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Ammonia
Ammonia is represented by its symbol NH(3). In drawing its diagram using VSEPR theory, we get a triangular pyramidal shape.
to do this you pea in a cup and pour it in. this will extract the nitrate by preticipation and put all of the potassium at the top
Yes ,it has a smell. It has a characteristic smell.
It depends on the fertilizer you are using. Some fertilizers have a high pH and some have a low pH. So find out what the pH is on the fertilizer before using because you don't want to throw you pH off to much, it will bind up alot of vital nutrients in the soil.
Ammonia and Lithium combined with pseudoephedrine or ephedrine will make Methamphetamine. Using ammonium nitrate fertilizer is not recommended due to its tendency to explode.
It doesn't do so directly. The poop breaks down and creates ammonia and mulm. This ammonia is deadly poisonous but nature has contrived to fix it by converting it into Nitrite and then to Nitrate by using naturally occurring bacteria in the environment and the 'cycled' filter. The plants can then use up the nitrate and mulm as they photosynthesise and grow.
It was fairly basic chemistry and physics using products which are commercially available such as agricultural fertilizer and diesel fuel.
this is because nitrate reductase test using the production of nitrite from nitrate as a measure of nitrate reductase activity
advantages;-helps plants grow bigger and faster-cheap and cost effective-high nitrogen contentdisadvantages;-danger to handlers-danger to the environment-ammonia production accounts for as much as 1% of the world's total energy usage
It is very difficult to pin point exactly where the Nitrate supply is coming from. One way nitrates get into the water is the farmers using Fertilizers and pesticides contain high amounts of ammonia and when ammonia oxidizes it produces nitrates that get washed into streams and in underground water supplies. Another way is that when plants die they produce nitrogen and when nitrogen forms with oxygen it produces nitrate which again gets washed into the soil.
Yes, garden fertilizer can kill cats. Don't let your cat outside after using fertilizer.
"Nitrogen" in fertilizer is in the form of bioavailable nitrogen ... nitrates and/or ammonia salts ... so yes, it would lower the melting point of water and "melt ice" the same way that rock salt does.
You cannot do that. You can only make sodium nitrate using a different process (search Youtube) or buy it.
yes ammonia use as a refrigerant
I would go with a broadcast spreader and use dry fertilizer , might be safer than using liquid fertilizer with a sprayer.
It depends on what toothpaste you are using