| BORON PHOSPHATE | ||
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PRODUCT IDENTIFICATION |
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| CAS NO. | 13308-51-5 |
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| EINECS NO. | 236-337-7 | |
| FORMULA | BO4P | |
| MOL WT. | 105.78 | |
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H.S. CODE |
2850.00 | |
| TOXICITY | ||
| SYNONYMS | Boron orthophosphate; Bororthophosphat (German); | |
| Oortofosfato de boro (Spanish); Orthophosphate de bore (French); | ||
| DERIVATION | ||
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CLASSIFICATION |
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PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES |
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| PHYSICAL STATE | White crystals or powder | |
| MELTING POINT | > 1200 C (sublimes) | |
| BOILING POINT | ||
| SPECIFIC GRAVITY | 2.52 | |
| SOLUBILITY IN WATER |
Insoluble (soluble in caustic solution) |
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| pH | ||
| VAPOR DENSITY | ||
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AUTOIGNITION |
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NFPA RATINGS |
Health: 1 Flammability: 0 Reactivity: 0 | |
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REFRACTIVE INDEX |
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| FLASH POINT | Not considered to be a fire hazard | |
| STABILITY | Stable under ordinary conditions but hygroscopic | |
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APPLICATIONS |
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| Boron is a
nonmetallic element, group III in the periodic table. Symbol B; aomic number 5;
atomic mass 10.811; melting point ca 2,300 C; sublimation point ca 2,550 C;
specific gravity 2.37 or 2.34; valence +3; electronic config. [He]2s22p1. There
are two allotropes of boron; amorphous boron is a dark brown to black amorphous
powder, but metal-like crystalline solid is an extremely hard (9.3 on Mohs'
scale), black to silver-gray, brittle, lustrous and has a bad conductor in room
temperatures. The specific gravities of amorphous and crystalline forms are 2.37
and 2.34 respectively. The crystalline form is far less reactive than the
amorphous form. The amorphous powder is oxidized slowly in air at room
temperature and ignites spontaneously at high temperatures to form an oxide but
the crystalline form is oxidized only very slowly, even at higher temperatures.
Boron is widely distributed in the form of borates but is never found in the
elemental form in nature. The important commercial borate products are borax
penta (or deca) hydrate, boron oxide, sodium perborate, boric acid and minerals
are borax, colemanite, ulexite, tincal, kermite, and brines as well as
ascharite, hydroboracite, datolite, tourmaline, etc. The simple way to prepare
boron of amorphous powder form is the reduction of boron trioxide by heating
with magnesium. Boric acid is produced mainly from borate ores containing sodium
or calcium by the reaction with sulfuric acid in the presence of a hot aqueous
boric acid liquor to recycle.
Major end uses for borates include;
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| SALES SPECIFICATION | ||
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APPEARANCE |
White crystals or powder | |
| B2O3 | 34.0 - 39.0% | |
| P2O5 | 55.0 - 60.0% | |
| TRANSPORTATION | ||
| PACKING | 25kgs in bag | |
| HAZARD CLASS | Not regulated | |
| UN NO. | ||
| OTHER INFORMATION | ||
| Hazard Symbols: , Risk Phrases: , Safety Phrases: 22-24/25 |
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