Tin oxide or stannic oxide is commonly used as an opacifier in ceramic glazes. |
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The working temperature is 70ºC. The process takes place basically because the sodium perborate oxidises the stagnate ion into stannic. |
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This book presents the background science and technology of the stannic oxide gas sensor, along with practical information about its applications. |
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The colour of pure tin is retained during exposure because a thin, invisible, protective film of stannic oxide is formed spontaneously by reaction with the oxygen of the air. |
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Sometime between 1858 and 1859, French chemist François-Emmanuel Verguin found that reaction of aniline with stannic chloride gave a fuchsia, or rose-coloured, dye, which he named fuchsine. |
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The tin chloride is oxidised to stannic acid and the gold chloride is reduced to metallic gold forming a colloidal precipitation onto the stannic acid. |
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The developed plate was dried using hot air to evaporate solvents from the plate and sprayed with stannic chloride reagent. |
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Tin occurs in grains of the native metal but chiefly as stannic oxide, SnO2, in the mineral cassiterite, the only tin mineral of commercial significance. |
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White enamel is produced by adding stannic and arsenious acids to the flux, the quantity of the acid affecting the density, or opacity, of the enamel. |
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