Kerosine
Honeycomb wax is pure beeswax. It can be eaten but has no nutritional value. Beeswax is used in food manufacture as a glazing agent, a binding agent, and as a mould-release agent.
It is a nitrating agent without using mixed acids. It ican be used both as a harsh and, mild nitration medium . Besides it is a specific nitrating agent in the sense the nitonium ion can be bonded at specif locations in the molecular strucure. it is used in the preparation of high energy explosives.
an agent
Selenium dioxide (SeO2) is the most widely used selenium compound in industry. It is used as an oxidising agent in drug and other chemical manufacture, a catalyst in organic syntheses, and an anti-oxidant in lubricating oils.
Because they decompose the water to pure hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen is a flammable gas and the oxygen is the oxidizing agent that reacts together in an explosive manner.Caesium
At one time it was nitroglycerin- now it is probably ammonium nitrate, but RDX, HMX and TNT are also widely used.
There were 2300 tonnes of picric acid (an explosive agent more destructive than TNT), 200 tonnes of TNT, 35 tonnes of benzole and 10 tonnes of gun cotton.
No. Not even close.
fertilizeroxidizing agent in various explosive mixturesoxidizing agent in some solid rocket fuel mixtures
high yield explosives
secretary of the army
it is used as an anti-atherosclerotic agent and also in the manufacture of dyes and perfumes.
Honeycomb wax is pure beeswax. It can be eaten but has no nutritional value. Beeswax is used in food manufacture as a glazing agent, a binding agent, and as a mould-release agent.
No, silver nitrate is not explosive, although it does burn very rapidly ---- Well no, neither will it burn. What it is is an oxidiser, thus it must be mixed with a suitable reducing agent (fuel) for it to burn or explode.
Driving or bursting out with violence and noise; causing explosion; as, the explosive force of gunpowder., An explosive agent; a compound or mixture susceptible of a rapid chemical reaction, as gunpowder, or nitro-glycerine., A sound produced by an explosive impulse of the breath; (Phonetics) one of consonants p, b, t, d, k, g, which are sounded with a sort of explosive power of voice. [See Guide to Pronunciation, Ã 155-7, 184.]
High-yield explosives
High-Yield Explosives