Lexicographical Neighbors of Phosphids
Literary usage of Phosphids
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Inorganic Chemistry According to the Periodic Law by Francis Preston Venable, James Lewis Howe (1898)
"... are salts of hydrazoic acid (HN,), and have already been described under the
nitrogen hydrids. 481. phosphids.— These are more numerous and better ..."
2. Inorganic Chemistry: With the Elements of Physical and Theoretical Chemistry by John Iredelle Dillard Hinds (1908)
"phosphids.—Phosphorus unites to hydrogen and nearly all the metals to form ...
The metallic phosphids may also be regarded as derivatives of hydrogen ..."
3. Inorganic Chemistry: With the Elements of Physical and Theoretical Chemistry by John Iredelle Dillard Hinds (1905)
"phosphids.—Phosphorus unites to hydrogen and nearly all the metals to form ...
The metallic phosphids may also be regarded as derivatives of hydrogen ..."
4. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1900)
"Of binary compounds with the less negative elements, such as the phosphids and
car- bids of iron, little is known. Like iron, nickel and also platinum and ..."
5. Appletons' Annual Cyclopædia and Register of Important Events of the Year (1903)
"By oxidation the sulfids or phosphids become sulfates and phosphates, and pass
into the slag; and it is represented that in this way sulfur and phosphorus ..."