Advanced Search
Search Results
117 total results found
Obsessive Pie Disorder (OPD)
Allen (surname unknown, but probably something crusty, like "Baker" or "Quiche") is a man whose life is defined by one single, all-consuming passion: Pies. His friends and family (those who are still speaking to him) have affectionately (and occasionally, wear...
Quang: The Legacy of a Dictator
Quang "The Pheromone Despot" Nguyễn (Redirected from "Quang the Girl Thief", "Supreme Leader of the Bar", and "Why Your Wingman is a War Crime Against Humanity") Quang "The Pheromone Despot" Nguyễn (born 1993) is a Vietnamese-Canadian pharmaceutical quality c...
Canada and Iceland (circa 185)
Well, there isn't much to say.
Vogue Magazine: Brandon
Brandon (Polymath) Brandon is a world-renowned Canadian fashion icon, pharmaceutical visionary, and the only man ever to be banned from Home Depot for "knowing too much." Residing in the Waterloo Region (specifically the Cambridge area), he is best known for ...
Loss on Drying (LOD)
USP sodium chloride Loss on Drying is performed by drying a 1.000 g sample at 105 °C for 2 hours and calculating the percent weight loss; the monograph limit is not more than 0.5% loss. Loss on Drying Overview What the test measures Loss on Drying determines t...
Limit of Phosphates
In the USP sodium chloride monograph, the Limit of phosphates test is an impurity test that checks that phosphate ions—present as a trace contaminant—are below a very low specified level. A test solution of sodium chloride is treated with acid and ammonium mol...
Identification
Identification Tests The United States Pharmacopeia (USP) specifies two primary identification tests for Sodium Chloride to confirm the presence of both sodium and chloride ions. These tests are essential for verifying the identity of the material before furth...
Assay
Summary of the USP sodium chloride Assay The Assay in the USP sodium chloride monograph is a quantitative argentometric titration that determines the actual content of NaCl in the sample. Purpose: Confirm that bulk sodium chloride contains 99.0%–100.5% NaCl ...
Limit of Iodides
Limit of Iodides — Summary Purpose: Verify that soluble iodide in sodium chloride does not exceed the pharmacopeial limit (no more than 0.01% iodide). Principle: Iodide in the sample is converted to free iodine under acidic, nitrosating conditions and then det...
Limit of Bromides
Step-by-Step Instructions Prepare the sample solution as specified. Add pH 4.7 phenol red TS and chloramine T solution. Mix immediately and wait exactly 2 minutes. Add sodium thiosulfate to stop the reaction. Measure the absorbance at 590 nm using UV...
Limit of Aluminum
Uses fluorescence spectroscopy after extraction with a chelating agent. Step-by-Step Instructions Dissolve 20.0 g of Sodium Chloride in 100 mL of water and add pH 6.0 acetate buffer. Extract the solution three times with a 0.5% solution of 8-hydroxyquinoli...
Limit of Barium
Summary of the USP “Limit of barium” test for sodium chloride The Limit of barium test in the USP sodium chloride monograph is a qualitative limit test designed to ensure that sodium chloride contains no more than a trace amount of soluble barium salts. Pur...
Limit of Iron
Limit of Iron Summary Purpose: Verify iron content does not exceed the specified limit. Principle: The monograph describes reduction and complexation steps that produce a colored species which is compared to a blank or limit standard; absence of color beyond t...
Magnesium and Alkaline-Earth Metals
Magnesium and Alkaline Earth Metals Limit Test — Summary Purpose: Verify that the combined content of magnesium and other alkaline earth metals in sodium chloride is below the pharmacopeial limit. Principle: The test is a complexometric EDTA titration at pH 10...
Ferrocyanides Limit Test
Ferrocyanides Limit Test — Summary Purpose: The ferrocyanides limit test for Sodium Chloride checks that ferrocyanide/ferrocyanide-derived cyanide species are not present at levels that produce a visible blue complex when reacted with iron(III). Acceptance: th...
Residual Solvents
USP 〈467〉 classifies solvents into Class 1 (to be avoided), Class 2 (to be limited), and Class 3 (low toxic potential) and prescribes headspace GC procedures (A, B, C) for screening, confirmation, and quantification of residual solvents. Testing is required on...
Vogue Magazine: Tony
Tony (IT Department Visionary, Fashion Catastrophe, Accidental Icon) Tony (born sometime during a server outage) is a legendary IT technician at an unnamed pharmaceutical company who rose to global prominence after appearing—controversially, confusingly, and ...
Dylan (Archer, Barber, Time Magazine Cover Legend)
Dylan (born sometime between the invention of scissors and the invention of gravity) is a globally unverified yet universally admired archer-barber-vigilante polymath. Best known for appearing on the cover of Time magazine under the headline “Man Accidentally...