bromation

Mercuric chlorate

Mercurous bromate

Mercurous chlorate

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