Fluoride in a sentence as a noun

Don't drink the water, either; it has fluoride in it.

I thought fluoride is put in water for its teeth/health benefits.

Tin fluoride is also commonly used in toothpaste under the name of stannous fluoride.

This isn't one of the fancy liquid fluoride thorium reactors that people immediately think of.

I also found the details of the design of the liquid thorium fluoride reactor intriguing.

Hm. I'm only going to talk about fluoride, because it's the easiest to pick on: yes, China does have dangerously high levels of fluoride in groundwater in some areas.

""Exposure of larger amounts of chlorine trifluoride, as a liquid or as a gas, ignites tissue.

You might as well call all caffeinated beverages toxic given the toxic dose of caffeine is 1/30th that of sodium fluoride.

This is, after all, how the beneficial effects of fluoride on tooth enamel strength and resistance to decay were discovered.

The "source" for this claim is a conspiracy-nut anti-fluoride essay in the Rothbard-Rockwell Report.

The micro-organisms usually present in stagnant fresh water are much more harmful than low levels of chlorine or fluoride that are added to **** them.

" While the study reports a negative correlation with higher fluoride levels, "high" in the underlying studies usually mean above 2mg/L.

Chlorine trifluoride and gases like it have been reported to ignite sand, asbestos, and other highly fire-retardant materials.

You can replace BeF2 with a eutectic lithium fluoride/thorium fluoride composition, but that requires an increased temperature of the reactor salts.

To become an advocate for further investment in this concept, I would have to learn more about how the concept deals with the safety issues involved in the handling of fluorine gas and fluoride materials.

By using a liquid fluoride salt, you can run a thorium reactor at ambient pressure and high temperatures, leading to safer operation and better utilization of thorium in feed stock.

Such circumstances are difficult to find in many industrialized countries, because fluoride concentrations in community water are usually no higher than 1 mg/L, even when fluoride is added to water supplies as a public health measure to reduce tooth decay.

It can be kept in some of the ordinary structural metals steel, copper, aluminum, etc. because of the formation of a thin film of insoluble metal fluoride which protects the bulk of the metal, just as the invisible coat of oxide on aluminum keeps it from burning up in the atmosphere.

Fluoride definitions

noun

a salt of hydrofluoric acid