Search results for "Chromate conversion coating"
showing 7 items of 17 documents
Chromated metal products may be hazardous to patients with chromate allergy.
2009
Background: Hidden allergen exposure may contribute to persistence and relapse of chromate dermatitis. According to case reports, chromated metal products, such as screws, fittings, etc., may be relevant allergen sources for patients sensitized to chromate. Objectives: To examine concomitant patch test reactivity to potassium dichromate 0.5% petrolatum (pet.) and three different types of chromated metal rings. Patients/Methods: Patients with proven or suspected chromate allergy were patch tested with potassium dichromate 0.5% pet. and three different types of chromated metal rings (yellow, olive, and black). Hexavalent chromium Cr(VI) release from the patch tested rings was chemically an…
Theoretical Insights into the Ferromagnetic Coupling in Oxalato-Bridged Chromium(III)-Cobalt(II) and Chromium(III)-Manganese(II) Dinuclear Complexes …
2012
Two novel heterobimetallic complexes of formula [Cr(bpy)(ox)(2)Co(Me(2)phen)(H(2)O)(2)][Cr(bpy)(ox)(2)]·4H(2)O (1) and [Cr(phen)(ox)(2)Mn(phen)(H(2)O)(2)][Cr(phen)(ox)(2)]·H(2)O (2) (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine, phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, and Me(2)phen = 2,9-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline) have been obtained through the "complex-as-ligand/complex-as-metal" strategy by using Ph(4)P[CrL(ox)(2)]·H(2)O (L = bpy and phen) and [ML'(H(2)O)(4)](NO(3))(2) (M = Co and Mn; L' = phen and Me(2)phen) as precursors. The X-ray crystal structures of 1 and 2 consist of bis(oxalato)chromate(III) mononuclear anions, [Cr(III)L(ox)(2)](-), and oxalato-bridged chromium(III)-cobalt(II) and chromium(III)-manganese(II) din…
Preparation of mixed oxides MNdO3, with M=Cr, Fe. Comparison of several methods
1993
Abstract Different methods for the formation of NdCrO3 and NdFeO3, having the perovskite-like structure, were studied including the ceramic method, simultaneous precipitation of hydroxides and simultaneous crystallization from aqueous solutions of nitrates. Preparation of mixed oxides from hydroxides simultaneously precipitated lowered the temperature and time required for their formation. In the case of NdCrO3 the formation process from hydroxides and nitrates occurred through the chromate, NdCrO4, without intermediate decomposition of the precursor to metal oxides, which lead to the mixed oxide by 600°C.
Cr(VI) sorption by intact and dehydrated Candida utilis cells in the presence of other metals
2002
This study examined the Cr(VI), Cu(II), Zn(II), Cd(II), Pb(II) sorption by intact and dehydrated Candida utilis cells. The anion [Cr2O7]2− and cation Me2+ sorption kinetics was investigated in both single- and dual-metal situations. Uptake of chromate anions occurred much more slowly singularly than with metal cations. A combination of Pb or Cu and chromate anions gave a synergistic effect for Cr(VI) sorption, but not Cd and Zn, which inhibited Cr(VI) sorption by dehydrated cells. The use of alcian blue to occupy maximum vacant adsorption sites on the cell surface unexpectedly did not influence further adsorption of Me2+. Metal uptake by C. utilis was 7 mg (135 μM) Cr, 23 mg (362 μM) Cu, 39…
Mobility of Cr and V in Spent Oil Shale: Impact of Thermal Treatment
2013
Abstract Spent oil shale samples were evaluated for potential chromium and vanadium release upon aerobic combustion used in power generation, or anaerobic retorting used in shale oil recovery. Combusted samples released more Cr than retorted or raw samples due to chromate formation. The behavior of vanadium was just opposite in that more V was released from retorted than from aerobically combusted samples, probably due to reduced vanadyl cation formation.
Exothermic adsorption of chromate by goethite
2020
Abstract Goethite is a common Fe oxyhydroxide coating soil particle surfaces, which has a high Cr(VI) adsorption capacity under acidic pH conditions. Batch equilibrium adsorption experiments with chromate concentrations of 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 mM were performed using solutions with ionic strengths of 0.1, 0.05, and 0.01 M and pH values of 3–11 and at four temperatures between 10 and 75 °C. The results of these experiments show that the amount of chromate adsorbed decreases as the pH increases towards the zero-point-of-surface-charge of goethite (pHPZC 9.1), which is typical for anions. The chromate adsorption efficiency also depends on the ionic strength of the solution. The amount of chromate…
Sodium Congener of the Classical Lithium Methylchromate Dimer: Synthetic, X-ray Crystallographic, and Magnetic Studies of Me8Cr2[Na(OEt2)]4
2011
One of the milestone structures in the development of transition-metal complexes with metal metal bonds of multiple bond order was the lithium methylchromate dimer Me8Cr2[Li(donor)](4) (donor = THF or Et2O). Using a simple salt metathesis reaction mixing this compound with sodium tert-butoxide, the sodium congener Me8Cr2-[Na(OEt2)]4 has been synthesized as a green crystalline compound and isolated in 51% yield. Its solid-state structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Exhibiting exact crystallographic C-4h symmetry, this heavier alkali-metal chromate structure is also dimeric, formally comprising a (Me8Cr4)(4-) tetranionic core with four peripheral Na+ cations carrying s…