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Black press

The United States methods of solvent recovery and drying of single-base propellants are described in detail in Ref 2 pp 26-32. These operations are conducted with proplnts in the shape of final grains. Prior to this, the colloided mass of proplnt is subjected, in sequence, to action of a preliminary blocking press, a macaroni press, final blacking press, graining and cutting opns (Ref 2, pp 23-25)... [Pg.469]

Phenol—formaldehyde (PF) was the first of the synthetic adhesives developed. By combining phenol with formaldehyde, which has exceptional cross-linking abiHties with many chemicals and materials, and a small amount of sodium hydroxide, a resin was obtained. The first resins soHdified as they cooled, and it was discovered that if it was ground to a powder with a small amount of additional formaldehyde and the appHcation of more heat, the mixture would Hquify and then convert to a permanently hard material. Upon combination of the powdered resin mixture with a filler material such as wood flour, the result then being placed in a mold and pressed under heat and pressure, a hard, durable, black plastic material was found to result. For many years these resulting products were called BakeHte, the trade name of the inventor. BakeHte products are still produced today, but this use accounts for only a small portion of the PF resins used. [Pg.378]

The product stream from the kilns is collected in storage bins. Black ash from the bins is fine-ground in a ball mill and fed to a leacher circuit, which is a system of stirred tanks, where it is dissolved in water and the muds are separated by countercurrent decantation. The solution from the decantation is passed through filter presses the muds are washed, centrifuged, and discarded. The filtered product, a saturated solution containing 12—13 wt % strontium sulfide, is sent to an agitation tank where soda ash is added to cause precipitation of strontium carbonate crystals ... [Pg.474]

In iadustrial production of titanium carbide, pure (99.8%, with minor impurities of Si, Fe, S, P, and alkahes) titanium oxide [13463-67-7] Ti02, iu the dry or wet state is mixed iu 68.5 31.5 ratio with carbon black or finely milled low ash graphite. The dry mixture is pressed iato blocks that are heated iu a horizontal or vertical carbon-tube furnace at 1900—2300°C hydrogen that is free of oxygen and nitrogen serves as protective gas. In the vertical push-type furnaces, the Hberated CO itself provides protection. [Pg.450]

Group 2 Nitrate/metal/sulphur compositions Compositions with >65% chlorate Black powder Nitrate/boron compositions Burn violently Large firework shells Fuse unprotected signal flares Non-pressed report bullets (bird scarers) Report cartridges (unpacked) Black matches (uncovered) Accelerating single-item explosions... [Pg.242]

Group 3 Nitrate/metal compositions without sulphur Compositions with <35-65% chlorate Compositions with black powder Lead oxide/silicon with >60% lead oxides Perchlorate/metal Burn fast Large firework shells Fuse protected signal flares Pressed report cartridges in primary packagings Quickmatches in transport packagings Waterfalls Silver wheels Volcanoes Black powder delays Burn very violently with single-item explosions... [Pg.242]

Filtering the tube suspension through a 0.2 xm pore ceramic paper leaves a uniform black deposit on the paper and can produce aligned CNT films [30]. The deposited material was transferred on a thin Teflon sheet by pressing the tube-coated side of the filter on the plastic and then the filter was lifted off to expose the surface. Scanning electron microscopic study reveals that the tubes are highly aligned perpendicular to the Teflon surface [30]. [Pg.80]

In earlier research the alignment operation was applied to CNTs in the form of a CNT-polymer resin [24] or CNT suspended in a solvent [25]. In the method developed by Ajayan et al. [24], purified MWCNTs were dispersed in an epoxy resin which was cut with a diamond knife and a microtome in order to obtain aligned CNTs. De Heer et al. [25] used a 0.2 (im pore ceramic filter in order to create an MWCNT suspension in ethanol, and to obtain a black deposit which was transferred to a plastic surface (Delrin or Teflon) by pressing the filter onto the polymer. However, only a moderate degree of orientation and uniformity in length of the CNTs was achieved by this method. [Pg.148]

Joseph Black was born in Bordeaux, France, the fourth child of parents of Scottish extraction. His father was a native of Belfast engaged in the Bordeaux wine trade his mother was a daughter of an Aberdeen man who had settled in Bordeaux. In all. Black s parents had twelve children. At the age of twelve Black was sent to school in Belfast, and around 1744 proceeded to the University of Glasgow. Black followed the standard curriculum until pressed by his father to choose a profession. He opted for medicine. Black began to study anatomy and chemisti-y. William Cullen had recently inaugurated lectures in chemisti y that were to have a decisive influence on Black s career. Recognizing Black s aptitude, Cullen employed Black as his laboratory assistant. [Pg.188]

Kuhn, T. S. (1978). Black-Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity, 1894-1912. New York Oxford University Press. [Pg.1038]

In pressing, the threshold concentration of the filler amounts to about 0.5% of volume. The resulting distribution of the filler corresponds, apparently, to the model of mixing of spherical particles of the polymer (with radius Rp) and filler (with radius Rm) for Rp > Rm as the size of carbon black particles is usually about 1000 A [19]. During this mixing, the filler, because of electrostatical interaction, is distributed mainly on the surface of polymer particles which facilitates the forming of conducting chains and entails low values of the percolation threshold. [Pg.132]

Figure 1. Both internal (white arrows) and external (black arrows) processes influence climatic variability. (Reproduced with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 1975 National Academy Press, National Academy of Sciences.)... Figure 1. Both internal (white arrows) and external (black arrows) processes influence climatic variability. (Reproduced with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 1975 National Academy Press, National Academy of Sciences.)...

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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.5 , Pg.36 ]




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