- "Eau de
Labarraque" or "
Labarraque's solution", a
solution of
sodium hypochlorite widely used as a
disinfectant and deodoriser.
Labarraque's use of sodium...
-
developed as a
bleaching agent around 1820 by the
French chemist Antoine Labarraque, as a
cheaper substitute for
Claude Berthollet's pot****ium hypochlorite...
- Bouvet,
Maurice (1950). "Les
grands pharmaciens:
Labarraque (1777–1850)" [The
great pharmacists:
Labarraque (1777–1850)].
Revue d'Histoire de la Pharmacie...
- 1820,
Antoine Labarraque substituted the much
cheaper precursor sodium hydroxide (soda lye, NaOH) for potash, thus
producing Eau de
Labarraque, basically...
-
calcium hypochlorite) in 1799.
Around 1820,
French chemist Antoine Germain Labarraque discovered the
disinfecting and
deodorizing ability of
hypochlorites and...
-
disinfectants and deodorizers. That
application started soon
after French chemist Labarraque discovered those properties,
around 1820 (still
before Pasteur formulated...
-
Member Azoulay has a son and a
daughter with her
husband François-Xavier
Labarraque, who also
studied at the École
nationale d'administration. "Audrey Azoulay"...
- Press.
Labarraque AM (1828). On the
disinfecting properties of
Labarraque's preparations of chlorine.
Translated by
Scott J. S. Highley. "
Labarraque AG"...
- hypochlorite.
Antoine Labarraque replaced potash lye by the
cheaper soda lye, thus
obtaining sodium hypochlorite (Eau de
Labarraque). Cl2(g) + 2 NaOH(aq)...
- Antoine-Germain
Labarraque (1777 – 1850) was a
French chemist and pharmacist,
notable for
formulating and
finding important uses for "Eau de
Labarraque" or "Labarraque's...