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" ... Fluorine does not combine with oxygen. It is the only element of which this statement can be made. Comparison of the Members of the Chlorine Family. — In considering, first, the physical properties of these elements, we notice that all, with the... "
A Manual of inorganic chemistry v. 1 - Page 246
de Sir Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1873
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A Manual of Inorganic Chemistry ...: The non-metals

Sir Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1874 - 412 pages
...to sea-salt, whence the name halogen applied to the group, from «/\s, dXo's, sea-salt, and yimaw, to produce. The physical characters and properties...being the mean of that of the chlorine and iodine— Br, 80 ^807mean. Cl, 35-5) I, 126'8) In chemical activity also bromine is midway between chlorine and...
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Nature, Volume 29

Sir Norman Lockyer - 1884 - 662 pages
...iodine for hydrogen is much less than that of bromine. But these thermal equations are not comparable; at ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid ; hence, on this ground alone, no precise conclusions can be drawn from the above data regarding the...
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A Treatise on the Principles of Chemistry

Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir - 1884 - 528 pages
...be accepted with great reserve, because no indication is given in these equations of the fact that at ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid ; the reactions formulated appear to be strictly comparable, whereas they really present wide differences....
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A Text-book of Pharmacology, Therapeutics and Materia Medica

Thomas Lauder Brunton, Francis Henry Williams - 1885 - 1204 pages
...bromine from sea- water, iodine from sea-weed. GENERAL CHARACTERS. — They are all very volatile. At ordinary temperatures, chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid, but both bromine and iodine give off vapour freely. On account of their active chemical affinities...
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An Introduction to the Study of Chemistry

Ira Remsen - 1886 - 414 pages
...of these elements, we notice that all, with the exception of fluorine, form colored gases or vapors. At ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid. In regard to their chemical conduct, it may be said that, in general, fluorine exhibits the strongest...
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The elements of chemistry

Ira Remsen - 1886 - 304 pages
...these elements, you notice that all, with the exception of fluorine, form colored gases or vapors. At ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid. In regard to their chemical conduct, it may be said that, in general, fluorine is the most active;...
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Practical Lessons in Science

Josiah Thomas Scovell - 1894 - 412 pages
...a powerful acid containing three atoms of oxygen. With nitrogen they each form explosive compounds. At ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid and iodine a solid. Chlorine is yellow, bromine reddish-brown and iodine violet. In general chlorine is more energetic...
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The Philosophy of Things, Volume 1

James Henry Ferguson - 1922 - 404 pages
...that of iodine the least. The combining weight of chlorine is 35. 5, of bromine 80, and of iodine 127. At ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid and iodine a solid. The chemical energy of chlorine is the greatest, that of bromine second best and that of iodine the...
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Nature, Volume 29

Sir Norman Lockyer - 1884 - 1196 pages
...iodine for hydrogen is much less than that of bromine. But these thermal equations are not comparable; at ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid; hence, on this ground alone, no precise conclusions can be drawn from the above data regarding the...
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A treatise on the principles of Chemistry

1884 - 672 pages
...[//, 0] = 22,000; [ff, Br] = 8,44o; [//, I]= -6,050 \ must be accepted with great reserve, because at ordinary temperatures chlorine is a gas, bromine a liquid, and iodine a solid ; the reactions formulated are not, therefore, strictly comparable. 131 There is another point to be...
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