- Feed Additives[6]
- Food Additives[6]
- Organic Acid[6]
- Benzene & Derivatives[2]
- Pharmaceutical[6]
- Oxide[6]
- Silicate[4]
- Flavour & Fragrance[6]
- Monosodium Glutamate[1]
- Sulphate[3]
- Chemical Auxiliary Agent[1]
- Nitrate[1]
- Carbonate[1]
- Alkali[1]
- Phosphate Fertilizer[1]
- Chloride[4]
- Organic Intermediate[6]
- Ester & Derivatives[6]
- Aldehyde & Ketone & Chinone[6]
- Alcohol & Hydroxybenzene & Ether[4]
- Contact Person : Mr. Wu Kunling
- Company Name : Zhengzhou Yi Bang Industry Co., Ltd.
- Tel : 86-371-66777261
- Fax : 86-371-66031338
- Address : Henan,Zhengzhou,No. 8, Xinglong Street
- Country/Region : China
- Zip : 450000
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Glauber Salt Manufacturer
What is glauber salt?
Sodium sulfate is the sodium salt of sulfuric acid. When anhydrous, it is a white crystalline solid of formula Na2SO4 known as the mineral thenardite; the decahydrate Na2SO4·10H2O has been known as Glauber's salt or, historically, sal mirabilis since the 17th century. Another solid is the heptahydrate, which transforms to mirabilite when cooled. With an annual production of 6 million tonnes, it is a major commodity chemical product.
Specification
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Usage
Sodium sulfate is mainly used for the manufacture of detergents and in the Kraft process of paper pulping. About two-thirds of the world's production is from mirabilite, the natural mineral form of the decahydrate, and the remainder from by-products of chemical processes such as hydrochloric acid production.
Commodity industries
The glass industry provides another significant application for sodium sulfate, as second largest application in Europe. Sodium sulfate is used as a fining agent, to help remove small air bubbles from molten glass. It fluxes the glass, and prevents scum formation of the glass melt during refining. The glass industry in Europe has been consuming from 1970 to 2006 a stable 110,000 tonnes annually.
Sodium sulfate is important in the manufacture of textiles, particularly in Japan, where it is the largest application. Sodium sulfate helps in "levelling", reducing negative charges on fibres so that dyes can penetrate evenly. Unlike the alternative sodium chloride, it does not corrode the stainless steel vessels used in dyeing. This application in Japan and US consumed in 2006 approximately 100,000 tonnes.
Small-scale applications
In the laboratory, anhydrous sodium sulfate is widely used as an inert drying agent, for removing traces of water from organic solutions.[19] It is more efficient, but slower-acting, than the similar agent magnesium sulfate. It is only effective below about 30 °C, but it can be used with a variety of materials since it is chemically fairly inert. Sodium sulfate is added to the solution until the crystals no longer clump together; the two video clips (see above) demonstrate how the crystals clump when still wet, but some crystals flow freely once a sample is dry.
glauber salt manufacturer