「decompose」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| ng up by distillation be aware that this can | decompose above about 160 °C to give phosphine which c |
| At pH 5.0, most NONOates are considered to | decompose almost instantaneously. |
| ied in the ground as huge steaks, which then | decompose and ferment over autumn and freeze over wint |
| Many organic compounds tend to | decompose at high sustained temperatures. |
| Triphosgene crystals | decompose at around 130 °C, although, the decompositio |
| methanol as colorless plates or prisms, that | decompose at about 100 C. |
| r and ethanol and forms yellow crystals that | decompose at 212°C. |
| with dehydration at about 115 °C, and slowly | decompose at about 160 °C. |
| e compounds have in common that they melt or | decompose at very high temperatures and that they are |
| ily soluble in hot water, melt at 187 °C and | decompose at about 240 °C. |
| the polymer can be irreversibly oxidized and | decompose at a rate comparable to the polymerization o |
| rs, and it is likely that the substance will | decompose at the typical acidic or basic conditions us |
| Q tree (Critical to Quality tree) is used to | decompose broad customer requirements into more easily |
| idizer - oxidizers that require less heat to | decompose burn faster |
| Chlorinated amino acids rapidly | decompose, but protein chloramines are longer-lived an |
| nguage have been implemented by using ASM to | decompose class structures for point-cut identificatio |
| contains lignin, which is relatively slow to | decompose compared with other organic materials such a |
| Other group I nitrates | decompose differently, forming the nitrite salt and ox |
| At temperatures above 140°C Bronopol will | decompose exothermically releasing Hydrogen bromide an |
| Some foods will | decompose exothermically at cooking temperatures; anyo |
| It is extremely unstable and can | decompose explosively giving off toxic fumes. |
| Ag+, Hg+, Tl+, Pb2+, and also Cu2+ and NH4+) | decompose explosively with heat or shock. |
| d for sequestering metal ions that otherwise | decompose hydrogen peroxide, which is used to bleach p |
| be dissolved in warm mineral acid, and will | decompose in boiling water. |
| Most degradable bags do not readily | decompose in a sealed landfill and represent a possibl |
| Chromites | decompose in acids and hydrolyze in neutral conditions |
| m of foul-smelling oily liquids, and rapidly | decompose in the presence of water to carbonyl compoun |
| pound gases combine with solar radiation and | decompose in the stratosphere, releasing atoms of chlo |
| Although triacetate does not | decompose in as dangerous a way as nitrate does, it is |
| ee crops are felled and shredded and left to | decompose in situ. |
| mpossible to isolate, since it would readily | decompose into acetic acid and water. |
| The couple eventually | decompose into skeletons and finally nothing remains i |
| The triangles in this compound | decompose into two orbits under action of the symmetry |
| The triangles in this compound | decompose into two orbits under action of the symmetry |
| Zinc and hydrochloric acid | decompose it with formation of orthoxylylene diamine. |
| The first one is to | decompose lazily, by representing only the generic poi |
| ves in hydrogen fluoride but these solutions | decompose, liberating fluorine. |
| Only fungi produce the enzymes necessary to | decompose lignin, a chemically complex substance found |
| less crystals which are soluble in water and | decompose on heating or in the presence of acid, with |
| s believed that the trees would soon die and | decompose once submerged. |
| off with a knife, and the skull had begun to | decompose only after a recent submersion in water. |
| op cans and other carbonated beverages, will | decompose over time (spontaneously) into carbon dioxid |
| Lab tests have shown that heat and light can | decompose polyacrylamide into acrylamide. |
| Most herbicides | decompose rapidly in soils via soil microbial decompos |
| tryptamines in their freebase form, does not | decompose rapidly in the presence of light in oxygen. |
| It has also been shown to | decompose readily upon cooking (up to 90% reduction) a |
| Materials may polymerize, | decompose, self-react, or undergo other chemical chang |
| , yellow (cream to orange) colonies on agar, | decompose several polysaccharides but not cellulose, G |
| hlorate is a very unstable oxidizer and will | decompose, sometimes violently, at room temperature. |
| The heat from the reaction will likely | decompose the carbonic acid to water and carbon dioxid |
| Therefore we can | decompose the expansion tensor into its traceless part |
| retising the continuous makes it possible to | decompose the this was, and thus the spectator may com |
| finite semigroups and automata that seeks to | decompose them in terms of elementary components. |
| st of the body, in or by the shallow pool to | decompose there. |
| Tellurols are easily oxidized and | decompose thermally. |
| erous chemicals, and these chemicals help to | decompose these sorbents. |
| After a few seconds, they | decompose to turn green as chromium(III) compounds are |
| A is not combustible, but when heated it may | decompose to form irritating and toxic fumes. |
| arely encountered because of its tendency to | decompose to the constituent elements. |
| On heating above 1350°C, it begins to | decompose to tricalcium aluminate, calcium oxide, sulf |
| Anhydrous AuCl3 begins to | decompose to AuCl at around 160 °C; however, this in t |
| osgene is exactly the same as phosgene since | decompose to phosgene on heating and upon reaction wit |
| s the sulfate ester which also spontaneously | decompose to form nitrenium ion. |
| lso, a foaming agent is a material that will | decompose to release a gas under certain conditions (t |
| re generally not very stable in solution and | decompose to ordinary oxyacids and oxygen, but relativ |
| and its methylated relative lotaustralin can | decompose to the toxic chemical hydrogen cyanide; henc |
| is that all such oils eventually chemically | decompose, turning rancid. |
| dry, however, copper(II) hydroxide does not | decompose unless it is heated to 185°C. |
| All compounds | decompose upon applying heat. |
| general, substituted derivatives of Cr(CO)6 | decompose upon exposure to air. |
| he fatty belly meat of tuna because it would | decompose very quickly. |
| of acyl nitroso species (which are known to | decompose via hydrolysis to HNO and acyl acid) are syn |
| William Nicholson was the first to | decompose water in this manner in 1800. |
| Carbonates will | decompose when heated, a notable exception being that |
| Sultones | decompose when heated to produce toxic, foul smelling, |
| cid dibromide, crystallizes in needles which | decompose when heated to 155-156 °C. |
| The hydrate will also | decompose with heat. |
| unds, such as those containing B-CF3 groups, | decompose with formation of B-F bonds. |
| trigger the nitrous oxide to exothermically | decompose with disastrous results (explosion).WolfKeep |
| Some plastics | decompose within a year of entering the water, leachin |
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