fulminate of mercury - significado y definición. Qué es fulminate of mercury
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Qué (quién) es fulminate of mercury - definición

CHEMICAL COMPOUND
Mercuric Fulminate; Mercury fulminate; Fulminate of mercury; Fulminated mercury; Hg(ONC)2; C2HgN2O2; Hg(CNO)2; Mercuric cyanate

Bristol Mercury         
  • Mercury license built by [[NOHAB]]
  • Side view showing valve gear detail.
  • Bristol Mercury VII on display at the [[Shuttleworth Collection]]
  • The Mercury powered Fokker G.1
AIRCRAFT ENGINE FAMILY BY BRISTOL
Alfa Romeo Mercurius; Mercury (aircraft engine); Bristol Mercury V.S2; Polish Skoda Works Mercury VI.S2; Polish Skoda Works Mercuty IV.S2; Bristol Mercury IV.A; P.Z.L. Mercury VIII; Polish Skoda Works Mercury IV.S2; Bristol Mercury IX; Bristol Mercury VIII; Bristol Mercury IIA; Bristol Mercury VIS2; Bristol Mercury XXX; The Bristol Mercury; Bristol Mercury XXIV; Bristol Mercury XII; Walter Mercury V-S2; Bristol Mercury XV; Bristol Mercury XX; Bristol Mercury IIIA; Bristol Mercury II
The Bristol Mercury is a British nine-cylinder, air-cooled, single-row, piston radial engine. Designed by Roy Fedden of the Bristol Aeroplane Company it was used to power both civil and military aircraft of the 1930s and 1940s.
Mercury, Texas         
HUMAN SETTLEMENT IN TEXAS, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Mercury, TX
Mercury is an unincorporated community in McCulloch County, Texas, United States. According to the Handbook of Texas, the community had an estimated population of 166 in 2000.
Hydrargyrum         
  • Amalgam filling
  • Mercury [[manometer]] to measure pressure
  • EPA workers clean up residential mercury spill in 2004
  • Evolution of mercury price (U.S.) and production (worldwide)
  • Joss paper burning on the street, a very common practice, Tai Po, Hong Kong, 2023
  • The bulb of a [[mercury-in-glass thermometer]]
  • Native mercury with [[cinnabar]], Socrates mine, [[Sonoma County, California]]. Cinnabar sometimes alters to native mercury in the oxidized zone of mercury deposits.
  • A single-pole, single-throw (SPST) mercury switch
  • Mercury-discharge spectral calibration lamp
  • Amount of atmospheric mercury deposited at Wyoming's Upper Fremont Glacier over the last 270 years
  • the planet Mercury]] (☿) has been used since ancient times to represent the element
  • pound coin]] (density ~7.6&nbsp;g/cm<sup>3</sup>) floats on mercury due to the combination of the [[buoyant force]] and [[surface tension]].
CHEMICAL ELEMENT WITH SYMBOL HG AND ATOMIC NUMBER 80
Mercury (Element); Element mercury; Mercury chemical element; Quicksilver (metal); Hydrargyrum; Element 80; Mercuric; Mercurous; Mercury compounds; Hygrargyrum; Elemental mercury; Hydragyrum; Mercury metal; Mercury/Element; Mercury element; Mercury pollution; Liquid mercury; Organic mercury; Mercurial chemistry; Density of mercury; Native mercury; Mercury (chemistry); Mercury contamination; Mercury (metal); ㋌; Mercurate; Mercury (chemical element); Quicksilver (element); Environmental effects of mercury; Hg (element); Medical uses of mercury; Hg (chemical); Mercury compound; Compounds of mercury; Compounds of hydragyrum; History of mercury (element)
·noun Quicksilver; mercury.

Wikipedia

Mercury(II) fulminate

Mercury(II) fulminate, or Hg(CNO)2, is a primary explosive. It is highly sensitive to friction, heat and shock and is mainly used as a trigger for other explosives in percussion caps and detonators. Mercury(II) cyanate, though its chemical formula is identical, has a different atomic arrangement; the cyanate and fulminate anions are isomers.

First used as a priming composition in small copper caps beginning in the 1820s, mercury fulminate quickly replaced flints as a means to ignite black powder charges in muzzle-loading firearms. Later, during the late 19th century and most of the 20th century, mercury fulminate became widely used in primers for self-contained rifle and pistol ammunition; it was the only practical detonator for firing projectiles until the early 20th century. Mercury fulminate has the distinct advantage over potassium chlorate of being non-corrosive, but it is known to weaken with time, by decomposing into its constituent elements. The reduced mercury which results forms amalgams with cartridge brass, weakening it, as well. Today, mercury fulminate has been replaced in primers by more efficient chemical substances. These are non-corrosive, less toxic, and more stable over time; they include lead azide, lead styphnate, and tetrazene derivatives. In addition, none of these compounds require mercury for manufacture, supplies of which can be unreliable in wartime.