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Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2
Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2
Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2
Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2
Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2
Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2

Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2 Pounds - Ammonium Chloride Powder

Product ID : 37531643


Galleon Product ID 37531643
UPC / ISBN 855126007163
Shipping Weight 2.14 lbs
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Model
Manufacturer Ecoxall
Shipping Dimension 9.61 x 6.42 x 2.95 inches
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1,956

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Ammonium Chloride for Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2 Features

  • GRANULAR POWDER - Easy-To-Use and Dissolve

  • MANY USES - Excellent for use in Wood burning, Pyrotechnics, Veterinary, Fertilizer, and Laboratory

  • NH4Cl Ammonium Chloride : Ninety-Nine Percent Purity

  • HIGHLY SOLUBLE - Easily dissolves in water

  • ANHYDROUS - Two Pounds of Granular Powder


About Ammonium Chloride For Wood Burning - 99.9% Pure - 2

Ammonium chloride is an inorganic compound with the formula NH4Cl and a white crystalline salt that is highly soluble in water. Solutions of ammonium chloride are mildly acidic. Sal ammoniac is a name of the natural, mineralogical form of ammonium chloride. The mineral is commonly formed on burning coal dumps from condensation of coal-derived gases. It is also found around some types of volcanic vents. It is mainly used as fertilizer and a flavouring agent in some types of liquorice. It is the product from the reaction of hydrochloric acid and ammonia. Ammonium chloride is used as a flux in preparing metals to be tin coated, galvanized or soldered. It works as a flux by cleaning the surface of workpieces by reacting with the metal oxides at the surface to form a volatile metal chloride. For that purpose, it is sold in blocks at hardware stores for use in cleaning the tip of a soldering iron, and it can also be included in solder as flux. In paleontology, ammonium chloride vapor is deposited on fossils, where the substance forms a brilliant white, easily removed and fairly harmless and inert layer of tiny crystals. That covers up any coloration the fossil may have, and if lighted at an angle highly enhances contrast in photographic documentation of three-dimensional specimens.