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So I'd guess that the solid remaining is sodium sulfate.
The resulting sodium sulfate from these processes are known as salt cake.
Sodium sulfate is removed by lowering the temperature of the mixture.
Demand for soda ash increased and supply of sodium sulfate had to increase in line.
By effort of the industry, therefore, sodium sulfate production as by-product is declining.
Solutions exposed to air are eventually oxidized to sodium sulfate.
He discovered sodium sulfate, which is commonly known today as Glauber's salt.
This makes a solution of ammonium nitrate and sodium sulfate.
Although sodium sulfate is generally regarded as non-toxic, it should be handled with care.
The chemical released most heavily in Connecticut was sodium sulfate solution at more than 19.4 million pounds, the report said.
Sodium sulfate displays a moderate tendency to form double salts.
One of her materials of choice was sodium sulfate Glauber's salt.
The organic solution was dried using sodium sulfate.
Miescher devised different salt solutions eventually producing one with sodium sulfate.
His discovery of sodium sulfate in 1625 led to the compound being named after him: "Glauber's salt".
The glass industry provides another significant application for sodium sulfate, as second largest application in Europe.
The sodium sulfate is afterwards fired with calcium carbonate and coal.
The exploited sodium sulfate is used in the formulations of powder detergents.
The sodium sulfate plant operated until 1977.
The 25 staff members produce sodium sulfate for shipping throughout Canada and the central United States.
Sodium sulfate has unusual solubility characteristics in water.
About one third of the world's sodium sulfate is produced as by-product of other processes in chemical industry.
Sodium sulfate is used as a fining agent, to help remove small air bubbles from molten glass.
In 1953, sodium sulfate was proposed for heat storage in passive solar heating systems.
Sodium sulfate is a neutral salt, which forms aqueous solutions with pH of 7.
There they found a good salt spring for making of salt cakes.
The resulting sodium sulfate from these processes are known as salt cake.
Even knowing which ones were empty, which were full of salt cake, still left him nearly a hundred to watch.
The substances produced included soap, borax, soda ash, salt cake and bleaching powder.
The weight ratio of the charge is 2:2:1 of salt cake, calcium carbonate, and carbon respectively.
When they arrived they heard news about Indians inhabiting the south and making large salt cakes used to trade for wild cotton and fish.
The company produces borax, boric acid, soda ash, salt cake and salt.
They saw crops, trails, white salt cakes and then huts where they found corn, yucca and beans.
Saltstone is a mixture of the salt cake (mostly sodium nitrate and other salts) with concrete and fly ash.
Once the luperci were dressed, they offered little salt cakes called mola salsa to the faceless deities who safeguarded the People of Rome.
Leblanc's contribution was the second step, in which the salt cake was mixed with crushed limestone (calcium carbonate) and coal and fired.
Float glass uses common glass-making raw materials, typically consisting of sand, soda ash (sodium carbonate), dolomite, limestone, and salt cake (sodium sulfate) etc.
The process of generating salt cake from salt and sulfuric acid released hydrochloric acid gas, and because this acid was industrially useless in the early 19th century, it was simply vented into the atmosphere.
And from that idea he went on to envision a salted cake, where amid various strata of pastry he put first one of ham, then one of sliced hard-boiled egg, then one of green vegetable.
Commodities produced by Searles Valley Minerals from their Searles Lake operations include borax, V-Bor (borax with 5 moles of water), anhydrous borax, boric acid, soda ash, salt cake and salt.
The Mannheim process is an important method for the manufacture of hydrogen chloride and sodium sulfate from sodium chloride (table salt) and sulfuric acid in which case the NaSO is known as salt cake:
A short prayer and an offering of a salt cake at the shrine to the gods of the house in the atrium, and then, when the servant on door duty called out that he could see the torches coming down the hill, a reverence to Janus Patulcius, the god who permitted safe opening of a door.
ESPs continue to be excellent devices for control of many industrial particulate emissions, including smoke from electricity-generating utilities (coal and oil fired), salt cake collection from black liquor boilers in pulp mills, and catalyst collection from fluidized bed catalytic cracker units in oil refineries to name a few.