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Activating agent

Soaps of heavy metals have been used but cationic surface-active agents have proved more suitable, notably organic amines of relatively high molecular weight. [Pg.16]

Dimeihylamine, C2H7N, (CH3)2NH. Colourless, inflammable liquid with an ammoniacal odour, mp -96" C, b.p. 7°C. Occurs naturally in herring brine. Prepared in the laboratory by treating nitrosodimetbyl-aniline with a hot solution of sodium hydroxide. Dimethylamine is largely used in the manufacture of other chemicals. These include the solvents dimethylacetamide and dimethyl-formamide, the rocket propellant unsym-metrical dimethylhydrazine, surface-active agents, herbicides, fungicides and rubber accelerators. [Pg.260]

Sorbitol is manufactured by the reduction of glucose in aqueous solution using hydrogen with a nickel catalyst. It is used in the manufacture of ascorbic acid (vitamin C), various surface active agents, foodstuffs, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, dentifrices, adhesives, polyurethane foams, etc. [Pg.368]

These surface active agents have weaker intermoiecular attractive forces than the solvent, and therefore tend to concentrate in the surface at the expense of the water molecules. The accumulation of adsorbed surface active agent is related to the change in surface tension according to the Gibbs adsorption equation... [Pg.380]

Tiianium(III) chloride, TiClj. Violet or brown solid (TiCU plus H3 at 700°C TiCU plus AIR3 (brown form)). Forms violet 6 hydrate. Used as a reducing agent. The fibrous brown form is an active agent in the Ziegler-Natta siereoregular polymerization of olefines. [Pg.399]

When a surface-active agent is present in a liquid droplet, it can adsorb to the surface, lower the surface energy, and cause the liquid contact angle to increase. This phenomenon, known as autophobicity, was postulated by Zisman many years ago [78, 79]. Autophobicity is quite striking in wetting films on clean... [Pg.360]

The surface-active agents (surfactants) responsible for wetting, flotation and detergency exhibit rather special and interesting properties characteristic of what are called association colloids or, in the older literature, colloidal electrolytes. These properties play an important role in determining, at least indirectly, the detergency of a given surfactant and are therefore considered here... [Pg.479]

In addition to lowering the interfacial tension between a soil and water, a surfactant can play an equally important role by partitioning into the oily phase carrying water with it [232]. This reverse solubilization process aids hydrody-namically controlled removal mechanisms. The partitioning of surface-active agents between oil and water has been the subject of fundamental studies by Grieser and co-workers [197, 233]. [Pg.485]

M. J. Rosen and H. A. Goldsmith, Systematic Analysis of Surface-Active Agents, Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1972. [Pg.491]

The mechanism of aromatic sulphonation is complex and may vary, e.g. with the concentration of water or oleum in the acid, the temperature, and the hydrocarbon. One active agent is SO3, and one simplified route may be ... [Pg.178]

I wetting agent for textiles, surface-active agent, [ food additive... [Pg.512]

Chemical Manufacturing. Chemical manufacturing accounts for over 50% of all U.S. caustic soda demand. It is used primarily for pH control, neutralization, off-gas scmbbing, and as a catalyst. About 50% of the total demand in this category, or approximately 25% of overall U.S. consumption, is used in the manufacture of organic intermediates, polymers, and end products. The majority of caustic soda required here is for the production of propylene oxide, polycarbonate resin, epoxies, synthetic fibers, and surface-active agents (6). [Pg.518]

Where surface-active agents are present, the notion of surface tension and the description of the phenomena become more complex. As fluid flows past a circulating drop (bubble), fresh surface is created continuously at the nose of the drop. This fresh surface can have a different concentration of agent, hence a different surface tension, from the surface further downstream that was created earlier. Neither of these values need equal the surface tension developed in a static, equiUbrium situation. A proper description of the flow under these circumstances involves additional dimensionless groups related to the concentrations and diffusivities of the surface-active agents. [Pg.92]

Many fluorinated, biologically active agents have been developed and successfully used in the treatment of diseases. The biological property of fluorinated organics has been further extended to applications in the agrochemical and pest management fields. [Pg.269]


See other pages where Activating agent is mentioned: [Pg.71]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.260]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.381]    [Pg.426]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.484]    [Pg.2574]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.952]    [Pg.1149]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.899]    [Pg.908]    [Pg.953]    [Pg.953]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.518]    [Pg.467]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.362]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.187 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.234 , Pg.356 , Pg.478 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.850 ]




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Activated carbons Activating agents

Activation by Insulin, Growth Factors, and Pharmacological Agents

Activator blowing agent

Active Agents to Hyaluronan

Active acylating agent

Active agents

Active agents controlled release

Active agents microencapsulation

Active agents promoting

Active catalyst agent

Active-site directed agents

Adrenergic agents, active

Affinity activating agents

Agent Orange active ingredients

Agent with chiral activity

Agent, electrophilic surface active

Alcohols membrane-active agents

Alkaline hydroxide activation activating agents

Alkylating Agent for Creation of Active Centers

Alkylating agents activation, deactivation

Anticholinergic activity antipsychotic agents

Antifungal agents/activity

Antiinflammatory activity Anti-inflammatory agents

Antileukemic activity/agents

Antioxidant activities agents

Antitumor agents activity

Antitumour activity agents

Arthropods agents active against

As surface-active agents

Biological activity antibacterial agents

Biological activity antimicrobial agents

Biological agents activity

Biological agents with pest-control activities

Biologically active agents

CNS-active agents

Central nervous system active agents

Chelating agents activity test

Chemical activations activating agents, comparisons

Chemical activations agents

Chemical reaction activation agents

Conclusions about the Active Agents

Condensing agents, basic activity

Controlled Delivery of Active Agents

Controlled release of active agents

Coupling agents Surface-active

Cytotoxic agents/activity

Early Research on Cell-Wall Active Agents

Effect of Activating Agent NaOH versus KOH

Effect of Surface-Active Agents

Emulsifier surface active agents

Endocrine disruption hormonally active agent

Endosomolytic agents, activation

Epoxy Resin System Activating Agents

Fermentation activating agents

Fibers active agents

General Classification of Surface-Active Agents

Heat treatment temperature activating agents affected

Hormonally active agent

Lewis acids acylating agent activation

Membrane-active agents

Membrane-active agents resistance

Membrane-active agents, effects

Micellization surface-active agents

Microencapsulation of Liquid Active Agents

Mustard agents cytotoxic activity

NAXEL Surface Active Agents

Nerve agents cholinesterase enzymes activity

Nerve agents hydrolytic catalytic activity

Nonionic surface-active agents

Nonionized compounds surface-active agents

Osmotically active agent

Other Zn-Barbier Reactions Solvents, Activating Agents

POLYENE ANTIBIOTICS AS MEMBRANE-ACTIVE AGENTS

POLYMERIC SURFACE ACTIVE AGENT

Paints surface active agents

Pharmacologically active agents

Polyphosphate surface active agents

Preparation and reactions of active acylating agents

Primary surface active agents

Quaternary ammonium compounds membrane-active agents

Redox-active agents

Reducing agents, enzyme activation

Reissert activating agents

Release of the active agent

Rubber Surface-active agents

Serotonin receptor-active agents

Solubilizers surface active agents

Sterol-complexing agents interfere with polyene activity

Sulfones Surface-active agent

Supplemental activator and reducing agent

Surface active agent, detergent

Surface active agents amphoteric

Surface active agents anionic

Surface active agents biodegradable

Surface active agents cationic

Surface active agents classification

Surface active agents fatty acid based

Surface active agents functionalized

Surface active agents hydrophilic group

Surface active agents hydrophobic group

Surface active agents interaction with

Surface active agents lipophilic group

Surface active agents lipophobic group

Surface active agents monolayer

Surface active agents synthetic

Surface active agents, effect

Surface active transfer agents

Surface-active agent definition

Surface-active agent structure

Surface-active agents

Surface-active agents (surfactants cationic

Surface-active agents (surfactants compounds

Surface-active agents Surfactant

Surface-active agents adsorption

Surface-active agents diluents

Surface-active agents mixtures

Surface-active agents suspensions

Surface-active agents, grafting

Surface-active agents, grafting monomer

Surfactant A “surface-active agent

Synthetic pharmacological agent antioxidant activity

Targeting agents,active

Terrorist activities with chemical agents

Textile active agents from

The injury of membranes by biologically active agents

The preservation of membranes by biologically active agents

Thrombolytic agent plasminogen activator

Tubulin active agents

Vascular-system active agents

Volume-active agents

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