This panacea was a solution ofdeutoxide of antimony in pyrotartaric acid; Glauber gives a most flattering account of its efficacy in removing the most virulent diseases, particularly all kinds of cutaneous eruptions.
In this experiment, the black and anhydrous deutoxide of copper gradually acquired a blue colour, as if a hydrate were formed under the influence of the feeble electric current formed by the arrangement.
This is owing to the decomposition of the nitric acid, (in the same manner as the acid of nitrate of potassa and other nitrates is decomposed), during which carbonic acid and deutoxide of azote are produced.
It is considered to be the hydrated deutoxide of potassium, and when decomposed will furnish potassium.
Part of its oxygen combines with the sulphurous acid, changing it into the sulphuric, and deutoxide of azote is reproduced.
If a few drops of deutoxide of hydrogen, or the oxygenized water of Thenard, be let fall on dry oxide of silver, a violent action will follow, accompanied with an explosion.
The acid is decomposed, deutoxide of azote is formed, and the oil acquires a hard consistence.
Heat a portion of deutoxide of chlorine: when the temperature arrives at 212°, an explosion will take place, and chlorine and oxygen be evolved.
It is formed by mingling four volumes ofdeutoxide of nitrogen with one volume of oxygen; and appears as a dark orange vapour which is condensable into a liquid at a temperature of 4 deg.
It consists of 47 parts of nitrogen gas, and 53 of oxygen gas, by weight; and of equal parts in bulk, without any condensation; so that the specific gravity of deutoxide of nitrogen is the arithmetical mean of the two constituents.
The former is effected by employing a cochineal bath, to which there have been added, in determinate proportions, acidulous tartrate of potash, and nitro-muriatic deutoxide of tin.
The deutoxide of manganese exists native in the mineral called Braunite; but it may be procured either by calcining, at a red heat, the proto-nitrate, or by spontaneous oxidizement of the protoxide in the air.
Thus we say deutoxide of copper, anddeutoxide of mercury.
Water converts it into nitric acid anddeutoxide of nitrogen; the latter of which escapes with effervescence.
The first of his discoveries was nitrous gas, now called deutoxide of azote, which had, indeed, been formed by Dr.
But he did not by any means confine himself to this, which was the primary object of the institution; but investigated the properties and determined the composition of nitric acid, ammonia, protoxide of azote and deutoxide of azote.
It possesses bleaching properties in perfection, and I think it likely that chlorine owes its bleaching powers to the formation of a little deutoxide of hydrogen in consequence of its action on water.
Black oxide of manganese (the oxide having the same name as the metal), peroxide or deutoxide of manganese.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "deutoxide" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.