Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
He would tell her what butesin picrate really was.
But where, all this time, was the picrate?
Potassium picrate is not a very powerful explosive.
A salt similar to ammonium picrate is produced.
The Navy proposed to continue using ammonium picrate.
Many picrates are explosives, for example ammonium picrate (known as Dunnite).
"Is there picrate of potash on board?"
Ammonium picrate is a salt formed by reacting picric acid and ammonia.
Ferrous picrate is used in some applications as a diesel fuel additive to achieve better mileage.
Ammonium picrate (known as Dunnite or explosive D) was used by the United States beginning in 1906.
The sailors caught his cry of "Picrate, picrate!"
By comparison, the more sensitive anhydrous lead picrate detonated 10% of the time when struck by the same mass dropped from the height of 2cm.
Barbara Gardiner wrote "butesin picrate" on a piece of paper and handed it across her office desk to Conor Fitzpatrick.
As with other picrates, potassium picrate may be produced by the neutralization of picric acid with the corresponding carbonate.
According to Urbanski, Potassium picrate detonated 10% of the time when struck by a mass of 2kg dropped from the height of 21cm.
The US forces normally used the explosive Explosive D, otherwise known as ammonium picrate, for this purpose.
"But tell me, Mr. Falsten," I asked, "is it possible for picrate of potash to ignite without concussion?"
Among the first things that were found was the case of picrate, perfectly intact, having neither been injured by the water, nor of course reached by the flames.
First dissolving the picric acid in methanol and then adding potassium carbonate will result in potassium picrate.
This report was severely criticized because their identification based solely on the optical properties of the crystalline picrate, and other scientists failed to reproduce the same result.
Kinetic Jaffe methods involve mixing serum with alkaline picrate and reading the rate of change in absorption spectrophotometrically at 520 nm.
Dunnite, also known as Explosive D or systematically as ammonium picrate, is an explosive developed by Major Dunn in 1906.
Glass or plastic bottles are required, as picric acid can easily form metal picrate salts that are even more sensitive and hazardous than the acid itself.
It burns readily and is more easily detonated than ammonium picrate or TNT, being about as sensitive as picric acid.
Potassium picrate, or potassium 2,4,6-trinitrophenolate, is an organic chemical, a picrate of potassium.