1958
DOI: 10.1021/ac60144a019
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Use of Ion Exchange Resins in Analysis of Rocks and Minerals. Separation of Sodium and Potassium

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This explains in part why the metals from which the alkali metals are separated by cation exchange with HCl are usually the other metals that are not adsorbed on anion exchangers from the same eluting agent. This is the case for separations of the alkalis from the alkaline earth metals as a group (105,502,598,585), Cs from Sr (538) (fig. 22), Rb from Sr (194), Li from Ca (245), Cs from the rare earths (409).…”
Section: Separation From Other Metalsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This explains in part why the metals from which the alkali metals are separated by cation exchange with HCl are usually the other metals that are not adsorbed on anion exchangers from the same eluting agent. This is the case for separations of the alkalis from the alkaline earth metals as a group (105,502,598,585), Cs from Sr (538) (fig. 22), Rb from Sr (194), Li from Ca (245), Cs from the rare earths (409).…”
Section: Separation From Other Metalsmentioning
confidence: 93%