O3 are symbols of basic salts. It will be noticed, on examining the above symbols, that neutral salts of monobasic acids contain as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base, and neutral salts of bibasic and tribasic acids... The Elements of Inorganic Chemistry - Página 24por John Charles Buckmaster - 1858 - 216 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| George Mendenhall - 1852 - 736 páginas
...acid or alkaline. The general rule in the formation of a neutral amphigen salt is: that tiiere are as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base to which it is attached. Thus one equivalent of acid is sufficient to neutralize a protoxide; but two... | |
| Josiah Parsons Cooke (Jr.) - 1857 - 150 páginas
...basic salts. It will be noticed, on examining the above symbols, that neutral salts of monobasic acids contain as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base, and neutral salts of bibasic and tribasic acids one half . and one third as many, respectively. This... | |
| Josiah Parsons Cooke (Jr.) - 1859 - 146 páginas
...basic salts. It will be noticed, on examining the above symbols, that neutral salts of monobasic acids contain as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base, and neutral salts of bibasic and tribasic acids one half and one third as many, respectively. This... | |
| John Johnston - 1860 - 530 páginas
...acid. But this is to be understood as liable to many exceptions. Frequently salts denominated neutral contain as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base. Thus, the neutral sulphate of soda is NaO,S03, and sulphate of the protoxide of iron FeO,SOs, but the... | |
| Charles William Heaton - 1861 - 216 páginas
...proportion of acid and base necessary to form a neutral salt:— In a neutral salt there an always as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the lose. Thus in the following salts,— KO, NO 5 . . . Nitrate of potash, Pb O, N 0 5 . . . Nitrate of... | |
| John Charles Buckmaster - 1863 - 284 páginas
...BaO,NO5(BaN0.). KO,SiOs(K,SiO4). Hgl. ZnS. HgS. FeCl. KCy or KC.N. AuCy,. HgCy. Fe,C73. Hg,Cy. Pbl. AgBr. There are three kinds of salts ; neutral salts, acid...neutral when they contain as many equivalents of acid or rather of the acid radical as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base, as KO,SO3 (K,SO4), AI,O33SO3... | |
| Josiah Parsons Cooke (Jr.) - 1863 - 148 páginas
...basic salts. It will be noticed, on examining the above symbols, that neutral salts of monobasic acids contain as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base, and neutral salts of bibasic and tribasic acids one half and one third as many, respectively. This... | |
| Worthington Hooker - 1864 - 476 páginas
...neutral salts, referred to in § 303, it will be proper to notice here. In neutral salts there are always as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of oxygen in the base. Commonly there is one equivalent of each. Basic salts are those in which there is present more than... | |
| Henry Morton - 1867 - 332 páginas
...KC1 + HO; NaO + HI=HO+NaI; CaO + HF=CaF+ HO; HcO-t-HCy=HO+HgCy. A Neutral Salt is one which contains as many equivalents of acid as there are equivalents of Oxygen in the base, as CaO,CO2, Carbonate of Lime; PdO2,2SO3, Sulphate of Binoxide of Palladium ; A12O3,3SO3, Sulphate... | |
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