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American Chemical Society chemistry research

The author s work in organocopper chemistry has been made possible by the generous support of the National Science Foundation (NSF), the American Chemical Society-Petroleum Research Fund (ACS-PRF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Thanks and appreciation go to the graduate students and postdoctoral fellows who made the chemistry work. A special thank goes to Dr. Ross Mabon and Dr. Kishan R. Chandupatla for carefully reading the entire manuscipt. [Pg.134]

We thank John Jean, R. D. Levine, M. Ben-Nun, David Jonas, Steven Bradforth, Ralph Jimenez, Yutaka Nagasawa, and Sean Passino for allowing us to use their results in this review and for much valuable scientific input. M. C. thanks Robert Silbey for support and G. R. F. thanks the Department of Chemistry at Cornell for their hospitality while this chapter was being prepared. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation and in part by the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund. [Pg.178]

American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund — Electronic submission only. http //www.chemistry.org/prf... [Pg.67]

Dennis W. Smith Jr. joined The Dow Chemical Company Central Research Laboratory as Sr. Research Chemist in 1993, working primarily on the synthesis and characterization of high performance thermosets for thin film microelectronics applications. He then j oined Clemson in 1998 and was promoted to Professor of Chemistry in 2006, and in 2010, he joined the University of Texas at Dallas as Robert A. Welch Professor of Chemistry and was elected as Fellow of the American Chemical Society. His research interests include synthesis, mechanism, structure-property relationships, and applications of polymeric materials and composites. Smith received his BS from Missouri State University and his PhD from the University of Florida under the guidance of Prof. Ken Wagener on the scope and mechanism of acyclic diene metathesis (ADMET) polymerization. [Pg.669]

The most comprehensive sources on the history of American chemistry are the series of commemorative publications sponsored by the American Chemical Society. A Half-Century of Chemistry in America, 1876-1926 (1926), edited by C. A. Browne, contains authoritative surveys of various specialties. Browne and Mary E. Weeks published a useful History of the American Chemical Society in 1952, which can be supplemented with Century of Chemistry (IB, 1976), edited by Herman Skolnik and Kenneth M. Reese. The 6 April 1976 issue of Chemical and Engineering News is a centennial review of the history of the American Chemical Society and research specialties in chemistry. Wyndham D. Miles s American Chemists and Chemical Engineers (IB, 1976), also prepared for the Society s hundredth anniversary, contains informative biographical sketches of 517 chemical worthies. [Pg.498]

In the summer of 1963, I learned that I had won the American Chemical Society Award in Petroleum Chemistry for my work on Friedel-Crafts chemistry. It was a most welcome recognition for someone who only a few years earlier had fled his native country and started all over on a far-away continent. Although I have received numerous other awards and recognitions over the years, with the exception of the Nobel Prize, no other award touched me as much. 1 remember that my first ACS award carried with it a check for 5,000. My research director for some reason believed that a company employee was not... [Pg.70]

References D. D. Wagman, et ah, The NBS Tables of Chemical Thermodynamic Properties, in J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data, 11 2,1982 M. W. Chase, et ah, JANAF Thermochemical Tables, 3rd ed., American Chemical Society and the American Institute of Physics, 1986 (supplements to JANAF appear in J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data) Thermodynamic Research Center, TRC Thermodynamic Tables, Texas A M University, College Station, Texas I. Barin and O. Knacke, Thermochemical Properties of Inorganic Substances, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1973 J. B. Pedley, R. D. Naylor, and S. P. Kirby, Thermochemical Data of Organic Compounds, 2nd ed.. Chapman and Hall, London, 1986 V. Majer and V. Svoboda, Enthalpies of Vaporization of Organic Compounds, International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Chemical Data Series No. 32, Blackwell, Oxford, 1985. [Pg.533]

GORE. The CORE Electronic Chemistry Library is a joint project of Cornell University, OCLC (On-line Computer Library Center), Bell Communications Research (Bellcore), and the American Chemical Society. The CORE database will contain the full text of American Chemical Society Journals from 1980, associated information from Chemical Abstracts Service, and selected reference texts. It will provide machine-readable text that can be searched and displayed, graphical representations of equations and figures, and full-page document images. The project will examine the performance obtained by the use of a traditional printed index as compared with a hypertext system (SUPERBOOK) and a document retrieval system (Pixlook) (6,116). [Pg.131]

Because of the importance of cellulose and the difficulty in unraveling its secrets, several societies (CeUucon, American Chemical Society, and TAPPI) are dedicated to cellulose, lignin, and related molecules, as is at least one journal that is abstracted by Chemicaly hstracts (3). The length of the proceedings of the Tenth Cellulose Conference (1638 pages) (4) indicates the vitaUty and interest in this subject, but research results are pubUshed in many other journals as well. There are also several recent books on cellulose (5—9). Reference 10 is a comprehensive review and is recommended especially for the historical review of proof of chemical stmcture, one of the milestones in organic chemistry. [Pg.237]

Sami Matar, Ph.D., is a retired professor of chemistry at King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, Dharan, Saudi Arabia. He received a B.Sc. from the University of Cairo and a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Texas, Austin. Dr. Matar has served as associate member of the board of the Egyptian Petroleum Institute and general manager of the chemical and research laboratories of Suez Oil Processing Co. The author and contributor to many articles and books. Dr. Matar is also a member of the American Chemical Society and Society of Petroleum Engineers. [Pg.392]

Advances in Chemistry Series was founded in 1949 by the American Chemical Society as an outlet for symposia and collections of data in special areas of topical interest that could not be accommodated in the Society s journals. It provides a medium for symposia that would otherwise be fragmented, their papers distributed among several journals or not published at all. Papers are refereed critically according to ACS editorial standards and receive the careful attention and processing characteristic of ACS publications. Papers published in Advances in Chemistry Series are original contributions not published elsewhere in whole or major part and include reports of research as well as reviews since symposia may embrace both types of presentation. [Pg.6]

Xhe 1987 WINTER SYMPOSIUM of the Division of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, hosted by the Minnesota Supercomputer Institute, was supported by grants from the American Chemical Society, the Minnesota Supercomputer Institute, Cray Research, Inc., and ETA Systems, Inc. The symposium consisted of four half-day sessions with four lectures per session and a two-part poster session with 15 poster papers. This book includes chapters by the lecturers plus five papers contributed by the session chairs. All contributions were refereed anonymously according to usual procedures of the ACS Symposium Series. [Pg.1]

In Supercomputer Research in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Jensen, K., el al. ACS Symposium Series American Chemical Society Washington, DC, 1987. [Pg.1]


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