- Source: Uranyl zinc acetate
Uranyl zinc acetate (ZnUO2(CH3COO)4) is a compound of uranium.
Uranyl zinc acetate is used as a laboratory reagent in the determination of sodium concentrations of solutions using a method of quantitatively precipitating sodium with uranyl zinc acetate and gravimetrically determining the sodium as uranyl zinc sodium acetate, (UO2)3ZnNa(CH3CO2)9·6H2O. The presence of caesium and rubidium does not interfere with this reaction, but the presence of potassium and lithium must be removed prior to analysis.
This method was important to determine Na in urine for diagnostic purposes. Zinc uranyl acetate is sometimes called "sodium reagent" since pale yellow NaZn(UO2)3(C2H3O2)9 is one of the very few insoluble sodium compounds.
Laboratory use
Uranyl zinc acetate has been used as a catalyst for the demethoxylation of toluene-2,4-dicarbamate into toluene-2,4-diisocyanate (TDI).
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Uranil seng asetat
- Natrium
- Kamus rumus kimia
- Uranyl zinc acetate
- Liquid–liquid extraction
- Uranium
- List of inorganic compounds
- Solubility table
- List of minerals recognized by the International Mineralogical Association (C)
- Ion
- Transmission electron microscopy
- Electron microscope
- Neodymium