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Definition of Tribasic acid
1. Noun. An acid containing three replaceable hydrogen atoms per molecule.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tribasic Acid
Literary usage of Tribasic acid
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1875)
"This same acid I boiled with water alone without adding nitric acid again, and
found I reconverted it into tribasic acid by simply heating it to 800° ..."
2. Allen's Commercial Organic Analysis: A Treatise on the Properties, Modes of by Alfred Henry Allen (1913)
"The anhydride of the tribasic acid has the constitution CO CO.OH-C3H7/ yO CO as
it yields a trimethyl ester, boiling at 300°, ..."
3. Commercial Organic Analysis by Alfred Henry Allen, Wm. A. Davis (1913)
"The anhydride of the tribasic acid has the constitution CO COOH-C3H7/ No CO as
it yields a trimethyl ester, boiling at 300°, ..."
4. Handbook of Organic Chemistry: For the Use of Students by William Gregory, J. Milton Sanders (1857)
"When a solution of any of the preceding acids is evaporated by a moderate heat
to the consistence of syrup, the residue is found to be the tribasic acid, ..."
5. The Chemical News (1860)
"Again, when a dibasic is compared with a tribasic acid the following relation is
observed : — i mol. PO,!!, equiv. to 3 mol. HC1 or 1-5 mol. ..."