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Sodium uranium bromide

The application of the Chelex 100 resin separation and preconcentration, with the direct use of the resin itself as the final sample for analysis, is an extremely useful technique. The elements demonstrated to be analytically determinable from high salinity waters are cobalt, chromium, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, scandium, thorium, uranium, vanadium, and zinc. The determination of chromium and vanadium by this technique offers significant advantages over methods requiring aqueous final forms, in view of their poor elution reproducibility. The removal of sodium, chloride, and bromide allows the determination of elements with short and intermediate half-lives without radiochemistry, and greatly reduces the radiation dose received by personnel. This procedure was successfully applied in a study of... [Pg.282]

In all 28 parameters were individually mapped alkalinity, aluminum, antimony, arsenic, barium, boron, bromide, cadmium, calcium, chloride, chromium, conductivity, copper, fluoride, hardness, iron, lead, magnesium, manganese, nitrate, pH, potassium, selenium, sodium, sulphate, thallium, uranium, and zinc. These parameters constitute the standard inorganic analysis conducted at the DENV Analytical Services Laboratory. [Pg.458]

Major constituents (greater than 5 mg/L) Minor constituents (O.Ol-lO.Omg/L) Selected trace constituents (less than 0.1 mg/L) Bicarbonate, calcium, carbonic acid, chloride, magnesium, silicon, sodium, sulfate Boron, carbonate, fluoride, iron, nitrate, potassium, strontium Aluminum, arsenic, barium, bromide, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, copper, gold, iodide, lead, Uthium, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, phosphate, radium, selenium, silver, tin, titanium, uranium, vanadium, zinc, zirconium... [Pg.26]

Uranium mineral first is digested with hot nitric acid. AH uranium and radium compounds dissolve in the acid. The solution is filtered to separate insoluble residues. The acid extract is then treated with sulfate ions to separate radium sulfate, which is co-precipitated with the sulfates of barium, strontium, calcium, and lead. The precipitate is boiled in an aqueous solution of sodium chloride or sodium hydroxide to form water-soluble salts. The solution is filtered and the residue containing radium is washed with boiling water. This residue also contains sulfates of other alkahne earth metals. The sohd sulfate mixture of radium and other alkahne earth metals is fused with sodium carbonate to convert these metals into carbonates. Treatment with hydrochloric acid converts radium and other carbonates into chlorides, all of which are water-soluble. Radium is separated from this solution as its chloride salt by fractional crystallization. Much of the barium, chemically similar to radium, is removed at this stage. Final separation is carried out by treating radium chloride with hydrobromic acid and isolating the bromide by fractional crystallization. [Pg.785]

Double bromides of the type RjUBre, similar to the corresponding chlorides, have been prepared by passing uranium tetrabromide vapour over the heated alkali bromides. The potassium and sodium salts, KgUBrg and NajUBr, are green crystalline substances, hygroscopic, but less so than uranium tetrabromide. [Pg.298]

The Phenol Red method has been applied for determining bromide in water [7,8,10,35-37], food products [6], sodium chloride [38], and uranium fluorides and oxides [1]. [Pg.131]

ABSOLUTE ALCOHOL or ABSOLUTE ETHANOL (64-17-5) Forms explosive mixture with air (flash point 55°F/13°C). Reacts, possibly violently, with strong oxidizers, bases, acetic anhydride, acetyl bromide, acetyl chloride, aliphatic amines, bromine pentafluoride, calcium oxide, cesium oxide, chloryl perchlorate, disulfuryl difluoride, ethylene glycol methyl ether. Iodine heptafluoride, isocyanates, nitrosyl perchlorate, perchlorates, platinum, potassium- er -butoxide, potassium, potassium oxide, potassium peroxide, phosphonis(III) oxide, silver nitrate, silver oxide, sulfuric acid, oleum, sodium, sodium hydrazide, sodium peroxide, sulfmyl cyanamide, tetrachlorosilane, i-triazine-2,4,6-triol, triethoxydialuminum tribromide, triethylaluminum, uranium fluoride, xenon tetrafluoride. Mixture with mercury nitrate(II) forms explosive mercury fulminate. Forms explosive complexes with perchlorates, magnesium perchlorate (forms ethyl perchlorate), silver perchlorate. Flow or agitation of substance may generate electrostatic charges due to low conductivity. [Pg.1]

CARBON BROMIDE (558-13-4) Violent reaction with fluorine, hexylcyclohexyldilead, oxygen, potassium, potassium acetylene-1,2-dioxide, sodium azide, uranium(III) hydride. Mixtures with finely divided aluminum, lithium, magnesium, potassium-sodium alloy, titanium, zinc can form a friction- or shock-sensitive explosive material. Incompatible with decaborane. Attacks active metals. [Pg.263]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.298 ]




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Sodium bromide

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