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inorganic compound
(redirected from Inorganic chemicals)

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.15 sec.

inorganic compound

Any chemical compound that is not an organic compound. Inorganic compounds include: all compounds that do not contain any carbon atoms; and also a small number of simple carbon compounds that don't have any of the functional groups typical of organic chemistry. Thus, carbon dioxide (CO2), all carbonates, carbon sulphide, cyanides, and carbides count as inorganic compounds.

However, simple carbon compounds that can be seen as the smallest member of a family of compounds sharing a functional group (for example methanol as the simplest alcohol) are treated as organic compounds.



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The Shin-Etsu Group offers a broad array of market-leading products in its Organic and Inorganic Chemicals, Electronic materials and Functional Materials and Others businesses.
And organic versus inorganic chemicals are defined based on whether or not they can be destroyed as follows: "Organic chemicals even those difficult to degrade can be destroyed when conditions are right.
The sludge processing method sorts out efficiently impure substances, including pulp short-fibers and ink chemicals, to produce inorganic chemicals in fine grain forms and it ensures whiteness comparable to conventional clay-based inorganic additives.
 
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