A Comprehensive Treatise on Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry, Volume 7Longmans, Green and Company, 1927 - Chemistry, Inorganic |
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Page 6
... Stannic Oxide ( 394 ) ; § 13. The Stannic Hydroxides ; and the Stannic and Perstannic Acids ( 404 ) ; § 14. The Stannates ( 414 ) ; § 15. The Fluorides of Tin and the Fluostannates ( 422 ) ; § 16. The Stannous Chlorides ( 424 ) ; § 17 ...
... Stannic Oxide ( 394 ) ; § 13. The Stannic Hydroxides ; and the Stannic and Perstannic Acids ( 404 ) ; § 14. The Stannates ( 414 ) ; § 15. The Fluorides of Tin and the Fluostannates ( 422 ) ; § 16. The Stannous Chlorides ( 424 ) ; § 17 ...
Page 31
... oxide . C. U. Shepard called a mineral from Magnet Cove , Arkansas , arkansite , but the obser- vations of A ... stannic oxide , SnO2 , and samples from Black's Hill , Dakota , 8 with 1.3 to 1.4 per cent . C. Friedel and T. Grandjean ...
... oxide . C. U. Shepard called a mineral from Magnet Cove , Arkansas , arkansite , but the obser- vations of A ... stannic oxide , SnO2 , and samples from Black's Hill , Dakota , 8 with 1.3 to 1.4 per cent . C. Friedel and T. Grandjean ...
Page 32
... stannic oxide . L. Bourgeois used barium chloride as a flux ; F. A. Genth , potassium hydrosulphate ; and P. Hautefeuille , sodium silicate , tungstate , or vanadate ; H. Cormimbœuf melted titanium dioxide with sodium carbonate , sodium ...
... stannic oxide . L. Bourgeois used barium chloride as a flux ; F. A. Genth , potassium hydrosulphate ; and P. Hautefeuille , sodium silicate , tungstate , or vanadate ; H. Cormimbœuf melted titanium dioxide with sodium carbonate , sodium ...
Page 37
... stannic oxide , white titanium dioxide becomes yellow and then brown when heated , and E. D. Clarke fused titanium dioxide in the oxyhydrogen flame . F. Born estimated titanic oxide to be dissociated to the extent of 10-18 into oxygen ...
... stannic oxide , white titanium dioxide becomes yellow and then brown when heated , and E. D. Clarke fused titanium dioxide in the oxyhydrogen flame . F. Born estimated titanic oxide to be dissociated to the extent of 10-18 into oxygen ...
Page 43
... stannic oxide , some titanium tetrachloride is formed . For the action of nitric acid , vide hydro- chloric acid . L. Weiss and M. Landecker found that the hydrated dioxide dissolves more slowly in nitric acid than it does in ...
... stannic oxide , some titanium tetrachloride is formed . For the action of nitric acid , vide hydro- chloric acid . L. Weiss and M. Landecker found that the hydrated dioxide dissolves more slowly in nitric acid than it does in ...
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Common terms and phrases
According acid soln action Akad alkali alloys aluminium Amer ammonia ammonium anorg Biltz boiling bromide Bull calcium Cals cassiterite cent Chem Chim co-workers compound Compt conc containing copper crystalline crystals decomposed deposits dissolved Elektrochem evaporated fluoride formed fused gave germanium grms hafnium Hütt hydrated hydrochloric acid hydrogen chloride hydrogen dioxide hydrogen sulphide hydroxide insoluble Inst iodide J. J. Berzelius Jahrb Journ L. F. Nilson lead Liebig's Ann liquid metal mineral mixture Moissan molten nitrate nitric acid obtained ordinary temp oxalate oxide oxygen Phil Phys Physik Pogg potassium potassium hydroxide powder prakt precipitate Proc reaction Rend rutile salt Sitzber sodium soln soluble stannate stannic oxide stannous chloride stannous sulphide sulphate sulphuric acid thoria thorium thorium-C titanic titanium dioxide titanium tetrachloride Trans Wöhler Zeit zinc zirconia zirconium zirconyl
Popular passages
Page 278 - De l'origine des loix, des arts et des sciences, et de leurs progrès chez les anciens peuples (par GOGUET et FUGÈRE).
Page 274 - The plumbum candidum is the most valuable, and it was called cassiteros by the Greeks. There is a fabulous story told of their going in quest of it to the islands in the Atlantic Ocean, and of its being brought in boats made of osiers covered with hides. The plumbum candidum occurs as a black sand found on the surface of the earth, and is to be detected only by its weight ; it is mingled with small pebbles, particularly in the dried beds of rivers. The miners wash the sand, which is then melted in...
Page 586 - no adulteration of any article has ever been invented so pernicious to the health, and, at the same time, so much practised as that of wine, with preparations of lead ; and we heartily agree with him, ' that the inventor deserves severer execration than Barthold Schwartz, the supposed inventor of gunpowder.
Page 494 - They melt the lead upon the tops of hills that lye open to the west wind ; making their fires to melt it as soon as the west wind begins to blow — which wind, by long experience, they find holds longest of all others. But for what reason I know not, since I should think...
Page 298 - ... interest to the physicist and metallurgist than to the antiquary. The metal is not much oxidized, yet it is so exceedingly brittle that it can be easily broken with the fingers. The effect of time upon it has resulted in a complete alteration of its molecular structure, the mass of the alloy being converted into an agglomeration of crystals, and to this its brittleness is due. On smelting and casting a small fragment I found that the crystalline structure disappeared and the metal regained its...
Page 278 - The Cassiterides : an Inquiry into the Commercial Operations of the Phoenicians in Western Europe; with particular reference to the British Tin Trade.
Page 507 - Lead, its occurrence in nature, the modes of its extraction, its properties and uses with some account of its principal compounds.
Page 277 - Observations on the tin trade of the ancients, In Cornwall and on the " Ictis
Page 7 - They are based upon the fact that in an equilateral triangle the sum of the perpendicular distances of any...
Page 587 - The wine, however, occasions, according as it is used in a great or small quantity, and according to the constitution of the consumer, a speedy or lingering death, violent colics, obstructions and other maladies ; so that one may justly doubt whether, at present, Mars, Venus, or Saturn is most destructive to the human race. The ancients, in my opinion, knew that lead rendered harsh wine milder, and preserved it from acidity, without being aware that it was poisonous. It was therefore long used with...