Talk:Contact process
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Contact process of manufacturing of sulfuric acid in the industries.
What is H2S2O7?
Incorrect?
Every textbook I've ever read has referred to the Contact Process as just the reversible reaction producing sulphur trioxide from sulphur dioxide and oxygen, not the entire process of the production of sulphur. I know article kind of gets this across, but the first line, "The contact process is the current method of producing sulphuric acid in the high concentrations needed for industrial processes" is misleading. Perhaps a re-write is in order here. Liverpool Scouse 11:31, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
IUPAC spelling
The standard for spelling of sulfur in science article is sulfur.
- In the interest of consistency and clarity the IUPAC standard should be used for chemical names in all science articles. Alternative spellings should be referenced in addition, especially when dealing with regional issues and historical development.
- The IUPAC currently recommends:
- Aluminium instead of aluminum
- Caesium instead of cesium
- Sulfur instead of sulphur
Source: Wikipedia:WikiProject_Science#IUPAC_Standard
Vsmith 19:44, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
A correction
Hey, I was never good at chem, but every textbook I have read says that a catalyst does not change the position of equilibrium. But the article says "A catalyst is necessary for this reaction or the equilibrium of the reaction would move to the left, producing more SO2." I think this is wrong, but just to make sure, I am posting this in discussions. —The preceding
Contradiction
I've added a {{contradict}} tag because the article can't seem to decide if Vanadium or Platinum is used as the catalyst, and which is poisoned by impurities.
Catalytic cycle - Vanadium oxidation state
The following publication shows that vanadium does not undergo a change in oxidation state in this process. The German Wikipedia shows the graphic to the catalytic cycle as found by Lapina et al. Could anyone please correct it?
O.B. Lapina, B.S. Bal'zhinimaev, S. Boghosian, K.M. Eriksen, R. Fehrmann: Progress on the mechanistic understanding of SO2 oxidation catalysts, in: Catalysis Today, 1999, 51, pp 469–479 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.215.222.75 (talk) 19:05, 1 February 2013 (UTC)
External links modified
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