Molybdic Acid
- Product Name: Molybdic Acid
- Chemical Name (IUPAC): Dihydroxy(dioxo)molybdenum
- CAS No.: 7782-91-4
- Chemical Formula: H2MoO4
- Form/Physical State: Solid
- Factroy Site: Science and Technology Industrial Park,Development Zone,Shouguang,Shandong,China
- Price Inquiry: sales9@boxa-chem.com
- Manufacturer: Shandong Tianli Pharmaceutical
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|
HS Code |
295917 |
| Chemicalname | Molybdic Acid |
| Chemicalformula | H2MoO4 |
| Molarmass | 161.95 g/mol |
| Appearance | Yellowish-green crystalline solid |
| Solubilityinwater | Slightly soluble |
| Meltingpoint | Often decomposes before melting |
| Density | 3.1 g/cm³ |
| Casnumber | 7782-91-4 |
| Ph | Acidic |
| Odor | Odorless |
| Boilingpoint | Decomposes on heating |
| Stability | Stable under recommended conditions |
As an accredited Molybdic Acid factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | 500g of Molybdic Acid is packed in a sealed, white HDPE bottle with a screw cap, labeled with hazard warnings. |
| Container Loading (20′ FCL) | **Container Loading (20′ FCL) for Molybdic Acid:** Packed in 25kg or 50kg drums/bags, total loading capacity is approximately 16–18 metric tons per 20′ FCL. |
| Shipping | Molybdic Acid should be shipped in tightly sealed containers, protected from moisture and physical damage. Store and transport in a cool, dry, well-ventilated area, away from incompatible substances. Ensure appropriate hazard labeling and follow all applicable regulations for chemical transport. Personal protective equipment may be required during handling. |
| Storage | Molybdic acid should be stored in a tightly sealed container in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area away from incompatible substances such as strong acids and bases. Protect from moisture and direct sunlight. Use corrosion-resistant materials for storage, and clearly label containers. Avoid storing near food or drink, and ensure that proper spill containment and handling procedures are in place. |
| Shelf Life | Molybdic Acid typically has a shelf life of 3 years when stored in a cool, dry, and tightly sealed container. |
Competitive Molybdic Acid prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615651039172 or mail to sales9@boxa-chem.com.
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Tel: +8615651039172
Email: sales9@boxa-chem.com
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- Molybdic Acid is manufactured under an ISO 9001 quality system and complies with relevant regulatory requirements.
- COA, SDS/MSDS, and related certificates are available upon request. For certificate requests or inquiries, contact: sales9@boxa-chem.com.
Molybdic Acid: Reliable Performance Straight from the Source
Direct Production, Real Advantages
From decades spent in chemical manufacturing, the value of consistency and reliability in raw materials stands out above almost anything else. Molybdic acid, produced here at our facility, offers both – not as an abstract promise but as a practical, daily reality. This compound might not have the public recognition of some big-name chemicals, yet it underpins a wide range of vital processes. Our batch model, designated MA-98, sets a benchmark for clarity, color, and purity. The crystalline appearance signals a careful synthesis process, and we maintain a minimum purity of 99.5% MoO3 content by dry weight. This isn’t about hitting “industry minimums”; it’s about delivering material that workers, engineers, and quality-checkers can rely on.
You will not find mystery blends or unnecessary fillers in our drums. The process starts with high-grade technical molybdenum trioxide, which passes through multiple filtration and controlled acidification steps. This strict approach drives consistency not just within a batch, but across years of runs. From tank temperature to settling time, everything is hands-on and tested at every critical stage before dry packing.
Molybdic Acid’s Role in Real Processing
Every time we send out molybdic acid, we see it forming the backbone for diverse applications. Take pigment manufacturing: the deep, stable colors in premium yellow and orange pigments come in no small part from this very acid. Glass manufacturers turn to it when aiming for clarity and improved durability in specialty panes—these include high-performance glasses found in laboratory and art settings. Catalysts in petrochemicals production gain stability and longevity through the steady presence of our product. Water treatment outfits use it to deliver trace elements needed for proper microbial function in essential processes.
What’s changed since we started isn’t so much the end uses, but the expectations for purity and trace element control. Over time, small things matter more. Traces of sodium or iron—unwanted but common in hastily produced acid—can cause whole product lines to fail spectrophotometric inspection. We don’t just talk about low impurities; daily lab data supports it. Each container ships with a complete impurity chart, showing total iron less than 10 ppm and total sodium under 15 ppm—no need for guesswork or second checks.
Practical Differences from the Rest
Not all molybdic acid comes out the same. Some producers cut corners, skipping extra filtration or letting batch tanks rest a little less to speed up turnover. The results show up as cloudiness, dust, or unexpected crystallization on standing—issues we long ago rooted out through process design. Over the years, customers coming from big resellers often mention sludgy or off-color material in the bottom of their shipments. We dissect these samples as part of our own process improvements, and consistently find that rushed drying or uncontrolled acid ratios lead to inferior performance.
Our direct production keeps all steps visible. Each shift logs temperature, filtrate clarity, and even grain shape (“rhombic” or “needle”) before a batch is cleared. Operators working in these rooms have handled the same process for years and know the subtle visual cues that screens and machines never catch. Keeping it hands-on, with only local staff monitoring every pump and mixer, builds the sort of reliability that cannot be borrowed from spec sheets alone.
Specifications That Matter in the Field
Spec sheets tell a story, but do not capture how materials behave in your plant at scale. In pigment plants, users see easily filterable material with no stubborn clumps—a direct result of our clean drying and crushing routines. In glass plants, operators report “no surprises” during melt, meaning fewer off-batch slabs and more predictable color quality month after month. Analytical labs see only minimal residue or haze, supporting better accuracy in downstream tests.
Most people never see the day-to-day operational headaches from unreliable acid. Batches that drift in moisture throw off weights and concentrations downstream. Variability in hydrogen content (which can sneak in during short drying) causes pH drift, disrupting catalytic reactions. We dedicate staff to moisture checks at packing, keeping loss on drying below 0.5%. These are small margins that translate, over time, to fewer stuck reactors or wasted pigment lots.
Our own facility never dumps partial runs to “make up” a batch. Consistency comes from refusing to blend old remainders—a surprisingly standard practice in parts of the industry, which we avoid entirely. Each lot gets tracked from raw rock through to the final drum, with spot samples collected at every turn. If anything shows even the hint of out-of-spec reading, it gets pulled out and reprocessed.
Supporting Reliable Downstream Results
Factories and laboratories trust chemical manufacturers that show up every time with the same product, not just those that aim for good enough. Our molybdic acid enables repeatable results whether you are running high-throughput pigment presses or controlled glass melts. This predictability minimizes troubleshooting. Instead of operators guessing whether the problem started upstream or in their own plants, they can focus on process improvements and innovation.
Working directly with users over the years has shaped how we refine both our process and our support. If a pigment batch starts to filter slower than usual or a glass line sees more inclusions, our chemists get directly involved, analyzing user samples side by side with retained control samples from the same production date. The factory team brings insight earned through their own daily habits of careful measurement and adjustment—qualities you won’t find from someone just reading off a third-party invoice.
Molybdic acid isn’t flashy. Yet its even performance supports industries that shape modern society, from communications and transportation to medicine and power. Our goal stays clear: supply exactly what the process calls for, in every container, every time.
Meeting Today’s Demands
Modern expectations go beyond product alone. Environmental stewardship, worker safety, and traceability matter now more than ever. All our molybdic acid runs are fully traceable back to batch, shift, and even the source molybdenum concentrate by date and mine. We audit water and energy inputs, reusing as much as possible, and always sending effluents through approved local treatments.
There’s no hiding from regulatory audits or environmental reporting. We maintain records not just for compliance, but because it drives improvements year after year. If a process wastes more water than it did a few years ago, or if an effluent reading creeps up, we catch and address it immediately. These aren’t luxuries or marketing points—just the way veteran plants stay viable and responsible in the long term.
Worker safety runs just as deep. Our operators continually handle acids, high heat, and sometimes fine powders. Training isn’t limited to “safety week”; it’s part of daily briefings, with every incident or near-miss discussed at start-of-shift meetings. We have learned that well-supported workers not only avoid accidents; they spot early warning signs of batch issues, equipment drift, or supply chain hiccups before they become real problems for customers.
Understanding Molybdic Acid in the Market
Not all buying experiences deliver the same outcome. Chemical traders and resellers often focus on price and volume. Their products may come from multiple sources, blended to reach an average spec. The end result for a glass plant or pigment user? Inconsistent batches, with “within tolerance” not always matching what a working process will take without headache.
Purchasing directly from manufacturers connects users with the reality of production. Put simply: if a specification changes, customers know about it immediately. Suppliers like us can also suggest adjustments for downstream process changes—a capability lost by those only moving boxes and papers. Batch consistency isn’t just a phrase; it means the glass line staff or pigment team can look at the drum and know what’s inside matches the last shipment, and the one before that.
Ongoing support makes a difference. In our case, if things do not look or perform as expected, we open the lines, pull matching samples from our on-premise archives, and troubleshoot in direct two-way conversation. This immediacy lets teams solve processing disruptions early instead of weeks after the fact. It’s a level of quality assurance that can only come from the source, not the storefront.
Practical Recommendations from Long Experience
After years of watching companies navigate supply chain setbacks and ingredient variability, the following lessons keep repeating: stable sources matter more each year. By leaning into partnerships where you talk directly to the plant, problems stay smaller, corrections get faster, and risks get minimized.
Raw material quality shapes the reliability of the final product. Factories with fragile process windows—glass, pigment, and analytical labs—should require documentation at every handoff, including impurity data and batch-by-batch specs. Buyers benefit when they demand production transparency—traceability right down to raw ore when possible. Requesting not just a certificate but also a real record from the source lab gives plant teams an extra layer of assurance.
Do not hesitate to ask for bulk or customized packaging. Years back, a large pigment press told us they struggled with clumping due to humidity changes during split shipments. We worked with them to change liner types and adapt drying levels. That close conversation cleared up downstream stoppages and made everyone’s work easier for years. Exploring this direct communication pays off at scales large and small.
Trust—earned batch by batch—remains the greatest differentiator. While price and lead time matter, factories know that a slightly cheaper acid that requires more troubleshooting or batch correction ends up costing more in the long run. Consistency lowers total cost far more than a few points shaved from the invoice.
Looking Ahead: Innovation from the Ground Up
Our work does not stop at making the same product over and over. New needs arise—higher-purity catalysts, optical-grade glass, advanced pigment runs—each one pushing our process and team to adapt. Ongoing R&D investments focus on lowering trace contaminants, improving hydrate stability during storage, and shortening treatment cycles for reduced environmental loading.
Real innovation stems from listening to the unique pain points users share. Whether pointing out minor hue shifts in certain pigment lots or tracking scale buildup in water treatment vessels, every data point triggers scrutiny from production and QC. Well-run manufacturing lines supply not just material, but usable answers and adjustments that keep industries growing stronger.
Future directions include smaller batch sizes for specialty glass and pigment customers and expanded impurity screening for critical-use sectors such as medical diagnostics and electronics. Engaging with technical end users gives us the best chance to refine our milling, drying, and packing operations for peak reliability.
Molybdic acid, supplied fresh and predictable, keeps everything running smoother down the line. Bringing together long-term experience with open, ongoing exchange makes real difference visible not only in the lab, but in every finished pane of glass or high-performance ceramic where it gets put to use.
Why Source Direct: The Bottom Line
Experience shows that when users step up to direct buying from established producers, projects meet deadlines, waste drops, and unexpected troubleshooting nearly disappears. By keeping every stage of molybdic acid manufacturing on-site and transparent, our team stands behind every lot shipped. That’s not a slogan—customers see it in clean drums, easy handling, and predictable results run after run.
As the market shifts, regulatory pressures mount, and process demands grow more precise, the steady hand of a producer providing real, up-to-date insight becomes indispensable. We take pride in each batch of molybdic acid that leaves our facility. More than that, we rely on decades of lessons learned from real-world feedback—not trade show talk or catalog copy. Every improvement we make, drawn from daily practice and open conversation, moves our entire industry forward.
Through open, informed exchange between those making and those using, chemistry keeps pushing boundaries. Reliable molybdic acid production anchors that progress, ensuring the next product line, treatment breakthrough, or materials advance starts on solid, tested ground.