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lead saltsの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • Paints used at the time contained high amounts of lead salts.
  • The Romans used lead salt pans to extract the salt from the brine.
  • A variety of lead salts can also be used, but are less common today.
  • In a working battery, the chemical conversion of metallic lead to a lead salt releases electrons.
  • The presence of carbonates or sulfates results in the formation of insoluble lead salts, which protect the metal from corrosion.
  • Members of the salt museum staff, dressed in historical costume, demonstrate the salt-boiling process using lead salt pans heated on wood fires.
  • Conditions / substances to avoid include : heat, light, bromides, chlorides, ammonia, alkalis, cyanides, copper salts, lead salts, iodoform and hydrogen peroxide.
  • Lead salts are thus very quickly and efficiently absorbed by the body, accumulating in it and leading to both chronic and acute poisoning.
  • The lead poisoning was also prevalent in Herefordshire as lead salts were added to the cider as a sweetener, being much cheaper than sugar.
  • Molybdates possess a lower toxicity than chromates or lead salts and are therefore seen as an interesting alternative to these salts for corrosion inhibition.
  • In the case of Lindlar's catalyst, palladium is poisoned with a lead salt to allow reduction of an alkyne to the corresponding alkene while preventing reduction of the alkene product to the corresponding alkane.
  • The early extreme pressure additives were based on lead salts of fatty acids ( " lead soaps " ), " active sulfur " compounds ( e . g . thiols and elementary sulfur ), and chlorinated compounds.