soda process

  • 121Etching — For other uses of etch or etching, see Etching (disambiguation), for the history of the method, see old master prints. The Soldier and his Wife. Etching by Daniel Hopfer, who is believed to have been the first to apply the technique to… …

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  • 122Alum — This article is about the chemical compound. For other uses, see Alum (disambiguation). Bulk alum Alum (  / …

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  • 123Salt glaze pottery — Pottery referred to as salt glazed or salted is created by adding common salt, sodium chloride, into the chamber of a hot kiln. Sodium acts as a flux and reacts with the silica in the clay body. A typical salt glaze piece has a glassine finish,… …

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  • 124sodium — /soh dee euhm/, n. 1. Chem. a soft, silver white, metallic element that oxidizes rapidly in moist air, occurring in nature only in the combined state, and used in the synthesis of sodium peroxide, sodium cyanide, and tetraethyllead: a necessary… …

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  • 125Nicolas Leblanc — chemist physician Born Dec …

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  • 126Coca-Cola — This article is about the beverage. For its manufacturer, see The Coca Cola Company. Coca Cola Classic redirects here. For the NCAA football game, see Coca Cola Classic (college football). Coca Cola …

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  • 127Leblanc, Nicolas — ▪ French chemist born 1742?, Issoudun, France died Jan. 16, 1806, Saint Denis       French surgeon and chemist who in 1790 developed the process for making soda ash (sodium carbonate) from common salt (sodium chloride). This process, which bears… …

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  • 128Hydrochloric acid — IUPAC name Hydrochloric acid[ …

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