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The garment in question contained an excess of sulphite.
The excipients, in particular sulphite, could contribute to the adverse effects.
Reaction with sulphite to a sulphonic acid and its monoxide derivative.
To prevent further use of sulphite I am therefore voting against Amendments Nos 7, 30, 31 and 38.
Show a dwarf a rock and he sees, for example, an inferior piece of crystalline sulphite of barytes.
The small sulphite mill started up in late 1922 with four 12-ton digesters and a daily output of 75 tons of pulp.
Reducing conditions for the decomposition of the Étard complex are provided by saturated aqueous sodium sulphite.
He took a slow breath and I knew that he felt as I had when this picture had slowly appeared from the sodium sulphite.
Both plant utilizes a calcium sulphite based digesting proses which gives high viscosity cellulose with high purity.
The door was more or less permanently wedged open, and Rennie Hamilton could hear the abrupt gush as the sulphite was emptied away.
Oil and natural gas, potash, kaolin, sodium sulphite and bentonite contribute a great part of Regina and area's economy.
She was carrying a cargo of sulphite as well as a number of passengers and her captain was the convoy's Vice Commodore.
Saskatchewan "has an estimated 75% of the world's potash reserves" kaolin, sodium sulphite and bentonite contribute to Saskatchewan's economy.
In the technical sphere, he was a proponent for using pyrite from Norway as well as natrium sulphite in the production of cellulose.
TauD is an alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase catalyzing the oxygenolytic release of sulphite from taurine.
Molybdenum cofactor deficiency is a rare human disease in which the absence of molybdenum cofactor leads to accumulation of toxic levels of sulphite and neurological damage.
Calcium sulfite, or calcium sulphite, is a chemical compound which is the calcium salt of sulfurous acid with the molecular formula CaSO.
Of the nickel ores, one of the more common is nickel sulphite, which has a high copper content and a lesser quantity of iron, ratios similar to the Bactrian coins.
Diagnosis of Molybdenum cofactor deficiency includes early seizures, low blood levels of uric acid, and high levels of sulphite, xanthine, and uric acid in urine.
On suggestion by Professor Leslie Cromby, lead oxide was applied to the hull, enabling it to become black on application of a solution of sulphite and sea water for night operation.
The Route 66 town of Galena is named for the lead sulphite ore galena, to which the series of small mining towns around Baxter Springs owe their boom and subsequent bust.
A longtime labor advocate, he became vice-president of the International Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite, and Paper Mill Workers and its successor, the United Paperworkers International Union.
In July 1937, an offer was received from a consortium of Dutch and German capitalists who intended to build a sulphite mill and wanted a steady supply of pulpwood and access to Canadian capital.
The paper industry was created by Edward Partington who, as Olive and Partington, bought the Turn Lee Mill in 1874 to produce high-quality paper from wood pulp by the sulphite method.
However, Alfred D. Remington learned that a Swede, Carl Daniel Ekman, was teaching papermakers in Sweden to make paper entirely out of wood pulp by using a sulphite process (SO3).
Copper sulfite deposits could also form in that area, he said.
Sodium sulfite is primarily used in the pulp and paper industry.
Ammonium sulfite can also be used in the making of bricks.
In the past, a sulfite rinse followed, but this is now considered unnecessary.
"The water from the spring in Saratoga had hydrogen sulfite.
Almost a decade later the first commercial sulfite pulp mill was built in Sweden.
The waters have a high content of sulfite compounds.
Antioxidants such as sulfite and ascorbic acid are sometimes used.
The sulfite is used in essential biomolecules such as cysteine.
Ammonium sulfite is used as a reducing agent in photography.
Nothing has caused more confusion than the sulfite warning on wine bottle labels.
For example, on reaction between potassium permanganate and sodium sulfite.
For example, with sulfite in acidic environments it reacts quickly and completely.
However, in finished food products, labeling is usually required only for sulfite levels above 10 ppm.
The most common food product with ammonium sulfite is caramel coloring.
Ammonium sulfite can be included in lubricants for cold metal working.
The sulfite process produces pulp with a cellulose content up to 92 percent.
Sulfite results from the reaction of aqueous base and sulfur dioxide.
The June 20 document outlines plans on the regulation of sulfite use in foods and drugs.
In such instances, the sulfite notice will be the only difference in the two labels.
And the negative doesn't need to be developed, just "cleared" in a bath of sodium sulfite.
It is made of sodium and sulfite ions.
These mechanical processes use fewer chemicals than either kraft or sulfite mills.
The sulfite process can use calcium, ammonium, magnesium or sodium as a base.
This reaction consists of a conversion from activated sulfate to sulfite.