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Tellurium

open access: yesZeitschrift für Klassische Homöopathie, 2007
Food (e.g., meat, dairy products, and cereals) is the main source of tellurium exposure in the general population. In the working environment, inhalational exposure predominates.
J.V. Comasseto   +2 more
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The localization of tellurium in tellurium-induced hydrocephalus

Experientia, 1971
L'etude presente concerne la localisation du tellure dans le cytoplasme de cellules nerveuses fœtales et post-natales chez des animaux dont la mere a ingere du tellure durant la grossesse.
S, Duckett, T, Scott
openaire   +2 more sources

Tellurium-intoxication

Klinische Wochenschrift, 1989
Tellurium is one of the rarest elements on earth. Intoxications are rare and almost exclusively occupationally exposed workers are affected. Only a few cases of non-occupational poisoning have been reported so far. Severe poisoning results in respiratory depression and circulatory collapse.
R, Müller   +3 more
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Microdetermination of tellurium and organo-tellurium compounds

Mikrochimica Acta, 1971
A method is described to convert elemental tellurium and organotellurium compounds quantitatively to Te(IV) by digestion with a mixture of nitric and sulfuric acids in the micro-Kjeldahl flask. After removal of nitrogen oxides by means of urea, exactly 5 ml of 0.02N potassium dichromate is added, whereupon Te(IV) is oxidized to Te(VI).
T. S. Ma, W. G. Zoellner
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Biochemistry of tellurium

Biological Trace Element Research, 1996
Tellurium (Te) demonstrates properties similar to those of elements known to be toxic to humans, and has applications in industrial processes, which are rapidly growing in importance and scale. It is relevant, therefore, to consider the tellurium physiology, toxicity, and methods for monitoring the element in biological and environmental specimens ...
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Resistance Characteristics of Tellurium and Silver-Tellurium Alloys

Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, 1937
The problem of correcting temperature errors in electrical instruments with copper windings is explained and the high electrical efficiency obtainable by correcting these errors with series resistors having negative temperature coefficients of resistance is noted.
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A tellurium-125 mössbauer investigation of tellurium-tantalum and tellurium-niobium oxides

Inorganica Chimica Acta, 1985
Abstract Several compounds from the tellurium-tantalum-oxygen and tellurium-niobium-oxygen systems have been examined by 125 Te Mossbauer spectroscopy. The results show that tellurium(IV) occupies a distorted oxygen environment in all compounds.
Frank J. Berry, John G. Holden
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Tellurium

2000
Abstract The name for element 52, tellurium (Te), is derived from the Latin tellus, or earth. Tellurium occurs in the earth’s crust at concentrations of 0.002-0.01 ppm (19). Te is a group-16 (formerly group VIB) element: AW, 127.6; MP, 449.5°C; and BP, 989.8°C.
openaire   +2 more sources

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