1933
DOI: 10.1021/ed010p330
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The chemistry of fluorine

Abstract: comparison. In presenting what seems to us the more important results of both experiment and theory we will include data obtained by the chemist, the physicist, and the spectroscopist, since all these fields must eventually be unified by an acceptable theory. None of the concepts involved in the two latter fields is as abstruse as may be supposed; their meaning is

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…1. In Aqueous Solutions (6,13,27,39,54,71,109) With aqueous solutions of HC1, HBr, and HI, oxygen difluoride reacts quantitatively, liberating free halogens.…”
Section: F Chemical Reactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1. In Aqueous Solutions (6,13,27,39,54,71,109) With aqueous solutions of HC1, HBr, and HI, oxygen difluoride reacts quantitatively, liberating free halogens.…”
Section: F Chemical Reactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%