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When nurse changed the bottles, she held the sal ammoniac against the wallpaper for a minute, I expect."
After accelerated rusting with sal ammoniac, the pistol was frozen so that the slide would not move.
Sal ammoniac is also the archaic name for the chemical compound ammonium chloride.
Sal ammoniac is a name of the natural, mineralogical form of ammonium chloride.
Evidence exists of use in the 13th century by alchemists as 'sal ammoniac'.
Sal ammoniac, you know.
It is a sublimation product that forms with cryptohalite, sal ammoniac, and native sulfur.
Ah, yes, certainly she would go at once-her case was not locked-and she would take with her some sal ammoniac.
In nature, bararite appears with cryptohalite, sal ammoniac, and native sulfur.
It is a very rare organic mineral which occurs in coal fire environments in association with sal ammoniac and native sulfur.
The nitrogen compound sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride) was known since the time of the Ancient Egyptians.
"It contains large quantities of chalk, also benzol peroxide powder, chlorine gas, sal ammoniac, and alum."
Sal ammoniac is a rare mineral composed of ammonium chloride, NHCl.
Alchemists prepared this by combining mercury, tin, sal ammoniac, and flowers of sulfur, grinding, mixing, then setting them for three hours in a sand heat.
Visually, cryptohalite crystals are almost impossible to discern from sal ammoniac (NHCl).
The addition of sal ammoniac to nitric acid creates Aqua regia and this acid is able to dissolve gold.
One method involved using clay as an absorbent, whereas the other method involved using ammonium chloride (sal ammoniac).
It occrs with native sulfur, sal ammoniac, letovicite, alunogen and boussingaultite.
Bararite has no known solution or exsolution, but it is always mixed with other substances (cryptohalite, sal ammoniac, and sulfur).
It was made by adding sal ammoniac to nitric acid which produced a mixture of hydrochloric acid and nitric acid.
Treatments with ammonium chloride (sal ammoniac), cuprous chloride/hydrochloric acid, and ammonium sulfate are somewhat successful.
In several countries, ammonium chloride, known as sal ammoniac, is used as food additive under the E number E510, commonly as a yeast nutrient in breadmaking.
Early examples of flux used different combinations and various amounts of iron fillings, borax, sal ammoniac, balsam of copaiba, cyanide of potash, and soda phosphate.