Yes, according to Wilkipedia. (In some cases such as injection into a nerve) Keith Wilsdorf keithwilsdorf@Yahoo.com
Quinine - C20H24O2N2 - contain 74,074 % carbon; the molar mass is 324,42 g.
quinine
No. Water is only poison when we put poison in it our self's.
Herapathite reaction is the reaction which is used to produce the complex sulfate or selenate.e.g.whe aristoquin(diquinine carbonic ester) is dissolved in hydrochloric or sulfuric acid,carbon dioxide is evolved and quinine chloride or quinine disulfate is formed,respectively.
The bar. or the grocery store usually. or a liquor store. your pick. the fancy ingredient you are probably looking for is quinine. so make sure the bottle actually says that it contains quinine. that way it will glow under a black-light.
can quinine go bad
Quinine is a noun.
Quinine is measured in milligrams.
Glowing jello glows because of the quinine that absorbs light from the black light
The bitter principle in grapefruit is naringin, not quinine. They are not chemically related.
Quinine is a drug with chemical formula C20H24N2O2. In each molecule of quinine there are 20 carbon atoms. Thus in 4.0 moles of quinine, there would be 80 moles of carbon.
No quinine is more for malaria. It is an anti-protozoal. Mixing antibiotics with quinine is not the best idea. It increases antibiotics side effects.
quinine is bitter when tasted........
That is the correct spelling of "quinine" (alkaloid from tree bark used medicinally).
Quinine. (Too much quinine in one's system can lead to cinchonism.)
Quinine comes from the bark of the cinchona tree.
Quinine - 1917 was released on: USA: 20 May 1917