Indian-ink, porcelain, asbestos, fluor-spar, minium, cinnabar, binoxide of lead, sulphate of zinc, tourinaline, graphite, and charcoal. In the second class are placed bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold,... Elementary Chemistry, Theoretical and Practical - Pagina 90door George Fownes - 1855 - 555 pagina’sVolledige weergave - Over dit boek
| 1897 - 868 pagina’s
...vennillion, charcoal, proto and per salts of iron, salts of manganese, oxygen, air. Diamagwlic. — Bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, tungsten, rock-crystal, mineral acids, alum, glass, litharge, nitre, phosphorus, sulphur, resin, water,... | |
| 1900 - 622 pagina’s
...the similar compounds of iron. The following metals are non-magnetic for the Wetherill separator : bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury,...silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, rhodium, iridium and tungsten. The improvement in the Wetherill apparatus consists mainly in the fact that both poles... | |
| Franklin Institute (Philadelphia, Pa.) - 1897 - 534 pagina’s
...nickel, cobalt, manganese, chromium, cerium, titanium, palladium, platinum, osmium. Diamagnetics. — Bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury,...gold. arsenic, uranium, rhodium, iridium, tungsten. Uranium was later found to be paramagnetic (by Verdet) ; and almost all amorphous and organic substances... | |
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