G has various meanings in the Chemistry category. Discover the full forms, definitions, and usage contexts of G in Chemistry.
Symbol:"Au" Atomic Number:"79" Atomic Mass: 196.97amu. Gold is one of the transition elements. Gold is one of the Earth's precious metals. You will find the yellow colored metal used in jewelry, electronics, coins, satellites, and even medicines. Gold is very non-reactive and will not oxidize in air.
ChemistryA fossil fuel found in porous rocks in the underground. It has several applications in substitution for diesel oil, ethanol, gasoline and LPG, and it can be added or not to petroleum. It is composed by inorganic gases and saturated hydrocarbonates, mostly methane, and propane and butane is a small amount. A gaseous mixture of hydrocarbon compounds, the primary one being methane.
ChemistryCalcium sulfate dihydrate (CaSO4 2H2O) a sludge constituent from the conventional lime scrubber process, obtained as a byproduct of the dewatering operation and sold for commercial use. OR A hydrous crystalline calcium sulphate used as an extender pigment in some paints and in special cement paints and is the basis of some wall plasters.
ChemistryCrystalline carbon used in very pure form as a moderator, principally in gas-cooled reactors, but also in Soviet-designed RBMK reactors.
ChemistryA glass is an amorphous solid. The term is usually applied to inorganic solids and not to plastics or other organics. Glasses do not have crystalline internal structure. They usually are hard and brittle solids.
ChemistryOne thousand million 10^9.
ChemistryA purine base found in DNA or RNA.
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