The brown spot on porcelain produced by contact with a flame of arseniuretted hydrogen is not a thin film of As, but one of the brown solid hydride AsH, formed by the decomposition of AsH{3}.
The contents of the stomach were acid, and yielded, on distillation, hydride of benzole and hydric cyanide.
This process is convenient for small amounts of arsenic; but, as stated before, the results are given as metallic arsenic, whereas the films appear never to be composed of pure metallic arsenic, but a mixture of hydride and suboxide.
Hence quantitative results from weighing arsenical mirrors can never be accurate, because the mirrors consist of mixtures of hydride and suboxide.
In addition to this, in the presence of water it may contain sodiumhydride and NaHO.
The appearance of sodium hydride resembles that of sodium itself; it is as soft as this latter, when heated it becomes brittle, and decomposes above 300°, evolving hydrogen.
Sodium hydride melts more easily than sodium itself, and then does not undergo decomposition if it is in an atmosphere of hydrogen.
Oil of cinnamon consists essentially of hydride of cinnamyl, but, unless when very recently prepared, it also contains a variable proportion of cinnamic acid formed by the oxidation of the hydride.
Unlike genuine oil of almonds or hydride of benzoyl, it is insoluble in water, and does not distil without suffering partial decomposition.
It is essentially the hydride of benzoyl, but it always contains a portion of hydrocyanic or prussic acid, to which it owes its very poisonous properties.
The light oil contains the most hydride of benzoyl, and the heavy oil the most benzoin.
Conversely, a layer of liquid ether or of hydride of amyl, of this thickness, were its molecules freed from the thrall of cohesion, would form a column of vapor 38 inches long, at a pressure of 7.
Or let it be hydride of amyl, of the same length, and at a pressure of 6.
The experiments have been made with the vapors of two very volatile liquids, namely, sulphuric ether and hydride of amyl.
However, the best you can do is lithium-hydride fusion missiles in the hundreds-of-megatons range.
I'm damn glad we've got plenty of stuff in our Op field and plenty of hydridefor the engines.
He could almost picture the stream of boronhydride blending with the oxidizer and flowing in an ever-increasing stream toward the combustion chamber.
Now and then he looked through the thick glass ports, and he saw the green mist of boron hydride as fuel throbbed slowly into the rocket's tanks.
Such a bomb would be nearly fifty thousand times as powerful as the lithium-hydride pinch bomb.
One gram of lithium hydridewould give nearly fifty-eight kilowatt-hours of energy in one blast.
Now, suppose a man had a pair of tweezers small enough to pick up a single molecule of lithium hydride and pinch the two nuclei together.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hydride" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.