different between anhydrous vs decahydrate
anhydrous
English
Etymology
an- +? Ancient Greek ???? (húd?r, “water”) +? -ous.
Adjective
anhydrous (comparative more anhydrous, superlative most anhydrous)
- Having little or no water.
- (chemistry) Having no water of crystallization.
Derived terms
- nonanhydrous
Translations
anhydrous From the web:
- what anhydrous means
- what's anhydrous ammonia
- what anhydrous salts
- what anhydrous copper sulphate
- what anhydrous calcium chloride
- what anhydrous glucose
- what anhydrous ammonia look like
- what's anhydrous acetone
decahydrate
English
Etymology
deca- +? hydrate
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?d?k??ha?d?e?t/
Noun
decahydrate (plural decahydrates)
- (chemistry) A hydrate whose solid contains ten molecules of water of crystallization per molecule, or per unit cell.
decahydrate From the web:
- decahydrate meaning
- what does decahydrate
- what does decahydrate stand for
- what is borax decahydrate
- what is borax decahydrate used for
- what is sodium decahydrate
- what is tetraborate decahydrate
- what does borax decahydrate mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- anhydrous vs decahydrate
- solid vs decahydrate
- decahydrate vs hydrate
- trihydate vs dihydrate
- hexahydrate vs dihydrate
- dihydrated vs dihydrate
- dihydrate vs sinjarite
- dihydrate vs barringtonite
- dihydrate vs dehydrate
- hehydrate vs dihydrate
- trihydrate vs dihydrate
- monohydrate vs tetrahydrate
- monohydrate vs sesquihydrate
- nonahydrate vs monohydrate
- pentahydrate vs monohydrate
- monohydrate vs dyehydrate
- monohydrate vs anhydrous
- monohydrate vs monohydrated
- sesquihydrate vs trihydrate
- sesquihydrate vs hexafluoroacetone