Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Mercuric orthothioarsenate

Mercury Thioarsenates.—When an alkali orthothioarsenate is added to an aqueous solution of a mercurous salt, a black precipitate of mercurous sulphide separates and a thioarsenate is formed in solution. Berzelius 3 thought this to be the pyro-salt which, when obtained by evaporation and heated, lost mercury and formed the mercuric pyro-salt. Heubach,4 however, stated that mercurous orthothioarsenate was formed and that this was decomposed by excess of mercurous salt to mercurous sulphide and arsenic acid. The mercuric salts are more stable. [Pg.277]

Mercuric Orthothioarsenate, Hg3(AsS4)2, is formed as an orange-coloured precipitate by treating mercuric chloride solution with sodium orthothioarsenate.5 It may be dried at 100° C. and sublimed without decomposition. Mercuric pyrothioarsenate is obtained as a dark yellow precipitate when mercuric chloride solution is treated with sodium meta- or pyro-thioarsenate.8 The salt decomposes on heating with loss of arsenic and sulphur. [Pg.277]


See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.277 ]




SEARCH



© 2024 chempedia.info