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Citrate¡ª To 15mL of pyridine add a few mg of a citrate salt, dissolved or suspended in 1 mL of water, and shake. To this mixture add 5 mL of acetic anhydride, and shake: a light red color is produced.

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Cobalt¡ª Solutions of cobalt salts (1 in 20) in 3 N hydrochloric acid yield a red precipitate when heated on a steam bath with an equal volume of a hot, freshly prepared solution of 1-nitroso-2-naphthol (1 in 10) in 9 N acetic acid. Solutions of cobalt salts, when saturated with potassium chloride and treated with potassium nitrite and acetic acid, yield a yellow precipitate.

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Copper¡ª Solutions of cupric compounds, acidified with hydrochloric acid, deposit a red film of metallic copper upon a bright, untarnished surface of metallic iron. An excess of 6N ammonium hydroxide, added to a solution of a cupric salt, produces first a bluish precipitate and then a deep blue-colored solution. With potassium ferrocyanide TS, solutions of cupric salts yield a reddish-brown precipitate, insoluble in diluted acids. Í­£º1¡¢¹©ÊÔÆ·ÈÜÒº¾­ÑÎËáËữºó£¬·ÅÈë±íÃæ¹â»¬Ã÷ÁÁµÄ½ðÊôÌú£¬ÔÚÌú±í²ãÓ¦ÐγÉÒ»²ãºìÉ«µÄ½ðÊôͭĤ¡£2¡¢Í­ÑÎÈÜÒºÖмÓÈë¹ýÁ¿µÄ6NµÄ°±Ë®£¬ÏȲúÉúµ­À¶É«£¨Çà°×É«£©³Áµí£¬³ÁµíÖð½¥±äΪÉîÀ¶É«¡£3¡¢¹©ÊÔÆ·ÓëÑÇÌúÇ軯¼ØÊÔÒº·´Ó¦Éú³ÉºìºÖÉ«³Áµí£¬³Áµí²»ÈÜÓÚÏ¡Ëá¡£ Hypophosphite¡ª When strongly heated, hypophosphites evolve spontaneously flammable phosphine. Hypophosphites in solution yield a white precipitate with mercuric µÚ 5 Ò³ ¹² 12 Ò³

chloride TS. This precipitate becomes gray when an excess of hypophosphite is present. Solutions of hypophosphites, acidified with sulfuric acid, and warmed with cupric sulfate TS yield a red precipitate.

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Iodide¡ª Solutions of iodides, upon the addition of chlorine TS, dropwise, liberate iodine, which colors the solution yellow to red. When the solution is shaken with chloroform, the latter is colored violet. The iodine thus liberated gives a blue color with starch TS. Silver nitrate TS produces, in solutions of iodides, a yellow, curdy precipitate that is insoluble in nitric acid and in 6N ammonium hydroxide.

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Iron¡ª Ferrous and ferric compounds in solution yield a black precipitate with ammonium sulfide TS. This precipitate is dissolved by cold 3N hydrochloric acid with the evolution of hydrogen sulfide.

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Ferric Salts¡ª Acid solutions of ferric salts yield a dark blue precipitate with potassium ferrocyanide TS. With an excess of 1 N sodium hydroxide, a reddish-brown precipitate is formed. With ammonium thiocyanate TS, solutions of ferric salts produce a deep red color that is not destroyed by dilute mineral acids.

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Ferrous Salts¡ª Solutions of ferrous salts yield a dark blue precipitate with potassium ferricyanide TS. This precipitate is insoluble in 3N hydrochloric acid but is decomposed by 1N sodium hydroxide. With 1N sodium hydroxide, solutions of ferrous salts yield a

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greenish¨Cwhite precipitate, the color rapidly changing to green and then to brown when shaken.

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Lactate¡ª When solutions of lactates are acidified with sulfuric acid, potassium

permanganate TS is added, and the mixture is heated, acetaldehyde is evolved. This can be detected by allowing the vapor to come into contact with a filter paper that has been moistened with a freshly prepared mixture of equal volumes of 20% aqueous morpholine and sodium nitroferricyanide TS: a blue color is produced.

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Lead¡ª With 2N sulfuric acid, solutions of lead salts yield a white precipitate that is insoluble in 3N hydrochloric or 2N nitric acid, but is soluble in warm 1 N sodium hydroxide and in ammonium acetate TS. With potassium chromate TS, solutions of lead salts, free or nearly free from mineral acids, yield a yellow precipitate that is insoluble in 6 N acetic acid but is soluble in 1 N sodium hydroxide.

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Lithium¡ª With sodium carbonate TS, moderately concentrated solutions of lithium salts, made alkaline with sodium hydroxide, yield a white precipitate on boiling. The precipitate is soluble in ammonium chloride TS. Lithium salts moistened with hydrochloric acid impart an intense crimson color to a nonluminous flame. Solutions of lithium salts are not precipitated by 2 N sulfuric acid or soluble sulfates (distinction from strontium).

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Magnesium¡ª Solutions of magnesium salts in the presence of ammonium chloride yield no more than a slightly hazy precipitate when neutralized with ammonium carbonate TS, but on the subsequent addition of dibasic sodium phosphate TS, a white, crystalline precipitate, which is insoluble in 6 N ammonium hydroxide, is formed.

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Manganese¡ª With ammonium sulfide TS, solutions of manganous salts yield a salmon-colored precipitate that dissolves in acetic acid.

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Mercury¡ª When applied to bright copper foil, solutions of mercury salts, free from an excess of nitric acid, yield a deposit that upon rubbing, becomes bright and silvery in appearance. With hydrogen sulfide, solutions of mercury compounds yield a black precipitate that is insoluble in ammonium sulfide TS and in boiling 2 N nitric acid. ¹¯£º1¡¢²»º¬¹ýÁ¿ÏõËáµÄ¹¯ÑÎÈÜÒº£¬Í¿²¼ÓÚ¹âÁÁµÄÍ­²­±íÃæ£¬²ÁÊúó¼´Éú³ÉÒ»²ã¹âÁÁËÆÒøµÄ³Á»ýÎï¡£2¡¢¹¯»¯ºÏÎïÓëÁò»¯Çâ·´Ó¦Éú³ÉºÚÉ«³Áµí£¬³Áµí²»ÈÜÓÚÁò»¯ï§ÊÔÒººÍ·ÐÌÚµÄ2NµÄÏõËá¡£

Mercuric Salts¡ª Solutions of mercuric salts yield a yellow precipitate with 1 N sodium hydroxide. They yield also, in neutral solutions with potassium iodide TS, a scarlet precipitate that is very soluble in an excess of the reagent.

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Mercurous Salts¡ª Mercurous compounds are decomposed by 1 N sodium hydroxide, producing a black color. With hydrochloric acid, solutions of mercurous salts yield a white precipitate that is blackened by 6N ammonium hydroxide. With potassium iodide TS, a yellow precipitate, that may become green upon standing, is formed.

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Nitrate¡ª When a solution of a nitrate is mixed with an equal volume of sulfuric acid, the mixture is cooled, and a solution of ferrous sulfate is superimposed, a brown color is

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