- halide salt
- haloid salt any binary compound of a metal or basic radical with a halogen (chlorine, iodine, bromine, or fluorine).
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
halide mineral — Any of a group of naturally occurring inorganic compounds that contain a halogen such as fluorine, chlorine, iodine, or bromine as the anion. Such compounds, with the notable exceptions of fluorite, halite, and sylvite, are rare and of very local … Universalium
Salt (chemistry) — This article is about the term as used in chemistry. For the chemistry of table salt, see Sodium chloride. The blue salt copper(II) sulfate in the form of the mineral chalcanthite In chemistry, salts are ionic compounds that result from the… … Wikipedia
halide — noun A salt of any halogen acid. Potassium iodide is a halide … Wiktionary
halide — A salt of a halogen. * * * ha·lide hal .īd, hā .līd n a binary compound of a halogen with a more electropositive element or radical * * * hal·ide (halґīd) 1. haloid. 2. a binary compound of one of the halogens (fluorine, chlorine, bromine,… … Medical dictionary
Metal-halide lamp — A metal halide gas discharge lighting system provides illumination for a college baseball game at Olsen Field in College Station, Texas, United States. Note the various colors of the lights as they warm up. Metal halide lamps, a member of the… … Wikipedia
Phosphonium salt — A phosphonium salt is a salt containing the phosphonium (PH4+) ion such as phosphonium iodide (PH4+I−). More commonly, phosphonium refer to an organic derivative such as tetraphenylphosphonium chloride, (C6H5)4P+ Cl and tetramethylphosphonium… … Wikipedia
Alkali halide — The alkali halides are the family of ionic compounds with simple chemical formula X+Y or XY, where X is an alkali metal and Y is a halogen. One of the most well known of these is sodium chloride or common table salt.In standard room conditions… … Wikipedia
Sonogashira coupling — In organic chemistry, a Sonogashira coupling is a coupling reaction of terminal alkynes with aryl or vinyl halides. This reaction was first reported by Kenkichi Sonogashira and Nobue Hagihara in 1975. [cite journal author = K. Sonogashira, Y.… … Wikipedia
Finkelstein reaction — The Finkelstein reaction, named for the German chemist Hans Finkelstein, is an SN2 reaction that involves the exchange of one halogen atom for another. Halide exchange is an equilibrium reaction, but the reaction can be driven to completion by… … Wikipedia
Schlenk equilibrium — The Schlenk equilibrium is a chemical equilibrium named after its discoverer Wilhelm Schlenk taking place in solutions of Grignard reagents. [W. Schlenk, W. Schlenk, Chem. Ber. 62, 920 1929 Note: the authors are father and son ] [ Grignard… … Wikipedia