| Edward Turner - Chemistry - 1828 - 516 pages
...added to them. The composition of chloriodic acid is not known with precision. Iodide of nitrogen. From the weak affinity that exists between iodine...portions of iodine, and thus cause the formation of hydriolic acid and iodide of nitrogen. The latter subsides in the form of a dark powder, which is characterised,... | |
| Edward Turner - Chemistry - 1828 - 516 pages
...added to them. The composition of chloriodic acid is not known with precision. Iodide of nitrogen. From the weak affinity that exists between iodine...these substances cannot be made to unite directly. 13ut when iodine is put into a solution of ammonia, the alkali is decomposed; its elements unite with... | |
| Edward Turner - Chemistry - 1829 - 508 pages
...added to them. The composition of chloriodic acid is not known with precision. Iodide of nitrogen. From the weak affinity that exists between iodine...formation of hydriodic acid and iodide of nitrogen. The latter subsides in the form of a dark powder, which is characterised, like the chloride of nitrogen,... | |
| Jacob Green - Chemistry - 1829 - 626 pages
...Oxygen - 40, or five atoms. And its atomic weight is 104. Iodine and A'itrogen. Iodide of Nitrogen. — From the weak affinity that exists between iodine...portions of iodine, and thus cause the formation of hydriolic acid and iodide of nitrogen. The latter subsides in the form of a dark powder, which is characterised,... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1831 - 620 pages
...which is characterized, like chloride of nitrogen, by its explosive property. In order to form it, iodine is put into a solution of ammonia ; the alkali...formation of hydriodic acid and iodide of nitrogen. Iodine forms, with sulphur, a feeble compound, of a grayishblack color. With phosphorus, also, it combines... | |
| Edward Turner - Chemistry - 1830 - 616 pages
...present. The composition of chloriodic acid is not known with precision. Iodide •of JVitrogen. — From the weak affinity that exists between iodine...elements unite with different portions of iodine, ind thus cause the formation of hydriodic acid and iodide of nitrogen. The latter subsides in the form... | |
| Edward Turner - Chemistry - 1830 - 588 pages
...present. The composition of chloriodic acid is not known with precision. Iodide of JVitrogen.-~From the weak affinity that exists between iodine and nitrogen,...these substances cannot be made to unite directly. Bat when iodine is put into a solution of ammonia, the alkali is decomposed ; its elements unite with... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1831 - 616 pages
...characterized, Eke chloride of nitrogen, by its explosive properly. In order to form it, iodine is put ¡ato a solution of ammonia ; the alkali is decomposed ;...formation of hydriodic acid and iodide of nitrogen. Iodine forms, with sulphur, a feeble compound, of a grayishblack color. With phosphorus, also, it combines... | |
| Encyclopaedia Americana - 1831 - 608 pages
...which is characterized, like chloride of nitrogen, by its explosive property. In order to form it, iodine is put into a solution of ammonia ; the alkali is decomposed ; its elements unite with difieren! portions of iodine, and thus eause the formation of hydriodic acid and iodide of nitrogen.... | |
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