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In 1896, he published a paper on preparation of a new stable chemical compound: Mercurous nitrite.
Calomel (mercurous chloride) was a popular medicine at the time and one the doctor himself used to excess.
The depolarizer is a paste of mercurous sulfate.
Mercury(I) iodide, also known as mercurous iodide, is a chemical compound.
Also known as mercurous compounds, these are weak reducing agents and weak oxidizing agents.
Reaction of tetraethylammonium iodide and mercurous chloride.
Above this was the mercurous sulfate paste and, above that, the zinc sulfate solution.
"Calomel" was mercurous chloride.
Mercurous chloride forms by the reaction of elemental mercury and mercuric chloride:
Mercury can strip off fluoride to make thionyl fluoride and mercurous fluoride.
There is evidence to suggest that some types of skin-whitening products use active ingredients (such as mercurous chloride) and hydroquinone which can be harmful.
Mercurous chloride is employed extensively in electrochemistry, taking advantage of the ease of its oxidation and reduction reactions.
When treated with a cold solution of mercuric chloride, a white precipitate of mercurous chloride forms:
Mercury(I) chloride (also known as calomel or mercurous chloride) has been used as a diuretic, skin disinfectant, and laxative.
Mercurous chloride is toxic, although due to its low solubility in water it is generally less dangerous than its mercuric chloride counterpart.
At the age of two William's hands and feet became nearly paralyzed, either from polio, or from a doctor administering a dose of calomel (mercurous chloride).
Mercury(I) chloride or mercurous chloride (HgCl)
Mercurous chloride decomposes into mercury(II) chloride and elemental mercury upon exposure to UV light.
Mercury(I) bromide or mercurous bromide is the chemical compound composed of mercury and bromine with the formula HgBr.
Mercury(I) oxide, also known as mercurous oxide or oxomercury, is an inorganic metal oxide with the chemical formula HgO.
Also known as calomel (a mineral form, rarely found in nature) or mercurous chloride, this dense white or yellowish-white, odorless solid is the principal example of a mercury(I) compound.
The anode is an amalgam of cadmium with mercury with a cathode of pure mercury over which a paste of mercurous sulphate and mercury is placed.
It was set up in an H-shaped glass vessel with zinc amalgam in one leg and pure mercury, surmounted by a layer of mercurous sulfate paste, in the other.
Clark cells use a zinc, or zinc amalgam, anode and a mercury cathode in a saturated aqueous solution of zinc sulfate, with a paste of mercurous sulfate as depolarizer.
A study was undertaken of DMPS use by workers involved in the production of a calomel skin bleaching lotion and in direct contact with mercurous chloride and that already showed elevated urine mercury levels.