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  2. Sulfur tetrafluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfur_tetrafluoride

    It is a colorless corrosive gas that releases dangerous hydrogen fluoride gas upon exposure to water or moisture. Sulfur tetrafluoride is a useful reagent for the preparation of organofluorine compounds, [3] some of which are important in the pharmaceutical and specialty chemical industries.

  3. Thionyl tetrafluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thionyl_tetrafluoride

    Thionyl tetrafluoride, also known as sulfur tetrafluoride oxide, is an inorganic compound with the formula S O F 4.It is a colorless gas.. The shape of the molecule is a distorted trigonal bipyramid, with the oxygen found on the equator.

  4. Stiff diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stiff_diagram

    1) to help visualize ionically related waters from which a flow path can be determined, or; 2) if the flow path is known, to show how the ionic composition of a water body changes over space and/or time. Example of a Stiff diagram. A typical Stiff diagram is shown in the figure (right).

  5. Bent's rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bent's_rule

    The inductive effect is the transmission of charge through covalent bonds and Bent's rule provides a mechanism for such results via differences in hybridisation. In the table below, [ 26 ] as the groups bonded to the central carbon become more electronegative, the central carbon becomes more electron-withdrawing as measured by the polar ...

  6. Particle-laden flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle-laden_flow

    The starting point for a mathematical description of almost any type of fluid flow is the classical set of Navier–Stokes equations.To describe particle-laden flows, we must modify these equations to account for the effect of the particles on the carrier, or vice versa, or both - a suitable choice of such added complications depend on a variety of the parameters, for instance, how dense the ...

  7. Lattice gas automaton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_gas_automaton

    The particles can move to any of the four sites whose cells share a common edge. Particles cannot move diagonally. If two particles collide head-on, for example a particle moving to the left meets a particle moving to the right, the outcome will be two particles leaving the site at right angles to the direction they came in. [6]

  8. Field flow fractionation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_flow_fractionation

    A force is applied from the top (here it is a cross flow used in asymmetrical flow fff). The particles diffuse up against this force. On average the smaller red particles are higher up above the accumulation wall compared to the blue particles. The elution flow in longitudinal direction is shown with the flow arrows indicating the velocity profile.

  9. Tetrafluoroberyllate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrafluoroberyllate

    The γ form is produced by cooling a melt of SrF 2 and Be 2 and the β form is made by precipitating from a water solution. When melted and heated to 850–1145 °C, Be 2 gas evaporates leaving behind molten SrF 2. [11] The barium tetrafluoroberyllate is very insoluble and can be used for gravimetric analysis of beryllium. [11]