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Potassium copper vanadate

As examples of some water-soluble salts, mention may be made of potassium chloride, copper sulfate, and sodium vanadate. As examples of some water-insoluble salts, mention may be made of some typical ones such as lead chloride, silver chloride, lead sulfate, and calcium sulfate. The solubilities of most salts increases with increasing temperature. Some salts possess solubilities that vary very little with temperature or even decline. An interesting example is provided by ferrous sulfate, the water solubility of which increases as temperature is raised from room temperature, remains fairly constant between 57 and 67 °C, and decreases at higher temperatures to below 12 g l-1 at 120 °C. Table 5.2 presents the different types of dissolution reactions in aqueous solutions, and Table 5.3 in an indicative way presents the wide and varied types of raw materials that different leaching systems treat. It will be relevant to have a look at Table 5.4 which captures some of the essential and desirable features for a successful leaching system. [Pg.471]

The carbonates, sulphates, and borates are decomposed. The sulphides of the alkalies and alkaline earths are decomposed while the sulphides of arsenic, antimony, molybdenum, zinc, cadmium, tin, iron, lead, copper, mercury, and palladium are not attacked. Cobalt sulphate is not attacked, while the sulphates of the alkalies and alkaline earths are attacked and dissolved. Alkali tungstates, ammonium arsenite and arsenate, copper arsenite, ammonium magnesium arsenate, ammonium molybdate and vanadate, potassium cyanide and ferrocyanide are decomposed. Paraffin is not attacked shellac, gum arabic, gum tragacanth, copal, etc., are decomposed. Celluloid is slowly attacked. Silk paper, gun cotton, gelatin, parchment are dissolved. M. Meslans 22 has studied the esterification of alcohol by hydrofluoric acid. [Pg.134]

Vanadium compounds (vanadic acid and vanadium chloride) have been proposed as substitutes for copper sulphide, but without much practical success. Potassium ferrocyanide and ferricyanide are also used to a certain extent. A mixture of these salts with aniline salt and potassium chlorate is printed, and the goods aged. The probable action is that the ferricyanide oxidises the aniline, and is continually regenerated from the ferrocyanide formed by the chloric acid present. Thus these salts play the part of oxygen carriers in a similar manner to the copper and vanadium compounds. In the opinion of technologists, the hlack produced by this process differs somewhat in its properties from that obtained with copper, but this may be ascribed to the presence of prussiaii blue in the former. In place of the aniline hydrochloride and potassium chlorate, a mixture of aniline sulphate and barium chlorate has recently been employed in black-printing. [Pg.197]


See other pages where Potassium copper vanadate is mentioned: [Pg.386]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.794]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.648]    [Pg.136]   
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