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Breath

This eliminates the vapor space but sealing the edge can be a problem. Double seals can help and sometimes a fixed roof is also added above the floating roof to help capture any leaks from the seal. However in this case, the space between the fixed and floating roof now breathes and an inert gas purge of this space would typically be used. The inert gas would be vented to atmosphere after treatment. [Pg.262]

Flexible membrane. Another method to stop the vapor space breathing to atmosphere is to use a tank with a flexible membrane in the roof, Fig. 9.26. [Pg.262]

Reduce losses from fugitive emissions and tank breathing as discussed under safety in Chap. 9. [Pg.290]

Reducing losses from fugitive emissions and tank breathing. [Pg.297]

Chowdhury, J., and Leward, R., Oxygen Breathes More Life into CPI IVocessing, Chem. Engg., 19 30, 1984. [Pg.298]

Leaving the refinery, jet fuel has generally no free water and contains only a small quantity of dissolved water. But humidity from the air and tank breathing result in continuous intrusion of water that must be then removed by decanting and filtration. This is why jet fuel needs to be tested for its ability to separate the contained water. [Pg.250]

Kreutz T G and Flynn G W 1990 Analysis of translational, rotational, and vibrational energy transfer in collisions between COj and hot hydrogen atoms the three dimensional breathing ellipse model J. Chem. Phys. 93 452-65... [Pg.3015]

The probability of finding a nucleic acid unit in the certain conformation according to our results is never equal to the unit. It agrees with the idea that NAs are not static but fluctuating, breathing , objects [23]. For example, in RNA molecule with 10 base pairs at the room temperature about 510 base pairs do not take part in the stacking and are not connected with H -bonds [2]. [Pg.122]

Remove the patient to the fresh air, and loosen clothing at the neck. If breathing has stopped or is extremely w eak, gh e artificial respiration and continue until the patient is transferred to hospital or until a doctor arrives. [Pg.527]

Miners, stonecutters, and others engaged in work where siliceous dust is breathed into large quantities often develop a serious lung disease known as silicosis. [Pg.34]

Chlorine is a respiratory irritant. The gas irritates the mucus membranes and the liquid burns the skin. As little as 3.5 ppm can be detected as an odor, and 1000 ppm is likely to be fatal after a few deep breaths. In fact, chlorine was used as a war gas in 1915. [Pg.42]

Tellurium and its compounds are probably toxic and should be handled with care. Workmen exposed to as little as 0.01 mg/ms of air, or less, develop "tellurium breath," which has a garlic-like odor. [Pg.120]

Different motions of a molecule will have different frequencies. As a general rule of thumb, bond stretches are the highest energy vibrations. Bond bends are somewhat lower energy vibrations and torsional motions are even lower. The lowest frequencies are usually torsions between substantial pieces of large molecules and breathing modes in very large molecules. [Pg.92]

The best azide to use these days is sodium azide (NaNs). It is inexpensive and unwatched. All azides have the potential to explode upon degradation and are toxic to breathe. The methods... [Pg.152]

A much greater yield can be had if the chemist uses carbitol as a solvent instead of propanol [62]. Carbitol is a really hazardous solvent and should not be breathed or placed on one s skin. The reaction proceeds exactly as before except that after 24 hours of reflux and cooling the mixture is slowly poured into 1500mL ice cold dH20. The upper solvent layer is separated and the aqueous layer extracted with 200mL ether which is then combined with that upper solvent layer. The combined solvent portions are vacuum distilled to afford safrole-azide (or phenylisopropyi-azide for amphetamine) with the yield rising to 70%. [Pg.153]

Oxygen is the most abundant element on earth The earths crust is rich in carbonate and sili cate rocks the oceans are almost entirely water and oxygen constitutes almost one fifth of the air we breathe Carbon ranks only fourteenth among the elements in natural abundance but trails only hydro gen and oxygen in its abundance in the human body It IS the chemical properties of carbon that make it uniquely suitable as the raw material forthe building blocks of life Let s find out more about those chemi cal properties... [Pg.6]

Naphthalenes 1390-1370 1026-1012 767-762 535-512 519-512 Ring breathing a or /3 substituents /3 substituents a substituents /3 substituents... [Pg.772]

In addition to the descriptions of group vibrations as stretch and bend (or deformation) the terms rock, twist, scissors, wag, torsion, ring breathing and inversion (or umbrella) are used frequently these motions are illustrated in Figure 6.13. [Pg.157]

Figure 6.13 Illustration of (a) rocking, (b) twisting, (c) scissoring and (d) wagging vibrations in a CH2 group. Also shown are (e) the torsional vibration in ethylene, (f) the ring-breathing vibration in benzene and (g) the inversion, or umbrella, vibration in ammonia... Figure 6.13 Illustration of (a) rocking, (b) twisting, (c) scissoring and (d) wagging vibrations in a CH2 group. Also shown are (e) the torsional vibration in ethylene, (f) the ring-breathing vibration in benzene and (g) the inversion, or umbrella, vibration in ammonia...
Breath freshener Breathing apparatus Bredimn [50924-49-7] Breeder reactors... [Pg.127]

The mats are moved along the line to the press loader. When the loader is filled and the press opens to remove the load of freshly pressed boards, the loader pushes the new boards into the unloader and deposits the load of mats on the press platens. The press closes as quickly as possible to the desired panel thickness. More pressure, as much as 4.8—6.9 MPa (700—1000 psi) is required to press high density dry-process hardboard, because the dry fiber exhibits much more resistance to compression and densification than wet fiber. Press temperatures are also higher, in the range of 220—246°C. No screens are used in the dry-process, but the moisture in the mats requires a breathe cycle during pressing to avoid blowing the boards apart at the end of the cycle. Because no screens are used, the products are called smooth-two-sides (S-2-S), in contrast to the wet-process boards, which have a screen pattern embossed into the back side and are known as smooth-one-side (S-l-S). [Pg.389]

Humans exude about 90 mg/day of volatile fatty acids ia exhaled breath and perspiration, 80% of which is acetic acid (73). In a confined environment, as much as 15—20 mg/m can accumulate and such concentrations can become serious ia submatines or space capsules. [Pg.70]

Care ought to be taken in handling acetic acid to avoid spillage or otherwise breathing vapors. Wash any exposed areas with large amounts of water. Once the odor of acetic acid vapors is noticeable, the area should be abandoned immediately. The U.S. threshold limit value for acetic acid is 10 ppm (25 mg/m ). Similar values prevail in Germany (75). [Pg.70]

Even small spills and leaks (<0.45 kg) require extreme caution. Unless the spill is contained in a fume hood, do not remain in or enter the area unless equipped with full protective equipment and clothing. Self-contained breathing apparatus should be used if the odor of acrolein or eye irritation is sensed. Small spills may be covered with absorbant, treated with aqueous alkalies, and flushed with water. [Pg.129]


See other pages where Breath is mentioned: [Pg.260]    [Pg.753]    [Pg.1160]    [Pg.1219]    [Pg.1222]    [Pg.602]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.1133]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.772]    [Pg.774]    [Pg.398]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.387]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.185]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.120 , Pg.121 , Pg.223 , Pg.224 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.19 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.399 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.54 , Pg.57 , Pg.316 ]




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Acetaldehyde from breath

Acetone from breath

Acetone in Breath

Active Masses Breathing

Air Pollution in the Breathing Zone

Air-breathing cathode

Air-breathing engine

Air-breathing vertebrates

Airflow in breathing

Alveolar breath

Amino acid breath test

Aminopyrine breath test

Analysis of Expired Breath

Analyzers breath alcohol

And breathing

Aromatics ring breathing modes

Atmosphere Air to Breathe and Much More

Augmented breath

Bad breath

Boyle’s law breathing and

Breath VOC Levels Measured Using PTR-MS versus Blood Concentrations

Breath acetone

Breath actuation

Breath alcohol

Breath alcohol measurement

Breath alcohol screening test

Breath alcohol vapor

Breath aldehydes

Breath analyser

Breath analysis

Breath analysis acetone

Breath analysis for

Breath analysis isoprene

Breath analysis smokers

Breath analyzer

Breath analyzer test

Breath aromatics

Breath benzene

Breath carbon dioxide

Breath carbon monoxide

Breath collection

Breath diagnostics

Breath diagnostics using laser spectroscopy

Breath ethers

Breath ethyl alcohol

Breath expired, normal

Breath figure method

Breath figure technique

Breath figures

Breath gas analysis

Breath gases

Breath halogenated hydrocarbons

Breath healing

Breath holding

Breath holding artifact

Breath ketones

Breath methodology

Breath monitoring

Breath odor

Breath odor humans

Breath operated inhaler

Breath regulation

Breath sampling

Breath sampling Tedlar bags

Breath sampling limitations

Breath sampling methodology

Breath sensors

Breath sounds

Breath test

Breath tester

Breath testing

Breath tests using

Breath toxic gases

Breath volume monitoring

Breath water vapor

Breath-Actuated MDIs

Breath-activated device

Breath-actuated inhalers

Breath-hold imaging

Breath-hold technique

Breath-holding time

Breathing

Breathing

Breathing Putting Pressure to Work

Breathing air

Breathing and Heart Rate

Breathing and pain

Breathing apparatus

Breathing atmosphere

Breathing crown ethers

Breathing cycle

Breathing difficulties

Breathing discomfort

Breathing during hypoxia

Breathing exercises

Breathing exercises hyperventilation

Breathing expiration

Breathing fetal

Breathing fluids

Breathing frequency

Breathing gases

Breathing inspiration

Breathing interaction

Breathing masks

Breathing mechanics

Breathing mixture

Breathing mode

Breathing motion

Breathing orbital

Breathing orbital VB

Breathing orbital effect

Breathing orbital valence bond

Breathing orbital valence bonds (BOVB

Breathing pattern

Breathing pattern cycle

Breathing pattern flow rate

Breathing pressure-volume relationship

Breathing process

Breathing protection

Breathing rate

Breathing rate variability

Breathing resistance

Breathing retraining

Breathing shell

Breathing shell model

Breathing sphere model

Breathing techniques

Breathing tube failures

Breathing vibrations

Breathing with oxygen

Breathing zone

Breathing zone air pollutants

Breathing zone pollutants

Breathing, deep

Breathing, effect

Breathing, proteins

Breathing, sleep apnea

Breathing, work

Breathing-mode acoustic oscillation

Breathing-related sleep disorders

Caffeine breath test

Calming Breath Technique

Cessation of breathing

Charles’s law breathing and

Circulation of breath ,

Cluster breathing

Complete breath

Compressed air for breathing apparatuse

Compressed air, breathing

Control of Fetal Breathing

Diabetes sleep-disordered breathing

Dragons fire breathing

Easi-Breathe inhalers

Elephants breath

Energizing Breath Technique

Erythromycin breath test

Ethanol in breath

Examples of breath monitoring

Exercise Fountain Breath

Exhaled breath condensate

Expiratory breathing techniques

Firefighting self-contained breathing

Flowing with Nature Movement, Breathing, and Biorhythms

Fountain Breath

Free-breathing cathode

Gas solubility and breathing

Guanine ring-breathing

Helium breathing

Human breath

Human breath analysis

Hydrogen breath test

Hydrophobic (Aromatic) Amino Acid Breath Test

Inhalers breath-activated

Inhalers breath-activated device

Inspiratory breathing exercises

Intermittent positive pressure breathing

Isoprene in breath

Kussmaul breathing

Liquid breathing

Liquid breathing perfluonnated liquids

Lung deposition breathing parameters

Lungs breathing mechanics

Mechanics of breathing

Meditation breathing exercise

Metered-dose inhaler actuation with breath inhalation

Metered-dose inhaler breath actuated

Mold breathing

Mouse breathing

Mouth breathing

Nebulizer breath activated

Nebulizer breathing pattern

Nebulizers breath-enhanced

Nose breathing

Odor uremic breath

Online Breath Sampling

Oronasal breathing

Oxygen/helium breathing mixture

Pattern of breathing

Personal protective equipment self-contained breathing apparatus

Pollution of the Air We Breathe

Positive expiratory pressure breathing

Positive pressure breath controller

Pressure-volume relationship, in breathing

Protective equipment, personal breathing apparatus

Proton-transfer-reaction mass human breath

Radial breathing mode

Radial breathing mode, RBM

Radial breathing modes single wall carbon nanotubes

Raman spectroscopy radial breathing mode

Random breath testing

Rapid shallow breathing index

Relaxation techniques breathing exercises

Resistance tidal breath

Respirators self-contained breathing apparatus

Respiratory system breathing mechanics

Respiratory system/respiration breathing

Restricted breathing enclosure

Ring breathing mode

Ring breathing vibration

Safety breathing losses

Scuba diver gases breathed

Self Contained Underwater Breathing

Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus

Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus SCBA)

Self-contained breathing apparatus

Self-contained breathing apparatus in oxygen-deficient atmospheres

Shortness of breath

Single-breath nitrogen test

Sleep disordered breathing prevalence

Sleep-disordered breathing

Sleep-disordered breathing syndromes

Smoking and Breath Volatiles

Spontaneous breathing trials

Supplied Air Breathing Apparatus

Targeting the Lungs During Nose Breathing

Tellurium breath

The Air We Breathe

The Breathing-Orbital Valence Bond Method

The Problem of Air-Breathing Cathodes

To Breathe Clean Air

Triglyceride breath test

Urea breath test

Volatile organic compounds in breath

What Is the Cool Sensation in Toothpaste and Breath Fresheners

When is breath monitoring appropriate

Why Are Bombardier Beetles Known as Fire-Breathing Dragons

Why is it more difficult to breathe when up a mountain than at ground level

Work of breathing

YRTO PETREAS 1 Principles of breath monitoring

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