Uranium oxide

Uranium dioxide is oxidized in contact with oxygen to form triuranium octoxide.

3 UO2 + O2 → U3O8; at 700 °C (970 K)
Yellowcake, a mixture of uranium oxides.

Uranium oxide is an oxide of the element uranium.

The metal uranium forms several oxides:

Preparation 38

During World War II, "Preparation 38" was the codename for uranium oxide used by German scientists.[1][2][3]

gollark: You're killing innocent ale!
gollark: Just do `/execute @e ~ ~ ~ summon ozelot ~ ~ ~`. I think that's the right command.
gollark: But how will we find ocelots to enslave for the carpeted capacitors powering GTech's data centres?!
gollark: * config
gollark: Clearly the lizards in power don't want you to see the sponge conifg.

References

  1. Per F. Dahl, Heavy water and the wartime race for nuclear energy (Institute of Physics Publishing, London 1999), p. 135
  2. Uranium Oxide International Bio-Analytical Industries, Inc. Archived January 18, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  3. Geoffrey Brooks (1992). Hitler's Nuclear Weapons. p. 40. ISBN 9780850523447.
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