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Question Chain Thread !!! (1 Viewer)

axlenatore

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danz90 said:
correct



awwww shiiiiiit LOL... eenie meenie minie mo......

Insoluble?

lol
In truth i dont know, i just wanted to ask something from left field,
 

danz90

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axlenatore said:
In truth i dont know, i just wanted to ask something from left field,
does Uranium Phosphate even exist?

Ferric Hydroxide
 

JasonNg1025

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Yah I'm guessing insoluble
Majority of phosphates are, and uranium is heavy
 

danz90

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hey guys..

how do we differentiate between purifying and sanitising water?
 

JasonNg1025

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Ferric hydroxide insoluble?

Purifying is making clear of impurities such as ions dissolved and undissolved solids and all that. Sanitising I think is making it clear of microorganisms?
 
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all hydroxides and oxides are insoluble.......... if i rmemeber right!

ammonium nitrate
 

axlenatore

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aussiechick007 said:
all hydroxides and oxides are insoluble.......... if i rmemeber right!

ammonium nitrate
soluble

copper carbonate
 

danz90

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Ferric Hydroxide is insoluble, Jason's right.

I started laughing when I saw a glass container labelled Fe(OH)3 in one of the prep-rooms at school, with a brown-orange liquid in it, which had no solid, was all liquid. lol dumb lab assistant.

Ammonium nitrate is soluble, as all nitrates are soluble.
 

danz90

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JasonNg1025 said:
Soluble

Ammonium Molybdate
Gosh I've never heard of that.

Ohhh.. actually I remember you said thats used to precipitate phosphate ions. So hence it must be soluble ?
 

JasonNg1025

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Yes xD
And priorities - no matter how bad molybdate is, ammonium and Group 1 ions always out prioritise it, so it must be soluble
So what's next
 

danz90

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JasonNg1025 said:
Yes xD
And priorities - no matter how bad molybdate is, ammonium and Group 1 ions always out prioritise it, so it must be soluble
So what's next
I'm off for a few minutes to go call the advice line before it closes.
Be back soon ;)
 

JasonNg1025

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Yes, I'd say that was correct.
But when they ask you to purify and sanitise, include chloronation and fluoronation for the sheer heck of it.
 

danz90

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I'm pretty happy with what the advice line said about my questions

-Firstly I asked about the dotpoint on a chemist in named industry. You don't actually have to know the name of a chemist - but rather concentrate on the industry they are employed in, their role, and what chemical principles they use.

-The equation that I've given in one of the threads in Production of materials subforum in regards to reduction in the Dry Cell is correct - Mn2O3 reacts with water in the electrolyte paste to produce Manganese(III) Hydroxide anyway. happy that I clarified that, I panicked a little.

- And for the dotpoint that asks us to asses evidence of increasing concentrations of acidic oxides in the atmosphere - the point that air pockets ice shafts in antarctica are analysed to show historical trends is good to mention, coz u can question its accuracy - apparently Sulfur Dioxide and Nitric Oxide would would dissolve in the water in the ice-cap anyway, and wouldn't be trapped as a gas in an air pocket.

The advice line is awesome, pity this is the last year they doing it.
 

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