¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Trioxides
1. trioxide [n] - See also: trioxide
Lexicographical Neighbors of Trioxides
Literary usage of Trioxides
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences by Henry Watts (1871)
"The trioxides of aluminium, iron, chromium and cerium exist in several different
modifications, some of which are readily, others scarcely at all acted upon ..."
2. A System of Inorganic Chemistry by William Ramsay (1891)
"The only trioxides known in the free state are chromium trioxide, or chromic
anhydride, CrO3, and manganese trioxide, MnO.,. ..."
3. Introduction to the Study of Chemical Philosophy: The Principles of by William Augustus Tilden (1901)
"The trioxides, MoO3, WO3, and UO3, are generally acidic. ... These trioxides also
exhibit a feebly basic function, the oxy-salts of uranium being the most ..."
4. Technology Quarterly by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1895)
"Nitrogen peroxide converts both the metals into trioxides, while the metals remain
unchanged in an atmosphere of methylamine. Tungsten trioxide when heated ..."
5. The Chemistry of medicines, practical by John Uri Lloyd (1883)
"It will be noticed that each of the above-named trioxides contains two atoms ...
trioxides are also compounds in which one atom of a metal is combined with ..."