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Potassium Hydroxide

POTASSIUM HYDROXIDE FLAKES 90% is a white, deliquescent solid in the form of flakes obtained by concentration of purified electrolytic potassium hydroxide solution.

Potassium Sulphate

POTASSIUM SULPHATE or SULPHATE OF POTASH (SOP), is the world’s most popular fertilizer. Combining Potassium and SOP offers a high concentration of nutrients readily available to plants.

Potassium Nitrate

POTASSIUM NITRATE is a chemical compound with the chemical formula KNO₃. It is an ionic salt of potassium ions K+ and nitrate ions NO₃−, and is therefore an alkali metal nitrate.

Potassium Carbonate

Potassium carbonate is the inorganic compound with the formula K2CO3. It is a white salt, which is soluble in water and forms a strongly alkaline solution. It is deliquescent, often appearing as a damp or wet solid.

Potassium Chloride

Potassium chloride (KCl, or potassium salt) is a metal halide salt composed of potassium and chlorine. It is odorless and has a white or colorless vitreous crystal appearance. The solid dissolves readily in water, and its solutions have a salt-like taste.

Sodium Tripolyphosphate

STPP is a colorless salt, which exists as anhydrous and also as hexahydrate. Its wide spread use is well known in detergent industries. The most common method of preparation is by reacting Mono Sodium and Disodium Phosphates.

Diamonium Phosphate (DAP)

Diammonium phosphate (DAP) is the world’s most widely used phosphorus fertilizer. It’s made from two common constituents in the fertilizer industry, and its relatively high nutrient content and excellent physical properties make it a popular choice in farming and other industries.

Monoamonium Phosphate (MAP) Ammophos

Monoammonium phosphate (MAP) is a widely used source of P and N. It is made of two constituents common in the fertilizer industry and has the highest P content of any common solid fertilizer. The process for manufacturing MAP is relatively simple.

Phosphoric Acid

Phosphoric acid is a corrosive acid that can form three different classes of salts, namely primary phosphates, dibasic phosphates and tribasic phosphates. Phosphoric acid is soluble in water. It is incompatible with strong caustics and it is corrosive to ferrous metals and alloys.

Sodium Hexamethaphosphate E452(i)
The European food additive number for it is E452i. Generally, its purpose in food is as a texturizer, sequestrant, thickener, and emulsifier. SHMP can be used in food and beverage, personal care products, water treatment, and other industrial uses. 
Sodium Polyphosphate E450(iii)

It comprises sodium cations (Na+) and dihydrogen pyrophosphate anions (H2P2O2−7). It is a white, water-soluble solid that serves as a buffering and chelating agent, with many applications in the food industry.

E509 Dihydrate Calcium Chloride

E509 (Calcium chloride) is an odorless, white, crystalline solid compound that is highly soluble in water. A type of salt, this chemical is hygroscopic, which means it can attract and absorb water molecules from its surroundings.

Calcium Chloride 6-water E509

E509 (Calcium chloride) is a white to off-white solid. Sinks and mixes with water. E509 (Calcium chloride) is an inorganic compound, a salt with the chemical formula CaCl2. E509 (Calcium chloride) is a white colored crystalline solid at room temperature, and it is highly soluble in water.

Magnesium Sulphate 7-water E518
Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate is a hydrate that is the heptahydrate form of magnesium sulfate. It has a role as a laxative and a cathartic. It is a magnesium salt and a hydrate. It contains a magnesium sulfate.
 
Phosphoric Acid

Phosphoric acid is a corrosive acid that can form three different classes of salts, namely primary phosphates, dibasic phosphates and tribasic phosphates. Phosphoric acid is soluble in water. It is incompatible with strong caustics and it is corrosive to ferrous metals and alloys.

Sodium Hydroxide (caustic Soda) 

It is white acicular crystal, easy to deliquescence, soluble in water, ethanol and glycerol, but insoluble in acetone. It is basic chemical raw materials, used as high-purity reagents, are widely used in chemical industry, metallurgy, papermaking, petroleum, textile and daily chemical industry.

Cenospheres

Cenospheres are hollow particles in fly ash, a by-product of coal burning, and are widely used as a reinforcement when developing low-density composites called syntactic foams.

Sodium Percarbonate
Sodium percarbonate appears as a colorless, crystalline solid. Denser than water. May combust in contact with organic materials. Contact may irritate skin, eyes and mucous membranes. May be toxic by ingestion.
Citric Acid Monohydrate
Citric acid is a white or colorless, odorless, crystalline solid. It is highly soluble in water, freely soluble in ethanol, and slightly soluble in ether. Citric acid has three carboxyl groups and, therefore, is a good buffer for pH control.
Chloroform

Chloroform is a colorless liquid with a pleasant, sweet odor. It is used as a solvent and to make refrigerants, resins, and plastics. It is no longer used as an anesthetic. determine potentially hazardous exposures.

Barium Carbonate

Barium carbonate is a white solid precipitated from a solution of barium hydroxide and urea. The chemical formula for barium carbonate is BaCO3. It also occurs in minerals known as witherite and is also prepared from barytes through precipitation. It is toxic in nature.

Urea

Urea is the chief nitrogenous end product of the metabolic breakdown of proteins in all mammals and some fishes. It occurs not only in the urine of mammals but also in their blood, bile, milk, and perspiration.

Sodium Carbonate (Soda Ash)

Sodium carbonate (also known as washing soda, soda ash and soda crystals) is the inorganic compound with the formula Na 2CO 3 and its various hydrates. All forms are white, odourless, water-soluble salts that yield alkaline solutions in water.

Sodium Bicarbinate

Sodium bicarbonate is a white solid that is crystalline but often appears as a fine powder. It has a slightly salty, alkaline taste resembling that of washing soda (sodium carbonate). 

Tri Sodium Citrate

Trisodium citrate dihydrate occurs as white, granular crystals or as white, crystalline powder with a pleasant, salty taste. It is slightly deliquescent in moist air, freely soluble in water and practically insoluble in ethanol (96 %).

Chlorinated lime

Chlorinated lime is commercially called as Bleaching Powder. It is a mixture of calcium chloride, calcium oxychloride and calcium hydroxide (unreacted). It is a deodorant sanitising bleach used for general-purpose cleaning and sanitising concrete floors in farm dairies.

Sodium Sulphate

Sodium sulphate (Na2SO4) is the sodium salt of sulfuric acid. Anhydrous sulphate is a white crystalline solid also known as the mineral thenardite, while the decahydrate Na2SO4. 10H2O has been known as Glauber’s salt or mirabilis.

PEAT

Peat is the surface organic layer of a soil that consists of partially decomposed organic matter, derived mostly from plant material, which has accumulated under conditions of waterlogging, oxygen deficiency, high acidity and nutrient deficiency.

Amonium Nitrate

ammonium nitrate, (NH4NO3), a salt of ammonia and nitric acid, used widely in fertilizers and explosives. The commercial grade contains about 33.5 percent nitrogen, all of which is in forms utilizable by plants; it is the most common nitrogenous component of artificial fertilizers.