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Army Research Office

The author is grateful to the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy, Environmental Protection Agency, the Army Research Office, Hercules and Cara Plastics for their generous support of this research. Particular thanks are extended to my graduate students and research associates for shouldering the brunt of the research. [Pg.399]

Sugama, T, In Proc. Conf. Structural Adhesives Needs Through the 1990s. Army Research Office, Raleigh, NC, 1985, p. 11. [Pg.1007]

Our research studies on ionomers and on ionomer blends has received financial support from the U.S. Army Research Office and ACS-PRF, whose assistance is gratefully appreciated. Our appreciation is also expressed to former graduate students, Drs. P. Jar, M. A. Bellinger, and X. Ma, who made significant contributions to some of the research results reported herein. [Pg.152]

The research was supported through the U.S. Army Research Office under Grant No. DAAH04-93-G-0427 and the Office of Research at California State University Nort bridge. [Pg.394]

This work was supported by the Army Research Office and performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by LLNL (contract No. W-7405-Eng-48). [Pg.423]

Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. This work was supported by the U. S. Army Research Office — Durham. [Pg.74]

The authors would like to thank the Army Research Office and the National Science Foundation for financial support of this research. [Pg.461]

This research was supported by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (Project Defender) and was monitored by the U.S. Army Research Office-Durham under contract DA-31-124-D-257, by the Atomic Energy Commission, and by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Office of Aerospace Research, under AFOSR grant no. AF-AFOSR-631-67. [Pg.616]

Hammett, L. P., Symposium on Linear Free Energy Correlations, U.S. Army Research Office, Durham, North Carolina, 1964, p. 77. [Pg.482]

Department of Chemistry, University of Nebraska—Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588. This work was supported in part by grants from the Research Corporation, National Science Foundation, North Carolina Board of Science and Technology, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and the Army Research Office. [Pg.183]

This material is based upon work supported by the Army Research Office through a MURI grant (DAAD19-03-1-0169) for fuel ceU research to the Case Western Reserve University by the Army Research Office under award Army W91 lNF-08-1-0309, by the National Science Foundation under awards DMR 0504038 and NSF CHE06-51083, and by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award FA9550-06-1-0235. [Pg.403]

We are grateful to the Army Research Office for their generous support of this work. [Pg.79]

We would like to thank Army Research Office for its financial support. We also thank Dr. T. E. Hogen-Esch for helpful suggestions and Dr. H. E. Hall for sending us a pivalolactone sample. [Pg.163]

The authors would like to thank Mr. R. H. Bott and Ms. B. E. McGrath for thermal analysis measurements and Dr. Wunderlich (Rohm Tech, West Germany) for the generous donation of various acrylic monomers. We also appreciate the support of the Exxon Foundation, Dow USA, the Army Research Office (ARO) and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). [Pg.274]

Our work has been supported mainly by the Army Research Office, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Office of Naval Research, and the Public Health Service through the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. [Pg.265]

The authors thank the U.S. Army Research Office for financial support of this research at TCU and SMU. The light scattering and the thermal analysis experiments were conducted, respectively, by Dr. G.L. Hagnauer (Army Materials Technology Laboratory, Watertown, MA) and Dr. J.J. Meister (SMU). [Pg.289]

Our work was generously supported by the Materials Science Center at Cornell University, the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, the Army Research Office, and the Dow Chemical Company. Special thanks to Dr. Michael J. Bedzyk (CHESS) and to Dr. James H. White as well as to Michael Albarelli, Mark Bommarito, Dr. Martin McMillan, and David Acevedo. The work on the copper and silver underpotentially deposited on gold... [Pg.321]

Army Research Office for financial support of this work through... [Pg.152]

The authors would like to acknowledge the support of Army Research Office Grant No. DAAG 29-80C-0099 for financial assistance of this work. [Pg.234]

The authors wish to express their thanks to the U.S. Army Research Office, Research Triangle Park, N.C. for sponsoring this work under the grant No. DAAG-29-79-C-0124. [Pg.273]

Research in the areas of high temperature chemistry, fluorine chemistry, optical and mass spectroscopy and thermodynamics has been supported at Rice University by the United States Atomic Energy Commission, by the US. Army Research Office (Durham), by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, by the Petroleum Research Fund of the American Chemical Society and by the Robert A. Welch Foundation. Liquid helium for low temperature nock was provided through arrangements with the U.S. offices of Naval Research. [Pg.34]

U.S. Military Academy, West Point, NY, 10996 USA 2 Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708 USA 3ARL Army Research Office, 4300 S. Miami Blvd., Durham NC, 27703 USA (email russell.harmon us.army.mil)... [Pg.277]

Acknowledgment We are grateful for support of (this work by the U.S. Department of Energy, the Air Force of Scientific Research, the Office ofNaval Research, and the Army Research Office (Durham). [Pg.220]

A conference grant from the Army Research Office facilitated the organization of the Pacifichem Symposium. I should also thank many friends, colleagues, and collaborators who gave positive feedback and encouragement. [Pg.11]

Mario Gauthier (University of Waterloo) for the PS Arborescent polymers. Special thanks to the NIST dendrimer team who provided all of the characterization work, Andreas Topp, Ty J. Prosa, Da-Wei Liu, Catheryn L. Jackson, and Giovanni Nisato. This work is supported in part by the US Army Research Office under contract number 35109-CH. [Pg.283]

I would like to acknowledge support by the Army Research Office-Durham for much of the work described in this account. [Pg.149]

One effort, being run in collaboration with the Army Research Office, has demonstrated a prototype fuel cell designed to replace in many applications a popular military standard battery. The target application is the Army s BA-5590 primary (i.e., use-once-and-dispose) lithium battery. The Army purchases approximately 350,000 of these batteries every year at a cost of approximately 100 per battery, including almost 30 per battery for disposal. Fuel cells, on the... [Pg.42]

A. Vishnyakov and A. N. Neimark. Final report for U.S. Army Research Office, DAAD190110545, March 2005. [Pg.429]

Acknowledgment. The authors wish to thank Dr. N. S. Dixit for valuable technical assistance, and the US Army Research Office for financial support. [Pg.186]

Army Research Office, the Office of Naval Research, the National Institutes of Health, NASA, and the National Science Foundation Polymers Program. It is a pleasure to acknowledge the contributions of my recent coworkers, especially T. J. Fuller,... [Pg.65]

The US Army Research Office is gratefully acknowledged for financial support of the MRG contrihutions to this chapter (W91 lNF-06-1-0169). [Pg.167]


See other pages where Army Research Office is mentioned: [Pg.251]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.269]   
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