ikbendirk
September 15th, 2004, 04:50 PM
I noticed that there it is quite frequently asked whether a salt is soluble, acidic, or other information. In the Netherlands, there is a book consisting of collections of all kinds of tables called Binas, the must-have for every scientist. It was only recently that I realized, that it is not available in other countries, so I scanned most important tables and put them on internet.
The main drawback is that only the most common chemicals are listed, and is therefore not sufficient for the actual rogue scientist.
tables are in *.jpg format, right click and save target as.
translations on request
Table 45: Solubilities (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel45.jpg)
Table 48a: Redox part 1 (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel48a.jpg)
Table 48b: Redox part 2 (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel48b.jpg)
Table 49: Acidities (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel49.jpg)
Table 57: 'vormingswarmten' (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel57.jpg)
(I really have no clue what it is in English :()
I sure hope it was helpfull to someone... enjoy
The main drawback is that only the most common chemicals are listed, and is therefore not sufficient for the actual rogue scientist.
tables are in *.jpg format, right click and save target as.
translations on request
Table 45: Solubilities (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel45.jpg)
Table 48a: Redox part 1 (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel48a.jpg)
Table 48b: Redox part 2 (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel48b.jpg)
Table 49: Acidities (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel49.jpg)
Table 57: 'vormingswarmten' (http://www.redrival.com/blackstorm/tabel57.jpg)
(I really have no clue what it is in English :()
I sure hope it was helpfull to someone... enjoy