Why does silver oxide color vary from grey to brown to black when none of
the componants have any of those colors?
Crystal size that varys with different inclusions of oxygen maybe?
What color is a diluted brown? Brown is not a primary color nor is it a
single shade.
Peroxide clears all of
Ode Coyote wrote:
Why does silver oxide color vary from grey to brown to black when none of
the componants have any of those colors?
Most likely due to the size of the crystals. For instance you can take black
glass and grind it up, and it will be grey, and power it and it will be white.
Mike Monett wrote:
CS
From: Marshall Dudley
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 10:32:29
Still got experiments to run, but this is starting to make some
sense now.
Marshall
1. Silver oxide produces the yellow tint in cs, and adding H2O2
produces a clear solution. If the H2O2
Marshall Dudley wrote:
Mike Monett wrote:
CS
From: Marshall Dudley
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 10:32:29
Still got experiments to run, but this is starting to make some
sense now.
Marshall
1. Silver oxide produces the yellow tint in cs, and adding H2O2
produces a clear
What other choice is there. If it were silver oxide, that precipitates out
within days, yet yellow CS will last for years. I have papers that give the
absorption spectrum for silver particles of different sizes. This is a known
fact, it is not conjecture. I have posted these curves to this
CS
From: Marshall Dudley
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 10:32:29
Still got experiments to run, but this is starting to make some
sense now.
Marshall
1. Silver oxide produces the yellow tint in cs, and adding H2O2
produces a clear solution. If the H2O2 generated silver oxide as you
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