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White solid acids

Johnson (9) had proposed that one could titrate the acidity of colored solids by adding white solid acids and then titrate while observing the color changes on the white solid acids. This idea is based on the assumption that the colored and white solids do not interact with each other but only with the titrant and dyes. This assumption has been used for many years without challenge, but T. Fabish (14) has just recently shown that carbon blacks do indeed interact with silica-alumina particles and can appreciably change their surface acidity. [Pg.73]

Particle Interactions in Binary Mixtures of Carbon Black and White Solid Acids... [Pg.197]

Figure 5. Independently measured white solid acidities in binary mixtures of 86/13 silica-alumina and a alumina at a pK, of —1.5 (aqueous) using mass... Figure 5. Independently measured white solid acidities in binary mixtures of 86/13 silica-alumina and a alumina at a pK, of —1.5 (aqueous) using mass...
CCls CHO. A colourless oily liquid with a pungent odour b.p. 98°C. Manut actured by the action of chlorine on ethanol it is also made by the chlorination of ethanal. When allowed to stand, it changes slowly to a white solid. Addition compounds are formed with water see chloral hydrate), ammonia, sodium hydrogen sulphite, alcohols, and some amines and amides. Oxidized by nitric acid to tri-chloroethanoic acid. Decomposed by alkalis to chloroform and a methanoate a convenient method of obtaining pure CHCI3. It is used for the manufacture of DDT. It is also used as a hypnotic. [Pg.91]

Ditrosonium hydrogen sulphate, chamber crystals, NOHSO4. White solid m.p. 73°C (decomp.). Prepared SO2 and fuming nitric acid. Used in diazotization. [Pg.280]

CH3-[CHi]5.CH CH-[CH2]g-C02H. A white solid, m.p. 43-44°C, which is present in small quantities in animal fats and in milk. It is the only naturally occurring fatty acid with the trans configuration. [Pg.415]

The white solid oxides MjO and M 0 are formed by direct union of the elements. The oxides MjO and the oxides M"0 of calcium down to radium have ionic lattices and are all highly basic they react exothermically with water to give the hydroxides, with acids to give salts, and with carbon dioxide to give carbonates. For example... [Pg.129]

The larger cations of Group 1 (K, Rb, Cs) can be precipitated from aqueous solution as white solids by addition of the reagent sodium tetraphenylborate, NaB(C( H5)4. Sodium can be precipitated as the yellow sodium zinc uranium oxide ethanoate (sodium zinc uranyl acetate). NaZn(U02)3(CH3C00)y. 9H2O. by adding a clear solution of zinc uranyl acetate in dilute ethanoic acid to a solution of a sodium salt. [Pg.136]

Aluminium oxide is a white solid, insoluble in water, with a very high melting point. If heated above red heat, it becomes insoluble in acids and alkalis, and can only be brought into solution by first fusing it with sodium or potassium hydroxide when an aluminate is formed. [Pg.150]

There appears to be only one true oxide of iodine, diiodine pentoxide, IjOs- It is a white solid prepared by heating iodic acid(V) to 450 K ... [Pg.337]

This occurs naturally as a white solid in various crystalline forms, in all of which six oxygen atoms surround each titanium atom. Titanium dioxide is important as a white pigment, because it is nontoxic. chemically inert and highly opaque, and can be finely ground for paint purposes it is often prepared pure by dissolving the natural form in sulphuric acid, hydrolysing to the hydrated dioxide and heating the latter to make the anhydrous form. [Pg.371]

Zinc(II) oxide, ZnO, is prepared by heating the hydroxide ZnlOH) or the carbonate ZnCOj. It is a white solid, insoluble in water, but readily soluble in acids to give a solution containing the zincfll) cation, and in alkalis to give a hydroxozincate(II) anion ... [Pg.419]

Mercuryill) chloride is obtained in solution by dissolving mercury(II) oxide in hydrochloric acid the white solid is obtained as a sublimate by heating mercury(II) sulphate and solid sodium chloride ... [Pg.437]

It is marketed as a 35-40 per cent, solution in water (formalin). The rpactions of formaldehyde are partly typical of aldehydes and partly peculiar to itself. By evaporating an aqueous solution paraformaldehyde or paraform (CHjO), an amorphous white solid is produced it is insoluble in most solvents. When formaldehyde is distilled from a 60 per cent, solution containing 2 per cent, of sulphuric acid, it pol5unerises to a crystalline trimeride, trioxane, which can be extracted with methylene chloride this is crystalline (m.p. 62°, b.p. 115°), readily soluble in water, alcohol and ether, and devoid of aldehydic properties ... [Pg.319]

When mixed with Lewis acids, dinitrogen pentoxide yields crystalline white solids, which were identified as the corresponding nitronium salts by their infra-red spectra. The reaction with boron trifluoride can be formulated in the following way... [Pg.51]

Semidry Scrubbers The advantage of semidry scrubbers is in that they remove contaminants by way of a solid waste that is easier to dispose of (less expensive). Initially, the scrubbing medium is wet (such as a lime or soda ash slurry). Then a spray dryer is used to atomize the slurry into the gas which evaporates the water in the droplets. As this takes place, the acid in the gas neutralizes the alkali material and forms a fine white solid. Most of the white solids are removed at the bottom of the scrubber while some are carried into the gas stream and have to be removed by a filter or electrostatic precipitator (discussed later). Although semidry systems cost 5-15% more than wet systems, when combined with a fabric filter, they can achieve 90-95% efficiencies. Dry scrubbers are sometimes used in a very similar fashion, but without the help of gas-liquid-solid mass transfer, these systems use much higher amounts of the solid alkali materials. [Pg.546]


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