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unconventional sodium http://avogadro.chem.iastate.edu/MSDS/NaOAc-3H2O.htm
Looks like anhydrous acetate is insoluble in e ... |
29-9-2003 at 04:55 by: Theoretic |
PbO or PbO2
Correct me if I'm wrong...
Cathode:
Pb + 2H2O => Pb(OH)2 + 2H+
Anode:
2H+ + 2e- => ... |
29-9-2003 at 04:31 by: Theoretic |
cheapest way to 96% hno3 The original question was: can NH4NO3 work? Yes it CAN!
At high temperatures the reaction of NH3/NH ... |
12-9-2003 at 07:10 by: Theoretic |
Cyanogen nitrite/nitrate Thanks, that's quite useful (although I thought of NO2Cl too, I didn't know it could be ma ... |
12-9-2003 at 04:22 by: Theoretic |
Perperation of calcium Apparently NOT. If this reaction is used as a purification reaction, then it must be quite easy and ... |
10-9-2003 at 04:50 by: Theoretic |
Cyanogen nitrite/nitrate I'm thinking about compounds-cyanogen nitrite and nitrate. I think they could be made by:
ClC ... |
10-9-2003 at 04:44 by: Theoretic |
Perperation of calcium Industrially, the Ca metal obtained by electrolysis is purified from salt impurities by passing (mol ... |
8-9-2003 at 06:24 by: Theoretic |
High-t (useful) ion exchange You don't need especially pure Al2O3. I think anything with a content of Al2O3 will do (as long ... |
8-9-2003 at 04:50 by: Theoretic |
unconventional sodium The McGraw-Hill "Handbook of inorganic industrial chemicals" says Na reacts with NaOH betw ... |
12-8-2003 at 06:05 by: Theoretic |
electrolytic manufacturing of HNO3 from Ca(NO3)2 Well, Ca(OH)2 will still act as an insoluble base - compare with CaCO3.
It would still create a HIG ... |
11-8-2003 at 08:09 by: Theoretic |
PbO or PbO2 Yeah, Na2 is theoretically possible, but with zero thermodynamical stability. Just nothing to hold i ... |
11-8-2003 at 07:58 by: Theoretic |
Processing chlorate cell electrolyte Well... if anyone wants to try NaClO3 for a change? More oxygen per gram and a "golden flame&qu ... |
8-8-2003 at 05:58 by: Theoretic |
NH4NO3->nitric acid + ammonia Actually, ammonium amalgam decomposes readily at ordinary temperatures. It COULD be that you still g ... |
8-8-2003 at 05:49 by: Theoretic |
Yes, comments, comments... Yes! It won't work!
Apart from clogging the electrode and stopping the current from flow ... |
7-8-2003 at 06:00 by: Theoretic |
NH4NO3->nitric acid + ammonia Er, chemoleo, there's actually a 40C gap between AN's melting temperature (170C)
and its ... |
4-8-2003 at 06:56 by: Theoretic |
Potassium ferrate Mistake! Not 2.7, but 2.07!
Well, 2.07 according to some, 2.08 according to another, and 2.75 accor ... |
1-8-2003 at 07:09 by: Theoretic |
Decomposing Urea Hmmm, urea into ammonia...
Ca(OH)2+CO(NH2)2=>CaCO3+NH3
(melt) |
1-8-2003 at 07:02 by: Theoretic |
Potassium ferrate It's red/purple.
Could Na2FeO4 be made by electrolysing a NaOH solution with a steel or iron c ... |
31-7-2003 at 09:35 by: Theoretic |
High-t (useful) ion exchange Yes, that's one reactant solid and one liquid (Edit: or gas). A link? No, I coined the term mys ... |
31-7-2003 at 08:37 by: Theoretic |
Nitric acid OOPS... the problem is where we least expect it (more so if you need anhydrous HNO3).
4NO2+2H2O+O2= ... |
31-7-2003 at 08:35 by: Theoretic |
Cyanate to cyanide - fresh thread Somewhere in the deep core of the old cyanide thread there's a few posts about
cyanate, with u ... |
31-7-2003 at 06:47 by: Theoretic |
Sodium! Oh well, .
But what about tribasic sodium phosphate? It's m.p. is 73-77C, and it's not ... |
31-7-2003 at 06:33 by: Theoretic |
O3? Well, electrolysis of HClO4 at high current density yields 30% O3, and I guess it's much more f ... |
28-7-2003 at 06:12 by: Theoretic |
Anhydrous ammonia preparation How about THIS?
CO(NH2)2+Ca(OH)2=>CaCO3+2NH3
|
24-7-2003 at 09:50 by: Theoretic |
Nitric acid So it WOULD work after all... |
24-7-2003 at 09:46 by: Theoretic |
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