¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Protoxides
1. protoxide [n] - See also: protoxide
Lexicographical Neighbors of Protoxides
Literary usage of Protoxides
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Annual of Scientific Discovery, Or, Year-book of Facts in Science and Art. by David Ames Wells, George Bliss, Samuel Kneeland, John Trowbridge, Wm Ripley Nichols, Charles R Cross (1867)
"... it was suggested that the reduction to the metallic state was mainly produced
by the action of substances containing protoxides of iron, which, ..."
2. A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences by Henry Watts (1866)
"... the oxygen-ratio of the protoxides, alumina and silica is as 1 : 3 : 9 (see ii.
618). The ratio between the lime and alkalis is somewhat variable, ..."
3. A Compendium of the Course of Chemical Instruction in the Medical Department by Robert Hare (1828)
"The decomposition of potash, by iron card teeth, heated to incandescence.
OF POTASH, OR POTASSA, AND SODA, THE protoxides OF POTASSIUM AND SODIUM. ..."
4. Chemical Recreations, a Popular Manual of Experimental Chemistry by John Joseph Griffin (1860)
"protoxides. Ethers. An ether contains two similar basic radicals, one of them
combined with one atom of oxygen. These compounds are similar in constitution ..."
5. Chemical Recreations, a Popular Manual of Experimental Chemistry by John Joseph Griffin (1860)
"protoxides. Ethers. An ether contains two similar basic radicals, one of them
combined with one atom of oxygen. These compounds are similar in constitution ..."
6. The Use of the Blowpipe in Chemistry and Mineralogy by Jöns Jakob Berzelius (1845)
"It is readily dissolved by borax and salt of phosphorus, giving the reaction of
the protoxides of iron and manganese. With soda on charcoal it gives readily ..."
7. A Manual of Chemistry, Descriptive and Theoretical by William Odling (1861)
"The protoxides of lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, strontium, and barium,
... All other protoxides are insoluble in water, and for the most part ..."