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  2. Residue (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residue_(chemistry)

    In chemistry, residue is whatever remains or acts as a contaminant after a given class of events. Residue may be the material remaining after a process of preparation, separation, or purification, such as distillation, evaporation, or filtration. It may also denote the undesired by-products of a chemical reaction.

  3. Glossary of chemistry terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_chemistry_terms

    This glossary of chemistry terms is a list of terms and definitions relevant to chemistry, including chemical laws, diagrams and formulae, laboratory tools, glassware, and equipment. Chemistry is a physical science concerned with the composition, structure, and properties of matter , as well as the changes it undergoes during chemical reactions ...

  4. Residue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residue

    Pesticide residue, refers to the pesticides that may remain on or in food after they are applied to food crops; Petroleum residue, the heavier fractions of crude oil that fail to vaporize in an oil refinery; Residue (chemistry), materials remaining after a physical separation process, or by-products of a chemical reaction

  5. Azeotrope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azeotrope

    Stripping: the residue, or "bottoms", is retained and exhibits an increasingly higher boiling point. A mixture of 5% water with 95% tetrahydrofuran is an example of an azeotrope that can be economically separated using a pressure swing: a swing in this case between 1 atm and 8 atm .

  6. Talk:Residue (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Residue_(chemistry)

    Then there's the more technical meanings, relating to molecular structure. (And there are several related terms - sidechain, substituent, residue, moiety, . . ) Some are current in chemistry generally, some are specialised (eg in biochemistry). Organise the top like that, and the body sections will fall into place pretty sweetly, I'd think.

  7. Centrifugation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugation

    Laboratory centrifuge. Centrifugation is a mechanical process which involves the use of the centrifugal force to separate particles from a solution according to their size, shape, density, medium viscosity and rotor speed. [1]

  8. Residue (biochemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Residue_(biochemistry...

    Residue (chemistry)#Biochemistry; To an embedded anchor: This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to an embedded anchor on the redirect's ...

  9. Oxidizing agent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxidizing_agent

    The international pictogram for oxidizing chemicals. Dangerous goods label for oxidizing agents. An oxidizing agent (also known as an oxidant, oxidizer, electron recipient, or electron acceptor) is a substance in a redox chemical reaction that gains or "accepts"/"receives" an electron from a reducing agent (called the reductant, reducer, or electron donor).