Coming soon - Get a detailed view of why an account is flagged as spam!
view details

This post has been de-listed

It is no longer included in search results and normal feeds (front page, hot posts, subreddit posts, etc). It remains visible only via the author's post history.

2
Do some hydrate salts exist without an anhydrous form?
Post Flair (click to view more posts with a particular flair)
Post Body

I have been scouring the web trying to find any sort of record of anhydrous potassium citrate, and all I’ve been able to find from actual chemical vendors is the monohydrate form. One of the guys at a company I reached out to about this said that all readily available sources of potassium citrate would be the monohydrate form. Is it possible that there is either no anhydrous form for potassium citrate, or that potassium citrate is too hygoscopic to truly stay anhydrous? Any help or guidance here is appreciated (I didn’t know the best way to flair this, so I figured general would work)

Author
Account Strength
100%
Account Age
6 years
Verified Email
Yes
Verified Flair
No
Total Karma
13,993
Link Karma
4,855
Comment Karma
8,608
Profile updated: 4 days ago
Posts updated: 8 months ago

Subreddit

Post Details

We try to extract some basic information from the post title. This is not always successful or accurate, please use your best judgement and compare these values to the post title and body for confirmation.
Posted
1 year ago