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Where possible Fire retardant products containing sodium ferrocyanide will not be used.
The rate of addition of sodium ferrocyanide has decreased over the past years.
Effects of sodium ferrocyanide derived from road salting on the ecosystem.
Sodium ferrocyanide is not currently produced in Canada.
On the west coast, rock salt imported from Chile is treated with sodium ferrocyanide at a rate of 60 mg/kg.
Some fire retardants contain sodium ferrocyanide, a compound that increases the toxicity of the product.
Most road salt contains sodium ferrocyanide as an anti-caking and corrosion inhibitor.
Sodium ferrocyanide is a chemical additive known as E 535 in the EU.
But the culprit in that case was sodium ferrocyanide, which became toxic to fish under certain environmental conditions and is longer used in fire retardant.
Sodium ferrocyanide, also known as yellow prussiate of soda, is sometimes added to salt as an anticaking agent.
The safety of sodium ferrocyanide as a food additive was found to be provisionally acceptable by the Committee on Toxicity in 1988.
Road salts containing sodium ferrocyanide are used in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces.
Sodium ferrocyanide and ferric ferrocyanide are highly stable and relatively immobile in the environment.
Sodium ferrocyanide dissociates to yield sodium and ferrocyanide ions.
Sodium ferrocyanide addition rates were selected for inclusion in calculations on a probability basis reflecting the percentage of the market served by the corresponding source mine.
Despite the presence of the cyanide ligands, sodium ferrocyanide has low toxicity (acceptable daily intake 0-0.025 mg/kg body weight).
In Europe, sodium ferrocyanide (535) and potassium ferrocyanide (536) are more common anticaking agents in table salt.
Tier 1 and Tier 2 analyses have shown that, through the formation of cyanide, sodium ferrocyanide can have the potential to negatively impact the aquatic environment.
This compound decomposes to sodium ferrous ferrocyanide, sodium ferrocyanide, nitric oxide, and cyanogen at about 450 C.
Dishwasher salt is 95% sodium chloride; an anticaking agent (e.g. sodium ferrocyanide or potassium ferrocyanide) constitutes the remaining 5%.
Sodium ferrocyanide is the sodium salt of the coordination compound of formula [Fe(CN)].
While road salt is a complex mixture of chloride salts, various anticaking compounds such as sodium ferrocyanide, and abrasives, this assessment focuses on the chloride salts.
In its hydrous form, NaFe(CN) 10HO (sodium ferrocyanide decahydrate), it is sometimes known as yellow prussiate of soda.
Sodium ferrocyanide (hydrous, NaFe(CN)-10HO)
Table salt today is cheap and refined and much of it also contains an additive called sodium ferrocyanide, a cyanide compound that prevents salt "caking" when being moved around.