Excerpt from The Journal of the College of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo, Japan, 1903, Vol. 17
The present paper consists of a fuller account of this salt and other imidosulphites than could then be given.
Ammonium amidosulphite, from which the imide salt is derived (this Journal, 1900, 13, 187), is readily formed by the union of sulphur dioxide and ammonia, but is so unstable as to be largely decomposed by the unavoidable heating it suffers when these gases come together, unless cooled ether be used as their solvent. On keeping the dry salt at a temperature of about 35°, its decomposition goes on and ammonia escapes for some hours.
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