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Brown reddish

Bismarck brown, Basic Brown 1 Basic azo-dyestuff, dyes wool (reddish brown), used for cotton with tannin as mordant. Used as hair dye. [Pg.60]

Vanadium Il) bromide, VBr2. Reddish brown crystals formed from VBr3 and H2. [Pg.416]

Vanadium IV) chloride, VCI4, b.p. 154 C. Reddish brown liquid formed V plus CI2. Decomposes slowly to VCI3 and CU hydrolysed by water. [Pg.417]

Reddish-brown coloration (no precipitate) Blood red coloration... [Pg.400]

Dissolve a few drops of nitromethane in 10% sodium hydroxide solution. Add a few crystals of sodium nitrite and shake. Now add dilute sulphuric acid drop by drop. A brownish-red coloration develops, but fades again when an excess of acid is added. The sulphuric acid has thus liberated nitrous acid, which has in turn reacted with the nitromethane to give a nitrolic acid, the sodium salt of which is CH3NO2 + ONOH = CH(N02) N0H + HgO reddish-brown in colour, probably owing to mesomeric ions of the type ... [Pg.134]

Add 2 -3 drops of phenylhydrazine to about 2 ml. of Fehling s solution in a test-tube and shake the mixture vigorously nitrogen is evolved and reddish-brown cuprous oxide is precipitated. The reaction proceeds rapidly on gentle warming, more slowly in the cold. [Pg.199]

Ferric chloride reaction. For the success of this reaction it is important that the solution should be neutral. Excess of acid usually inhibits the production of colour or precipitate, and excess of alkali gives a reddish-brown precipitate of ferric hydroxide. A neutral solution may be made as follows ... [Pg.348]

The vanadium pentoxide catalyst Is prepared as follows Suspend 5 g. of pure ammonium vanadate in 50 ml. of water and add slowly 7 5 ml. of pure concentrated hydrochloric acid. Allow the reddish-brown, semi-colloidal precipitate to settle (preferably overnight), decant the supernatant solution, and wash the precipitate several times by decantation. Finally, suspend the precipitate in 76 ml. of water and allow it to stand for 3 days. This treatment renders the precipitate granular and easy to 6lter. Filter the precipitate with suction, wash it several times with cold 5 p>er cent, sodium chloride solution to remove hydrochloric acid. Dry the product at 120° for 12 hours, grind it in a mortar to a fine powder, and heat again at 120° for 12 hours. The yield of catalyst is about 3 - 5 g. [Pg.463]

Pour the resulting dark reddish-brown liquid into 500 ml. of water to which 17 ml. of saturated sodium bisulphite solution has been added (the latter to remove the excess of bromine). Steam distil the resulting mixture (Fig. II, 41,1) , collect the first portion of the distillate, which contains a little unchanged nitrobenzene, separately. Collect about 4 litres of distillate. Filter the yellow crystalline solid at the pump, and press well to remove the adhering liquid. The resulting crude m-bromonitrobenzene, m.p. 51-52°, weighs 110 g. If required pure, distil under reduced pressure (Fig. II, 19, 1) and collect the fraction of b.p. 117-118°/9 mm. it then melts at 56° and the recovery is about 85 per cent. [Pg.537]

Apply the test to compounds which contain chlorine or bromine. If the compound is a solid, dissolve 0 1 g. in the minimum volume of pure, dry acetone. To 1 ml. of the sodium iodide acetone reagent add 2 drops of the compound (if a hquid) or the acetone solution (if a sohd). Shake and allow to stand at room temperature for 3 minutes. Note whether a precipitate is formed and also whether the solution acquires a reddish-brown colour (liberation of iodine). If no change takes place at rocrm temperature, place the test-tube in a beaker of water at 50°. After 5 minutes, cool to room temperature, and observe whether a reaction has occurred. [Pg.1060]

Interesting note, using CuCk for the first time.. NO OLIVE GREEN color appeared. Stayed slightly yellow -dark brown... All the way through the rxn. Never came close to Green (light, dark or olive). When rxn finished solution was very dark reddish-brown, even when acid washed it stayed dark reddish brown. [Pg.72]

Salicylic acid 2-Hydroxybenzoic acid LeSCN2+ at pH 3 is reddish-brown Typical uses Pe(III) titrated with EDTA to colorless iron-EDTA complex... [Pg.1173]

The reaction of H2O2 and H2SO4 generates a reddish brown solution whose absorbance is measured at a wavelength of 450 nm. A regression analysis on their data yielded the following uncoded equation for the response (Absorbance X 1000). [Pg.703]

Iodine monochloride [7790-99-0] ICl, mol wt 162.38, 78.16% I, is a black crystalline soHd or a reddish brown Hquid. SoHd ICl exists ia two crystalline modifications the a-form, as stable mby-red needles, d = 3.86 g/mL and mp 27.3°C and as metastable brownish red platelets, d = 3.66 g/mL, mp 13.9°C and bp 100°C (dec). Iodine monochloride is used as a halogenation catalyst and as an analytical reagent (Wij s solution) to determine iodine values of fats and oils (see Fats and fatty oils). ICl is prepared by direct reaction of iodine and Hquid chlorine. Aqueous solutions ate obtained by treating a suspension of iodine ia moderately strong hydrochloric acid with chlorine gas or iodic acid (118,119). [Pg.366]

Other lodo Compounds. Thymol iodide, C2OH24I2O2, mol wt 550.23, 46.13% I, is a reddish brown or reddish yeUow bulky powder that... [Pg.366]

Simple nickel salts form ammine and other coordination complexes (see Coordination compounds). The octahedral configuration, in which nickel has a coordination number (CN) of 6, is the most common stmctural form. The square-planar and tetrahedral configurations (11), iu which nickel has a coordination number of 4, are less common. Generally, the latter group tends to be reddish brown. The 5-coordinate square pyramid configuration is also quite common. These materials tend to be darker in color and mostiy green (12). [Pg.9]

Amino-2-hydroxybenZOiC acid. This derivative (18) more commonly known as 4-aminosa1icy1ic acid, forms white crystals from ethanol, melts with effervescence and darkens on exposure to light and air. A reddish-brown crystalline powder is obtained on recrystallization from ethanol —diethyl ether. The compound is soluble ia dilute solutioas of nitric acid and sodium hydroxide, ethanol, and acetone slightly soluble in water and diethyl ether and virtually insoluble in benzene, chloroform or carbon tetrachloride. It is unstable in aqueous solution and decarboxylates to form 3-amiaophenol. Because of the instabihty of the free acid, it is usually prepared as the hydrochloride salt, mp 224 °C (dec), dissociation constant p 3.25. [Pg.315]


See other pages where Brown reddish is mentioned: [Pg.202]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.421]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.604]    [Pg.606]    [Pg.804]    [Pg.877]    [Pg.953]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.354]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.667]    [Pg.681]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.473]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.458]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.487]    [Pg.377]    [Pg.341]    [Pg.377]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.387]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.114 ]




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