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And the stannic oxide left the skin with an overall opaque whiteness.
A tin compound, stannic oxide, was the other major ingredient, and there was no evidence of any perfume.
Stannic acid is produced as byproduct.
Tin(IV) sulfide, also known as stannic sulfide, is a chemical compound.
At the hot end a very thin layer of tin oxide is applied either using a safe organic compound or inorganic stannic chloride.
The white of the glaze makes me think--as a guess--that it's a stannic oxide compound.
It reacts with acids to produce stannic salts, such as tin(IV) chloride with hydrochloric acid.
Cahours obtained similar products and attributed the formation of the so-called "stannic ethyl" to a reaction of the Wurtz type.
Already in 1858, "stannic ethyl" was formulated as a polymeric compound denoted with the composition n(SnCH).
Mikhail Lomonosov disproves the phlogiston theory of combustion and pioneers the study of oxidation by converting tin to stannic oxide.
The researchers suggest that the fat was heated, possibly to bleach it, and that the stannic oxide (easily made by heating tin) served only as a white pigment.
Stannous hydroxide is easily oxidized to stannic acid (Sn(OH)) by air since tin is often found in oxidation state +4.
Tin(IV) chloride or stannic chloride or tin tetrachloride (SnCl)
Stannic acid (Sn(OH)), the formal precursor to stannates does not exist and is actually a hydrate of SnO.
"Stannic acid" refers to hydrated tin dioxide, SnO, which is also called "stannic hydroxide."
Stannic chloride is used in chemical reactions with fuming (90%) nitric acid for the selective nitration of activated aromatic rings in the presence of unactivated ones.
The halo-Prins reaction is one such modification with replacement of protic acids and water by lewis acids such as stannic chloride and boron tribromide.
For glaze use only one tin compound, tin (IV) oxide Tin dioxide (SnO), and also called stannic acid, is commercially exploited.
Tin dioxide, also known by the systematic name tin(IV) oxide and stannic oxide in the older notation, is the inorganic compound with the formula SnO.
In the military, teargases such as CN, CS, and stannic chloride in a chamber may be used to give the users confidence in the efficacy of the mask.
Mosaic gold, or stannic sulfide, SnS, is obtained as a yellow scaly crystalline powder, and used as a pigment in bronzing and gilding wood and metal work.
Hydrous forms of SnO have been described in the past as stannic acids, although such materials appear to be hydrated particles of SnO where the composition reflects the particle size.
For the compound, SnO, the tin ion is Sn4+ (balancing out the 4 charge on the two O2 anions), and because this is a higher oxidation state than the alternative (Sn2+), this compound is called stannic oxide.
In addition, coloring "may also be attributable to the presence of chemicals such as chromium oxide greens, chromium hydroxide, ferric ferrocyanide, ferric ammonium ferrocyanide, stannic oxide, titanium dioxide, iron oxide, carmine, ultramarines, and manganese violet."
Stannic chloride was used as a chemical weapon in World War I, as it formed an irritating (but non-deadly) dense smoke on contact with air: it was substituted for by a mixture of silicon tetrachloride and titanium tetrachloride near the end of the War due to shortages of tin.