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And retention

Kg. lU-2. Comparison between molar volumes and retention volumes for 1-. 4-. and S-alkylthiazoles. [Pg.360]

Effect of a change in kg on resolution and retention time. The original value of kg is assumed to be 1. [Pg.557]

Solution Casting. The production of unsupported film and sheet by solution casting has generally passed from favor and is used only for special polymers not amenable to melt processes. The use of solvents was generally very hazardous because of their flammabiUty or toxic nature. The cost of recovery and disposal of solvents became prohibitive for many lower price film appHcations. The nature of the drying operations leads to problems with solvent migration and retention that are not problems with melt-processed polymers. [Pg.381]

Eor evaluation of flocculants for pressure belt filters, both laboratory-scale filters and filter simulators are available (52,53) in many cases from the manufacturers of the full-scale equipment. The former can be mn either batchwise or continuously the simulators require less substrate and are mn batchwise. The observed parameters include cake moisture, free drainage, release of the cake from the filter cloth, filter blinding, and retention of the flocculated material during appHcation of pressure. [Pg.36]

In this appHcation, the primary property concern is asphalt absorption and retention. If the geotextile has poor retention capabiHties, then the necessary waterproofing caimotbe achieved. [Pg.260]

Moisture. Absorbed and retained moisture, especially as ice, has a significant effect on the stmctural and thermal properties of insulation materials. Most closed-ceU plastic foams have low permeance properties most notably where natural or bonded low permeance surface skins exist (29,30). Design, building, and constmction practices requite adequate vapor retarders, skins, coatings, sealants, etc, in order to prevent the presence of moisture. However, moisture vapor cannot be completely excluded, thus the possibiUty of moisture absorption and retention is always present. The freezing of moisture and mpturing of cells result in permanent reduction of thermal and stmctural performance. [Pg.335]

Rosin sizing usually involves the addition of dilute aqueous solutions or dispersions of rosin soap size and alum to a pulp slurry (44—46). Although beater addition of either coreactant is permissable, addition of both before final pulp refining is unwise because subsequently exposed ceUulose surfaces may not be properly sized. The size and alum should be added sufficiendy eady to provide uniform distribution in the slurry, and adequate time for the formation and retention of aluminum resinates, commonly referred to as size precipitate. Free rosin emulsion sizes, however, do not react to a significant degree with alum in the pulp slurry, and addition of a cationic starch or resin is recommended to maximize retention of size to fiber. Subsequent reaction with aluminum occurs principally in the machine drier sections (47). [Pg.18]

Thermal Properties. The inherent thermal stabiUty of PPS translates into high temperature resistance for short- as well as long-term exposure and retention of properties at elevated temperature. [Pg.447]

Resilience of textile fabrics when compressed in the bent state is related to wrinkle resistance and retention of shape, drape, and hand. Resilience is an important parameter for evaluating blankets, wearing apparel in which warmth is a factor, pUe fabrics including carpets, and bulk fiber utilization in mattresses, cushions, etc. The general method for determining compressional resilience is to compress and unload the material cycHcahy, creating a plot of compressive force versus fabric thickness. [Pg.461]

Other Fiber Evaluation Methods. The extent of fiber separation (fiber openness) is an important evaluation criteria that is commonly measured by several techniques, namely ak permeabiUty, adsorbed gas volume, bulk density, and residence (compression and recovery). The adsorption and retention of kerosene is also used as a measure of fiber openness and fiber adsorption capacity (34). [Pg.353]

The Class I agents have many similar side effects and toxicities. The anticholinergic side effects include dry mouth, constipation, and urinary hesitancy and retention. Common gastrointestinal (GI) side effects include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and anorexia. Cardiovascular adverse effects are hypotension, tachycardia, arrhythmias, and myocardial depression, especially in patients with congestive heart failure. Common central nervous system (CNS) side effects are headache, dizziness, mental confusion, hallucinations, CNS stimulation, paraesthesias, and convulsions. [Pg.112]

Plasticity. Plasticity may be defined as the property of a material that permits it to be deformed under stress without mpturing and to retain the shape produced after the stress is removed. When water is added to dry clay in successive increments, the clay becomes workable, that is, readily shaped without mpturing. The workabiUty and retention of shape develop within a very narrow moisture range. [Pg.204]

A relatively few oxirane ring openings have been reported to give retention or a mixture of inversion and retention (see the general reviews on the mechanisms of oxirane ring opening, and the specialized one devoted to retention (68RCR448)). [Pg.110]

A plot of In n versus L is a straight line whose intercept is In and whose slope is —l/Gt. (For plots on base-10 log paper, the appropriate slope correc tion must be made.) Thus, from a given product sample of known shiny density and retention time it is possible to obtain the nucleation rate and growth rate for the conditions tested if the sample satisfies the assumptions of the derivation and yields a straight hne. A number of derived relations which describe the nucleation rate, size distribution, and average properties are summarized in Table 18-5. [Pg.1659]

Retention Rejection and Reflection Retention and rejection are used almost interchangeably. A third term, reflection, includes a measure of solute-solvent coupling, and is the term used in irreversible thermodynamic descriptions of membrane separations. It is important in only a few practical cases. Rejection is the term of trade in reverse osmosis (RO) and NF, and retention is usually used in UF and MF. [Pg.2025]

In spite of their high cost, silicone rubbers have over the last 40 years established themselves in a variety of applications where heat resistance and retention of properties over a wide range of temperatures are required. [Pg.832]

When this prior stereoi merization is accounted for, the rearrangonent is found to have resulted fixtm a mixture of all possible suprafacial, antarafacial, inversion, and retention combinations in reughly equal amounts, indicating that no stereochemical pathway is strongly preferred. Substituted systems, however, show higher stereoselectivity. Theoretical modeling of the reaction finds no intermediate, but tire titumtinn state is diradical in character. ... [Pg.629]

Fig. 13.7. Symmetry properties for [1,4] sigmatropic shifts with inversion and retention. Fig. 13.7. Symmetry properties for [1,4] sigmatropic shifts with inversion and retention.
PNEUMOCONIOSIS A gi oup of lung diseases of a ehronie fibrotie eharaeter due to die inhalation and retention in die lungs of a variety of industrial dusts. The main diseases are asbestosis, silieosis, eoalworkers pneumoeoniosis and mixed-dust pneumoeoniosis less eommon pneumoeonioses are assoeiated with tale, elay or aluminium. [Pg.17]

The dead point is the position of the peak maximum of an unretained solute. It is not the initial part of the dead volume peak as this represents a retarded portion of the peak that is caused by dispersion processes. The importance of employing the peak maximum for such measurements as dead volume and retention volume will be discussed in later chapters of the book that deal with peak dispersion. [Pg.14]

Scott and Beesley [2] measured the corrected retention volumes of the enantiomers of 4-benzyl-2-oxazolidinone employing hexane/ethanol mixtures as the mobile phase and correlated the corrected retention volume of each isomer to the reciprocal of the volume fraction of ethanol. The results they obtained at 25°C are shown in Figure 8. It is seen that the correlation is excellent and was equally so for four other temperatures that were examined. From the same experiments carried out at different absolute temperatures (T) and at different volume fractions of ethanol (c), the effect of temperature and mobile composition was identified using the equation for the free energy of distribution and the reciprocal relationship between the solvent composition and retention. [Pg.158]


See other pages where And retention is mentioned: [Pg.1101]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.1023]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.409]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.441]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.387]    [Pg.506]    [Pg.1616]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.118]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.523]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.187]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.428 ]




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Advantages of geosynthetic-enhanced erosion control products and sediment retention devices

Animal calorimetry methods for measuring heat production and energy retention

Anion and Molecular Retention

Bacteria Retention and Bubble Point

Combining the effects of polymer retention and degradation

Deposition and Retention of Inhaled Cerium

Drilling Fluids and Retention Pits

Droplet Sliding and Spray Retention

Efficiency, retention, selectivity and resolution in chromatography

Elution order and relative retention

Energy Input and Retention Time

Enhanced permeability and retention

Enhanced permeability and retention EPR) effect

Enhanced permeability and retention [EPR

Enhanced permeability and retention effect

Enhanced permeation and retention

Enhanced permeation and retention EPR) effect

Enhanced permeation and retention effect

Erosion control product and sediment retention device performance criteria

Erosion control product and sediment retention device testing

Excretion and retention

Factors that control retention and

Factors that control retention and selectivity

Flow Configurations of Feed, Permeate and Retentate Streams

Flow-through sensors for multideterminations based on integrated retention and detection

Geosynthetics in sediment control and retention

ITER Tritium Retention Estimates and Uncertainties

Integrated retention and detection

Inversion and retention

Inversion and retention of configuration

Lung retention and mouth absorption data

Lung retention and mouth absorption of several cigarette mainstream smoke components

Migration and Retention

Multi-sensors based on integrated retention and discriminating detection

Multi-sensors based on separation followed by integrated retention and detection

Other Optimization Techniques and Retention Parameters

PTFE examples of tensile stress and modulus retentions () versus temperature (C)

Permeabilities and Retention Properties

Polyimide retention of tensile strength and elongation at break versus Weather-Ometer exposure time (h)

Question 3 Are the Retention Times as Expected and within Established Tolerance Limits

Regulators of Phosphorus Retention and Release

Relief and Retention Systems

Retentate and permeate

Retention Factor and CMC

Retention Times and Band Profiles in Linear Chromatography

Retention Volume and Time

Retention and Distribution in the Body

Retention and Drainage Aids

Retention and Selectivity in RP Systems

Retention and drainage systems

Retention and recovery

Retention and resolution

Retention factors and

Retention in BeO and Mixed Be Materials

Retention in Li and Ga

Retention in soils, sediments, and rocks

Retention indexes and stationary phase constants

Retention mechanisms and mobile phase effects in ion-exchange chromatography

Retention of Occupational Safety and Health Act Records

Retention of Pigments and Cellulose Fines

Retention of Spherical and Linear Molecules

Retention of anthocyanins and

Retention of anthocyanins and pyruvic anthocyanin derivatives

Retention of configuration, and

Retention time and resolution

Retention times and capacity factors

Retention times and structures

Retention volume and temperature

Retention, clearance and absorption in the respiratory tract

Retention, drainage and formation

Retentivity of minerals for cosmogenic He and Ne

Reversible and Irreversible Retention

Salt and water retention

Sensors based on integrated retention and luminescence detection

Sensors based on integrated retention and photometric detection

Solid and hydraulic retention times

Structural and Interfacial Aspects of Particle Retention

Substantivity and Retention

Symmetry properties for 1,4-sigmatropic shifts with inversion and retention

The Combined Effect of Temperature and Solvent Composition on Solute Retention

The Role of Marine Macroalgae in Nitrogen Retention, Cycling, Turnover, and Loss

Wetting, Spreading, and Retention

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