¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hexahydrates
1. hexahydrate [n] - See also: hexahydrate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hexahydrates
Literary usage of Hexahydrates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Theoretical Chemistry from the Standpoint of Avogadro's Rule & Thermodynamics by Walther Nernst (1904)
"By introducing this water molecule we obtain hexahydrates, and this is actually
the form in which the heavy metals most commonly appear. ..."
2. A Text-book of Inorganic Chemistry by Arnold Frederik Holleman (1908)
"... the cobalt ammonias, ie, with the release of each water molecule a chlorine
atom sacrifices its ionizing ability. Two hexahydrates of chromic chloride, ..."
3. Review of American Chemical Research by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Arthur Amos Noyes, William Albert Noyes (1900)
"On the Inversion of the Hepta- and hexahydrates of Zinc Sulphate in the Clark Cell.
BY HT BARNES. /. Phys. Chem., 4, 1-21.—The paper contains the complete ..."
4. General Chemistry by Hamilton Perkins Cady (1916)
"... the hexahydrates absorb heat. When the hexahydrate is heated to 200°, it loses
four moles of water and forms a white porous mass of the dihydrate which ..."
5. Textbook of Physical Chemistry by Azariah Thomas Lincoln (1920)
"Werner assumes, therefore, that the hexahydrates are salt-like compounds in which
the positive radical consists of complexes containing ..."
6. Inorganic Chemistry by Hamilton Perkins Cady (1912)
"Anhydrous CaCl- and ice do not make a good freezing mixture since the salt evolves
so much heat in dissolving, while the hexahydrates absorb heat. ..."