Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Barium carbonate is the inorganic compound with the formula BaCO 3. Like most alkaline earth metal carbonates , it is a white salt that is poorly soluble in water. It occurs as the mineral known as witherite .
Barium hydroxide ("baryta") was known to alchemists, who produced it by heating barium carbonate. Unlike calcium hydroxide, it absorbs very little CO 2 in aqueous solutions and is therefore insensitive to atmospheric fluctuations.
pK sp; Aluminium hydroxide: 14.43 Ammonium magnesium phosphate: 12.60 Barium carbonate: 8.09 Barium chromate: 9.62 (28 °C) Barium fluoride: 5.76 (25.8 °C) Barium iodate
Witherite is a barium carbonate mineral, Ba C O 3, in the aragonite group. [2] Witherite crystallizes in the orthorhombic system and virtually always is twinned. [2] The mineral is colorless, milky-white, grey, pale-yellow, green, to pale-brown. The specific gravity is 4.3, which is high for a translucent mineral. [2]
Barium bromide – BaBr 2; Barium carbonate – BaCO 3 [85] Barium chlorate – Ba(ClO 3) 2 [86] Barium chloride – BaCl 2 [87] Barium chromate – BaCrO 4 [88 ...
Barytocalcite is an anhydrous barium calcium carbonate mineral with the chemical formula Ba Ca(C O 3) 2. It is trimorphous with alstonite and paralstonite, that is to say the three minerals have the same formula but different structures. [3] Baryte and quartz pseudomorphs after barytocalcite have been observed. [4]
Substance Formula 0 °C 10 °C 20 °C 30 °C 40 °C 50 °C 60 °C 70 °C 80 °C 90 °C 100 °C Barium acetate: Ba(C 2 H 3 O 2) 2: 58.8: 62: 72: 75: 78.5: 77: 75
Barium acetate is generally produced by the reaction of acetic acid with barium carbonate: [2] BaCO 3 + 2 CH 3 COOH → (CH 3 COO) 2 Ba + CO 2 + H 2 O. The reaction is performed in solution and the barium acetate crystalizes out at temperatures above 41 °C. Between 25 and 40 °C, the monohydrate version crystalizes. Alternatively, barium ...