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Everything posted by RyanJ
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I have header of that book so it is good? I avoided it because I could not find a lot of information on it... To add to Woelens list, I'd like to add a few too: Organic Chemistry by Clayden, Greeves, Warren and Wothers. Inorganic Chemitry Second Edition by Catherine E. Housecroft and Alan G. Sharpe. Chemistry Third Edition by Catherine E. Housecroft and Edwin C. Counstable. All of the above have helped me a lot so I though I'd list them (All found on Amazon). Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Books, lots of books. Woelen has a good list on his site (Also worth checking out for experiments!): http://woelen.scheikunde.net/science/chem/elem/refs.html And, as usual, Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chemistry Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Cellulose nitrate http://ptcl.chem.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/NI/nitrocellulose.html Gives you another example of why you reserch.... Nitrous oxide http://physchem.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/NI/nitrous_oxide.html Potassium http://physchem.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/PO/potassium.html etc. Certain things removed by me - don't want the kewls finding it Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Really :S So, can any of the experts resolve the issue, is Calcium mmore reactive than Sodium or vice versa? Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Thats a good point, I guess you'd need some sort of maintinance for a the filter list Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Ah, I understand the question now. Reactivity increases as you go down groups I and II... Seeing as Group I are more reactive then Group II anyway and Sodium being further up the table then Calcium I guess its open to debate, I personally agree with the Wikipedia one. Having seen Sodium and Calcium react I'd definatly say Sodium is more reactive. Lets see what the chemistry experts have too say - maybe they may be able to say for shure which is more reactive Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Not really, they are pretty much the same Maybe the "real one" has more metals in it but thats about the onlly differene as far as I am aware, the actual table its self remains the same Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Youprobably will not get a lot of replies too this because... people like to keep their soures secret The best thing I can suggest is use the search feature, there have been a lot of threads abou this in the past and I'm shure you'll find some of them useful Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Why do you need to make those? Some of those are quite unusual. Best thing to do is research via Google - should start you off. Be warned, research the chemicals before you try and make them, if they are toxic and you don't know it you could have problems later... Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Yes thats basically it. Its more correctly called the Activity Series, metals are listed in order of decreasing ease of oxidation and increased east of reduction http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactivity_series Cheers, Ryan Jones
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I say a flame test and then maybe testing its activity with some acids - should give you a rough idea of the element. After that you can use some other tests to identify the metal using what you have left over from the pevious tests Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Well, you vapourise a material and then treat it with an electrical charge to strip off any electrons. And for fussion you use a magnetic field to compress those now charged ions in an ever confined space until they start to fuse... Good luck, you'll need it. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Not shure but Yahoo video search may find you something: http://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video?p=%22Uranium%22&ei=UTF-8&fr=sfp&cv=g&x=wrt Have not had time to check the results though I am afraid so I'm not shure if it returned anything useful. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Ah I see. In that case I think its probably best to say that there are almost an unlimited number of ways that E-mails can be sent... How exactly were you planning ion implimenting something to stop spam that way?? (If you don't mind my asking) Cheers, Ryan Jones
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I wish they did, I can spell on paper but I can't spell and type Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Well, lell then 1/4 are actually Wikipedia is a good resource and almost always fills my needs then if not I know SFN is always here! Cheers, Ryan Jones
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozone#Industrial_production Should give you all the information you need Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Only by a few seconds it seems Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Is this a homework question...? The best I will do is point you too a source that should answer your questions: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Research is essential too any project even more so when it could be dealing with potentially harmful substances suck as those found in some expeciments in chemistry. Always research or you could one day find yourself in hospital because you failed to account for something Good job EvoN1020v for pointing that out! Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Quite a few, this can be done from a server side script such as a PHP script, through a program such as VB using DOM methods to access elements of a page and fill them in dynamically... and the list goes on an on. If there a specific one you are interested in? Cheers, Ryan Jones