Hidden fields
Books Books
" If we take a salt* to be the product of the mutual action of an acid and a metal or base upon each other, normal salts are obtained by exchanging the whole of the replaceable hydrogen of the acid for an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound... "
Lecture Notes for Chemical Students: Inorganic chemistry.-v.2. Organic chemistry - Page 12
by Sir Edward Frankland - 1870
Full view - About this book

Textbook of Temperance

Frederic Richard Lees - History - 1809 - 332 pages
...acid, or basic. In a normal salt (erroneously called "neutral"), the displaceablc hydrogen of the acid is all exchanged for an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound radical. In the following, the displaced and sub stituted elements are put in italics, — .-vt . A • i -BTri...
Full view - About this book

The Text-book of Temperance in Relation to Morals, Science, Criticism, and ...

Frederic Richard Lees - Alcohol - 1871 - 296 pages
...or basic. In a normal salt (erroneously called ' neutral '), the displaceable hydrogen of the acid is all exchanged for an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound radical. In the following, the displaced and substituted elements are put in italics : — 'HTM. ' A -j -Km...
Full view - About this book

A laboratory text book of practical chemistry; or, Introduction to ...

William George Valentin - 1871 - 446 pages
...each other, normal salts are obtained by exchanging the whole of the replaceable hydrogen of the acid for an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound radical, such at ammonium, NHt. acid contained in litmus. A solution of red litmus is obtained by adding very...
Full view - About this book

A Laboratory Text Book of Practical Chemistry: Or, Introduction to ...

William George Valentin - Analysis - 1871 - 412 pages
...each other, normal salts are obtained by exchanging the whole of the replaceable hydrogen of the acid for an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound radical, such aS ammonium, NHt. acid contained in litmus. A solution of red litmus is oblnincd by adding very...
Full view - About this book

Introduction to inorganic chemistry

William George Valentin - 1872 - 216 pages
...each other, normal salts are obtained by exchanging the whole of the replaceable hydrogen of the acid for, an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound radical, such as ammonium, NHi. Instances of normal salts : — Acid from which Salt5. the salt is derived....
Full view - About this book

Inorganic chemistry

William Allen Miller - Chemistry - 1878 - 1082 pages
...hereafter. Frankland defines a normal salt as " one in which the displaceable hydrogen of the acid is all exchanged for an equivalent amount of a metal, or of a positive compound radical." (581) Polybasic Acids — Acid Salts. — If a quantity of oxalic acid be divided into two equal portions,...
Full view - About this book

Inorganic Chemistry

Sir Edward Frankland, Francis Robert Japp - Chemistry, Inorganic - 1885 - 732 pages
...normal, acid, and bane. A normal salt is one in which the dixplaceable hydrogen of the odd (see p. 41) is all exchanged for an equivalent amount of a metal...been displaced in the salt, being printed in italics: An acid sail is one in which the displaceable hydrogtn of the add is only partially exchanged for a...
Full view - About this book

Handbook of Modern Chemistry Inorganic and Organic for the Use of Students

Charles Meymott Tidy - Chemistry - 1887 - 924 pages
...classes as follows :— (a.) Normal Salts, ie, a salt where all the displaceable hydrogen of the add is exchanged for an equivalent amount of a metal or of a positive compound radical. Thus, for example, KjS0 4 from H 2 SO 4 ; NaN0 3 from HNO 3 ; Ca" 3 2(P0 4 ) from 2H 3 PO 4 . A normal...
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF