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platinoid
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platinoid
platinoid, a. and n. (ˈplætɪnɔɪd) [f. platin-um + -oid.] A. adj. Resembling platinum.1864 in Webster. 1886 in Cassell's Encycl. Dict. B. n. [Cf. metalloid.] 1. Chem. Any metal of the class comprising platinum and those commonly found in association with it and resembling it in several properties, vi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Nascent hydrogen
transient formation of hydrogen atoms capable to immediately diffuse into the crystal lattice of common metals (steel, titanium) different from these of the platinoid
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platinum
platinum (ˈplætɪnəm) [mod.L., altered by Bergman (followed by Davy), from platina, in conformity with the names of other metals in -um.] 1. a. A somewhat rare metal (at first named platina), of a white colour like silver but less bright, very heavy, ductile, and malleable, unaffected by all simple a...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Benjamin Osgood Peirce
"On the thermo-electric properties of platinoid and manganine", Amer. J. Sci. (3) 48 (286) (1894), 302–306.
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Eureka
Eureka, int. (n.) (jʊəˈriːkə) [Gr. εὕρηκα, 1st pers. sing. perf. of εὑρίσκειν to find. The correct spelling heureka is rare.] 1. The exclamation (‘I have found it’) uttered by Archimedes when he discovered the means of determining (by specific gravity) the proportion of base metal in Hiero's golden ...
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Economic development of the Arctic zone of the Russian Federation
The platinoid-copper-nickel-cobalt deposits group is represented by Norilsk-1, Talnakh and Oktyabrsky.
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Otto Hahn
Part of the problem was that they still believed that element 94 was a platinoid, which confounded their attempts at chemical separation.
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