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Cold-releasing process

Cold methanol has proven to be an effective solvent for acid gas removal. Cold methanol is nonselective in terms of hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is released from solution easily by reduction in pressure. Steam heating is required to release the hydrogen sulfide. A cold methanol process is Hcensed by Lurgi as Rectisol and by the Institute Francaise du Petrole (IFP) as IFPEXOL. [Pg.212]

Lay-up is a cold moulding process and therefore cure is achieved by the use of a catalyst (e.g. a peroxide) and also an accelerator (typically cobalt napthanate). This may be assisted by the application of heat, generally by the use of an oven. When the laminate is sufficiently cured, it may be released from the mould and excess material at the edge trimmed back. Often the released part is post-cured at elevated temperature to reach the temperature performance or mechanical properties required for the application. [Pg.262]

Resin injection moulding is a cold moulding process applied at medium pressures (approximately 450 kPa), where mould surfaces are enriched with release agents and gel coat before GF reinforcement is placed on the bottom of the mould, allowing the plastic to extend beyond the sides of the mould. Then the upper mould is placed in its place and it is clamped to stop followed hy injection of activated resin under pressure into the mould cavity (Figure 9.11). By using this technique, it is possible to obtain a fibre/matrix ratio of 65 wt%. [Pg.339]

Overall, hydrogen has combined with oxygen to give water, but in the fuel cell arrangement, the process has been harnessed to drive electrons through a circuit. Instead of combustion and the wild release of energy as heat (Reaction 3), there is the controlled, almost cold release of energy as electricity. [Pg.59]

In the spring of 1989, it was announced that electrochemists at the University of Utah had produced a sustained nuclear fusion reaction at room temperature, using simple equipment available in any high school laboratory. The process, referred to as cold fusion, consists of loading deuterium into pieces of palladium metal by electrolysis of heavy water, E)20, thereby developing a sufficiently large density of deuterium nuclei in the metal lattice to cause fusion between these nuclei to occur. These results have proven extremely difficult to confirm (20,21). Neutrons usually have not been detected in cold fusion experiments, so that the D-D fusion reaction familiar to nuclear physicists does not seem to be the explanation for the experimental results, which typically involve the release of heat and sometimes gamma rays. [Pg.156]

Thermo-diffusion calculations analyze the migration of hazardous material from compartment to compartment to release in containment. These calculations use physico-chemical parameters to predict the retention of hazardous materials by filtration, deposition on cold surfaces and other retention processes in the operation. Containment event trees aid in determining the amount, duration and types of hazardous material that leaves the containment. [Pg.237]

A process that releases heat into the surroundings is called an exothermic process. Most common chemical reactions—and all combustions, such as those that power transport and heating—are exothermic (Fig. 6.8). Less familiar are chemical reactions that absorb heat from the surroundings. A process that absorbs heat is called an endothermic process (Fig. 6.9). A number of common physical processes are endothermic. For instance, vaporization is endothermic, because heat must be supplied to drive molecules of a liquid apart from one another. The dissolution of ammonium nitrate in water is endothermic in fact, this process is used in instant cold packs for sports injuries. [Pg.343]

Many of the cold packs sold in stores use this endothermic process. A cold pack usually contains a flimsy plastic bag of solid ammonium nitrate inside a larger package filled with water. When punched, the inner bag ruptures. This releases the ammonium nitrate, which dissolves and produces a chilled pack to relieve pain and swelling in aching joints. [Pg.75]

Some types of hot packs are constructed in much the same way as the cold packs described above. They have two compartments. One compartment contains a salt, such as calcium chloride. The other compartment contains water. In hot packs, however, the dissolution process is exothermic. It releases heat to the surroundings. [Pg.228]

The main limitation to the clinical use of the MAOIs is due to their interaction with amine-containing foods such as cheeses, red wine, beers (including non-alcoholic beers), fermented and processed meat products, yeast products, soya and some vegetables. Some proprietary medicines such as cold cures contain phenylpropanolamine, ephedrine, etc. and will also interact with MAOIs. Such an interaction (termed the "cheese effect"), is attributed to the dramatic rise in blood pressure due to the sudden release of noradrenaline from peripheral sympathetic terminals, an event due to the displacement of noradrenaline from its mtraneuronal vesicles by the primary amine (usually tyramine). Under normal circumstances, any dietary amines would be metabolized by MAO in the wall of the gastrointestinal tract, in the liver, platelets, etc. The occurrence of hypertensive crises, and occasionally strokes, therefore limited the use of the MAOIs, despite their proven clinical efficacy, to the treatment of atypical depression and occasionally panic disorder. [Pg.170]


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Cold releases

Process release

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