¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Bicarbonates
1. bicarbonate [n] - See also: bicarbonate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bicarbonates
Literary usage of Bicarbonates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Standard methods of chemical analysis: A Manual of Analytical Methods and by Wilfred Welday Scott (1917)
"Distinction between Soluble Carbonates and bicarbonates. The solution of the
former is alkaline to phenolphthalein indicator (pink). ..."
2. Journal of the American Chemical Society by American Chemical Society (1903)
"There was recently published,1 by FM Perkin, a test for bicarbonates based ...
bicarbonates are sufficiently acid to bring about this reaction and may thus ..."
3. A Treatise on the Practice of Medicine by George Bacon Wood (1866)
"It has been stated that the alkaline bicarbonates serve also to fulfil this as
well as the first indication. In order to- correct the tendency to an ..."
4. Biological Bulletin by Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.) (1915)
"Parallel with the dissociation of the carbonic acid there goes an increasing
tendency for the bicarbonates to break up to form the normal carbonate, ..."
5. The Chemistry of Cyanide Solutions Resulting from the Treatment of Ores by John Edward Clennell (1910)
"(b) Solution Contains Cyanides, Carbonates and bicarbonates. ... Estimation of
Hydrates, Carbonates and bicarbonates by Combined Titrations, ..."
6. A Dictionary of Chemical Solubilities: Inorganic by Arthur Messinger Comey, Dorothy Anna Hahn (1921)
"Sol. in solutions of the alkali bicarbonates. (Berzelius.) Sol. in aqueous
solutions of water-glass. (Ordway.) Sol. in NH4F+Aq. (Helmholt, Z. anorg. 3. 124. ..."
7. A handbook of therapeutics by Sydney Ringer (1876)
"... destroy the active principle of belladonna, hyoscyamus, and stramonium, but
that carbonates and bicarbonates of potash and soda do not destroy it. ..."