Potassium chloride is melted at 770 oC.
A pardon for those marked to hang.
Out of the 19 hanged during the actual events, only three deaths are described in the Crucible: John Proctor's, Rebecca Nurse's and Martha Corey's. However, the Crucible has those three deaths on the same day instead of the three separate days on which they occurred.
Mary's argument to Abby in 'The Crucible' is in regards to confessing what they have done. Mary wants them to say they were also dancing so that their punishments can be a whipping instead of a hanging.
In Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible," the character who says "more weight" is Giles Corey. This occurs during his pressing execution, where he refuses to enter a plea and instead chooses to be crushed under heavy stones. His defiance and strength of character symbolize resistance against injustice and the oppressive nature of the Salem witch trials.
In Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible," the last people to be hanged are John Proctor, Rebecca Nurse, and Martha Corey. They are executed as a result of the Salem witch trials, which reflect the hysteria and injustice of the period. Proctor's hanging occurs after he refuses to confess to witchcraft, choosing instead to uphold his integrity. The play critiques the dangers of mass paranoia and the consequences of a flawed judicial system.
If a student accidentally put potassium chloride instead of potassium chlorate in the crucible during a lab experiment, the results would likely not match the expected outcome. Potassium chloride does not release oxygen when heated like potassium chlorate does, so there would be no oxygen to react with the magnesium present in the crucible. This would impact the ability to achieve the desired chemical reaction and may lead to incorrect data or observations.
Despite that potassium chlorate catches on fire when it gets heated in the open, if you put it in a test tube and heat that, instead of burning it will melt into molten form, and this stage of potassium chlorate is extremely reactive, any contact with anything combustible like sugar would cause combustion of it. This is the basis for the famous gummy bear and potassium chlorate experiment. The sugar in the gummy bear would combust on contact with the molten potassium chlorate, resulting in an violent reaction.
If you use potassium hydroxide instead of sodium hydroxide, you would make potassium salts instead of sodium salts. For example, if you reacted potassium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid, you would produce potassium chloride.
yes probs as bananas do have potassium in
No, sodium chloride (table salt) cannot be used to make soap instead of lye. Lye (sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide) is the essential ingredient needed to saponify fats and oils to make soap. Sodium chloride does not have the same chemical properties to facilitate the soap-making process.
The reaction between potassium and hydrochloric acid is very violent, even explosive. On contact with the acid the reaction rapidly releases heat and hydrogen gas, which ignites. This in turn sets the potassium on fire. When this happens the potassium may explode, scattering flaming molten globules of metal.
In practicality, none. It is fairly simple chemistry. Potassim (K) typically does not just exist naturally as itself. It is usually is bonded with some other elements or substance. In the case of Potassium Pills, it is bonded with chloride and you get KCl. Potassium Gluconate just uses a a gluconate molecule instead of a Cl to bind it to. You may compare this to Na Cl or Sodium Chloride (Table Salt). You never eat sodium alone, it is always in combination with Chloride. The reason in short is that when Potassium is combined with another chemical it becomes charged positive (K+) and this is useful for your body. Any supplement you buy that contains Potassium, whether it be Potassium Gluconate or Potassium Chloride, are most often the same.
how many meq's is 595 mg of potassium gluconate in pill form? _____________ You seem to be asking how translate a dose of potassium chloride, which is often expressed as mEq's when prescribed as a drug, into an equivalent dose of potassium in supplemental potassium gluconate, which is generally expressed in mg. 595 mg of potassium gluconate contains about 99mg of elemental potassium. 189 mg of potassium chloride also contains about 99mg of elemental potassium. 189 mg of potassium chloride is about 2.54 mEq That said, the potassium in potassium gluconate is more easily absorbed by the body than is the potassium in potassium chloride, so seeking the equivalent elemental potassium dosage may not be what you want as it may produce different effects in the body. For example, my mother had been prescribed 20mEq of potassium chloride by her doctor, which contains 781.960 mg of elemental potassium. The large pills were hard for her to swallow. Instead i gave her about 1/4 teaspoon of powered potassium gluconate mixed in a glass of water, which contained only about 135 mg elemental potassium, about the same contained in 3.5 mEq of potassium chloride. That was less than a fifth the amount prescribed by her doctor, yet her potassium levels in her blood tests were just fine.
Potassium hypochlorite is a chemical compound with the formula KClO. It is commonly used as a disinfectant and bleaching agent. It is also used in water treatment to remove contaminants and kill bacteria.
Oh, dude, potassium chloride is totally sublime... in the scientific sense! It sublimes at high temperatures, meaning it goes from a solid to a gas without melting first. So yeah, it's like the David Blaine of chemicals, just disappearing into thin air.
Potassium is not commonly used for crackers as a main ingredient, but it may be added in small amounts as a preservative or to enhance flavor. Too much potassium can be harmful, so it's important to use it in moderation.
There is a system available now that uses a mixture of Magnesium chloride and potassium chloride instead of the old Potassium chloride we have been using it in our pool for about 5 months and the results are great Ive never seen the water as good without any problems whatsoever. I am not sure however if the electrodes need to be different in the chlorine generator to do what you are thinking of. The system I am talking about is called Magnablu. It is originally German but was handled handled by Poolrite in Australia. Poolrite Autralia however has gone to the wall and I don't know who took this part of their business over. Dragonfly.biz had dealings with them and may perhaps be able to help.