- layers.
Tin(II)
chloride dissolves in less than its own m****
of water.
Dilute solutions are
subject to hydrolysis,
yielding an
insoluble basic salt: SnCl2...
-
Tin(II)
acetate is the
acetate salt of tin(II), with the
chemical formula of Sn(CH3COO)2. It was
first discovered in 1822. To
obtain tin(II) acetate, tin(II)...
-
Tin(II) 2-ethylhexanoate or
tin(II)
octoate or
stannous octoate (Sn(Oct)2) is the
octaoate or 2-ethylhexanoate
salt of tin.
Produced by the
reaction of...
-
Tin(IV)
acetate is the
acetate salt of tin(IV), with the
chemical formula of Sn(CH3COO)4.
Tin(IV)
acetate can be
refluxed by
thallium acetate and
tin(IV)...
-
Tin(IV)
nitrate is a
salt of tin with
nitric acid. It is a
volatile white solid,
subliming at 40 °C
under a vacuum.
Unlike other nitrates, it
reacts with...
-
Tin(II)
oxalate is an
inorganic compound, a
salt of tin and
oxalic acid with the
chemical formula SnC 2O 4. The
compound looks like
colorless crystals...
-
Tin(IV) chloride, also
known as
tin tetrachloride or
stannic chloride, is an
inorganic compound of tin and
chlorine with the
formula SnCl4. It is a colorless...
- Yim
Tin Tze (or Yim
Tin Tsai, Chinese: 鹽田梓/鹽田仔; lit. 'Little
Salt Field') is a
small offs****
island in Sai Kung District, Hong Kong. As
of 2013 there...
- Lam
Tin was once a
large field in the
vicinity of Kowloon Bay.
During the Song dynasty, it was a site
of salt production.
Since the 1980s, a
number of housing...
- color, and is
sometimes called "New
England corned beef".
Tinned corned beef,
alongside salt pork and hardtack, was a
standard ration for many militaries...