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Chemical stability, effect water

Chemical stabilization involves removing the concentration of surface hydroxyls and surface defects, such as metastable three-membered rings, below a critical level so that the surface is not stressed by rehydroxylation in use. Thermal stabilization involves reducing the surface area sufficiently to enable the material to be used at a given temperature without reversible stmctural changes. The mechanisms of thermal and chemical stabilization are interrelated because of the extreme effects that surface hydroxyls and chemisorbed water have on stmctural changes. Full densification of gels, such as the... [Pg.255]

These coatings provide the most effective fire-resistant system available but originally were deficient in paint color properties. Since, historically, the intumescence producing chemicals were quite water-soluble, coatings based thereon did not meet the shipping can stability, ease of application, environmental resistance, or aesthetic appeal required of a good protective coating. [Pg.400]

Stresses caused by chemical forces, such as hydration stress, can have a considerable influence on the stability of a wellbore [364]. When the total pressure and the chemical potential of water increase, water is absorbed into the clay platelets, which results either in the platelets moving farther apart (swelling) if they are free to move or in generation of hydrational stress if swelling is constrained [1715]. Hydrational stress results in an increase in pore pressure and a subsequent reduction in effective mud support, which leads to a less stable wellbore condition. [Pg.62]

Lai, M.C., Hageman, M.J., Schowen, R.L., Borchardt, R.T., and Topp, E.M. 1999a. Chemical stability of peptides in polymers. 1. Effect of water on peptide deamidation in poly(vinyl alcohol) and poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) matrixes. J. Pharm. Sci. 88, 1073-1080. [Pg.94]

It is important to point out that our investigation of counterion effects in carboxylate soaps has so far been concerned almost exclusively with laurate soaps. Laurate soaps were chosen partly because they are generally convenient to handle in that many of them are readily soluble in water to give solutions of low viscosity, and partly because, as has been shown above, laurate soaps are very effective in enhancing the mechanical and chemical stability of natural rubber latex. It must therefore be borne in mind that the conclusions which have been drawn from this investigation concerning effects attributable to counterion variation in laurate soaps may not be generally valid for carboxylate soaps as a family. [Pg.181]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.11 , Pg.76 ]




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Chemical stability

Chemical stabilization

Stability , effects

Stability, chemical water

Stabilization effects

Stabilized effects

Stabilizing effect

Water chemicals

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