2. Adjective. That promotes nitration ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Nitrating
1. nitrate [v] - See also: nitrate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nitrating
Literary usage of Nitrating
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Manufacture of Explosives: A Theoretical and Practical Treatise on the by Oscar Guttmann (1895)
"Nitrating in small vessels has the advantage that if a decomposition does take
place, the quantity of cotton and acid lost is not large, and if necessary ..."
2. Text-book of Ordnance and Gunnery by William Harvey Tschappat (1917)
"In the process of nitration this amount of moisture placed in the nitrating acid
would result in heating which might cause the partially nitrated cotton to ..."
3. Cellulose, Cellulose Products, and Artificial Rubber: Comprising the by Josef Bersch (1904)
"Many fine fibres of gun-cotton collect gradually in the fluid in the nitrating
vessel, and when immersing fresh cotton, adhere so firmly to the latter as to ..."
4. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry by Thomas Edward Thorpe (1921)
"The usual arrangement now adopted for its manufacture (see Fig. 4) is as follows : '—
The nitrating pan haa a total capacity of ..."
5. Celluloid, Its Raw Material, Manufacture, Properties, and Uses: Its Raw by Friedrich Böckmann, Charles Salter (1907)
"... intended to expel from the interstices of the cotton the air which hinders
nitration, are made in different patterns, but have not Fid. 9.—Nitrating ..."
6. A Theoretical and Practical Treatise on the Manufacture of Sulphuric Acid by Georg Lunge (1903)
"1-99 Cost of 100 kil. nitric acid 36° B 26'55 Utilization of waste acids from
nitrating processes.—Enormous quantities of nitric acid, always mixed with ..."
7. Explosives: A Synoptic and Critical Treatment of the Literature of the by Heinrich Brunswig (1912)
"... sulphuric acid raises the nitrating power of nitric acid upon cellulose
considerably and allows a much weaker nitric acid to be used without decreasing ..."