Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

619 results
  1. NLM Digital Collections - The American dispensatory, containing the operations of pharmacy : together with the natural, ... 
    Publication: Philadelphia : Published by Thomas Dobson and Son ..., William Fry, printer, 1818
    ... richer a wine is in alcohol, the less malic acid it contains, and, therefore, the best wines give ... are free from the disagreeable taste which the malic acid imparts 10 them. Old wines give better brandy ...
  2. ... of vitriol, it changes into aconitic acid. 598 MALIC ACID AND ITS SALTS. If aconitic acid be heated ... C3H30.), with 1H.O. and 3(C.02). Malic Acid.—C8H408+2H.O. This acid exists in most ...
  3. NLM Digital Collections - The new dietetics : a guide to scientific feeding in health and disease 
    Publication: Battle Creek, Michigan : The Modern Medicine Publishing Co., 1923
    ... by their composition: citric acid, C6 H8 O7; malic acid, C4 H7 Os; tartaric acid, C4 He 06. ... With the exception of grape juice, citric and malic acids are the acids found in fruit juices. Most ...
  4. NLM Digital Collections - The American dispensatory, containing the operations of pharmacy : together with the natural, ... 
    Publication: Philadelphia : Published by Thomas Dobson ..., William Fry, printer, 1814
    ... very acid red juice, which consists chiefly of malic acid. This juice forms an useful and pleasant addition ... a very astrin- gent sourish taste. It contains malic acid.* The inspissated juice of the unripe fruit is ...
  5. NLM Digital Collections - The American dispensatory, containing the operations of pharmacy : together with the natural, ... 
    Publication: Philadelphia : Published by Thomas Dobson ..., Fry and Kammerer, printers, 1810
    ... very acid red juice, which consists chiefly of malic acid. This juice forms an useful and pleasant addition ... a very as- tringent sourish taste. It contains malic acid.* The inspissated juice of the unripe fruit is ...
  6. ... an acid, similar in its properties to the malic acid— Braconnot.) The roots yield a variety of extractive ... for preparing, with very little trouble, a pure malic acid from these berries, which may be used for ...
  7. ... Magnesia. Iron. Lime. Inorganic 34 QUANTITY OF SOLIDS. Acids. Uric. ... kidneys act the part of safety-valves to the system, in regulating the amount ...
  8. ... according to Proust, of citric acid 1*77; malic acid, gum, and bitter extractive 0*72; water, 97* ... much mucilage, a fixed and a volatile oil, malic acid and the malates of potassa and lime, chloride ...
  9. ... 0.17 to 0.19 per ct. of malic acid. Notwithstanding the fact that the cellulose content of ... considerable sugar; but as they likewise contain much malic acid, the wine obtained from them cannot be compared ...
  10. NLM Digital Collections - Chemistry of the carbon compounds, or, Organic chemistry 
    Publication: Philadelphia : P. Blakiston, Son & Co., 1886
    ... Sorbic Acid, CfiH802 = C5H7.C02H, occurs together with malic acid in the juice of unripe mountain-ash berries ( ... manufacture. It is obtained by the oxidation of malic acid (and hydracrylic acid) with chromic acid :— co2h ch2. ...
first · previous · 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10 · next · last