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Paris yellow

LEAD CHROMATE(VI) LEIPZIG YELLOW LEMON YELLOW PARIS YELLOW PIGMENT GREEN 15 PLUMBOUS CHROMATE PURE LEMON CHROME L3GS... [Pg.824]

Lead chromatai 410S PbCrO Leloslg yellow lemon yellow Paris yellow. [Pg.13]

Antimony lead oxide (SbzPbsOs) Diantimony trilead octaoxide EINECS 236-845-9 Lead antimonate Lead antimonate(V) Naples yellow Paris yellow. An orange-yellow pigment, A mixture of this material with carbonate and chromate of lead is also sold under this name. Cadmium sulfide, CPS, and a pale yellow ocher have been identified by this term used to stain glass, crockery and porcelain. Insoluble in H2O. [Pg.363]

Paricin 13. See Glyceryl hydroxystearate Paricin 15. See Glycol hydroxystearate Paridoi B. See Butyl paraben Paridoi E. See Ethyl paraben Paridoi M. See Methyl paraben Paridoi P. See Propylparaben Parietaria officinalis Parietaria officinalis extract Parietary extract. SeePellitory (Parietaria officinalis) extract Paris green. See Copper acetoarsenite Paris red. See Lead oxide, red Paris violet. See Basic violet 1 Paris white. See Whiting Calcium carbonate Paris yellow. See Lead chromate Parlsey seed oleoresin. See Oleoresin parsley seed... [Pg.3046]

Zerr and Riibencamp (1906) describe how Baltimore chrome yellow was a form of chrome yellow (q.v.) which contained white adjimcts such as baryte, china clay, diatomaceous earth and gypsum (qq.v.). Other related products were sold imder names such as new yellow, Paris yellow and American yellow. [Pg.35]

Baryte Gypsum American ditvme yellow Asbestine China clay. Chrome yellow Diatomaceous earth New yellow, Paris yellow Kuhn Curran (1986) Mierzinski (1881) 134 Zerr Rubencamp (1906/1908) 149... [Pg.35]

According to Zerr and Riihencamp (1906) Paris yellow was one of the forms of chrome yellow which contained white adjuncts such as haryte, china clay, diatomaceous earth and/or gypsum (qq.v.). Kiilm and Curran (1986) also document this as a form of chrome yellow, additionally noting other related products under the terms new yellow, Baltimore yellow and American (chrome) yellow. [Pg.292]

Kaiser-, imperial Caesarean, -blau, n. smalt, -gelb, n. mineral yellow, -griin, n. imperial green (Paris green). [Pg.232]

New Orleans was also filthy, no different in this respect from Paris. Garbage and waste clogged the streets of both cities, and disease was epidemic. During Rillieux s last year in Paris, cholera killed 18,402 people, most of them desperately poor. The year Rillieux arrived home, yellow fever struck New Orleans 8000 people, one-sixth of the town s population, died. [Pg.36]

Smoke shells and rockets are used to produce smoke clouds for military signaling and, in daylight fireworks, for ornamental effects. The shell case or rocket head is filled with a fine powder of the desired color, which powdered material need not necessarily be one which will tolerate heat, and this is dispersed in the form of a colored cloud by the explosion of a small bag of gunpowder placed as near to its center as may be. Artificial vermilion (red), ultramarine (blue), Paris green, chrome yellow, chalk, and ivory black are among the materials which have been used, but almost any material which has a bright color when powdered and which does not cake together may be employed. [Pg.122]

Procedure Unless the charcoal is already very finely powdered, grind it thoroughly in a large porcelain mortar. Add the plaster of Paris, mix the two materials, and pack the mixture in the clay crucible. Heat the crucible in a gas furnace to between a bright red and a yellow heat for I5 hours. At the end of this time remove the crucible from the furnace. When cold, inspect the contents of the crucible, particularly the inner portions to which the heat would have penetrated least there should be no unbumed charcoal left a small sample should dissolve with effervescence (hood) in hydrochloric add and leave no residue more than a slight turbidity. [Pg.151]

One of the founders of modern chemistry, Helmont was the first to recognise gases and the word was, in fact, coined by him. He was nearly accused of heresy by the Jesuits after one of his papers was published in Paris in 1621 without his permission. Helmont also provides us with several accounts of transmutation he recalls how he was given some transmutation powder by a stranger in 1618, and claims that he then made the Stone. He notes that it is yellow such as is saffron , and that it is remarkably effective in the curing of migraines and muscular ailments. [Pg.131]

Jackson, J. Dworkin, R. Tsai, T. McMullen, R. Kuchmak, N. Comparison of antibody response and patient tolerance of yellow fever vaccine administered by the Biojector needle-free injection system versus conventional needle/syringe injection. International Society of Travel Medicine Conference, Paris, 1993. [Pg.1219]

Drouet A, Chagnon A, Valance J, Carli P, Muzellec Y, Paris JF. Meningo-encephalite apres vaccination anti-amanile par la souche 17 D deux observations. [Meningoencephalitis after vaccination against yellow fever with the 17D strain 2 cases.] Rev Med Interne 1993 14(4) 257-9. [Pg.3704]


See other pages where Paris yellow is mentioned: [Pg.26]    [Pg.1826]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.852]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.1046]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.2373]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.1826]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.852]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.1046]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.2373]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.575]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.260]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.1072]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.994]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.51]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.53 ]




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