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Saturation, colour

The first synthetic polymers to be used as paint varnishes were acrylic and vinylic resins. Poly(vinyl acetate) (PVAc), commercialized under the name Mowilith by Hoechst and Vinylite by Union Carbide, has been used in conservation as an adhesive since 1932 and in 1937 it was proposed as a picture varnish by Stout and Cross [63]. PVAc was soon rejected as a varnish because, despite its light stability and good solubility in organic solvents, it demonstrated poor optical properties in terms of colour saturation and the tendency to pick up dirt due to its low glass transition temperature. [Pg.343]

Old masters were almost always given a final coat of varnish, partly to enhance the depth of colour (known as colour saturation) and partly as a necessary protective layer in the days when buildings were heated with open fires and stoves, which gave off damaging fumes... [Pg.190]

All RLM photographs were taken with a Lecia DFC 480 camera on a Lecia MZ16 microscope using Earth Basic software for image capture. The diaphragm was set to half open on the microscope and the gain and colour saturation set to xl on the camera for all photographs. [Pg.62]

Mirrors depict the object luminance according to its degree of reflection. The object luminance, which is dependent on the degree of reflection, is perceived by the eye, however, diminished by the transmittance of the side window The maximum luminance of moniUHs is limited. Ambient light can diminish the luminance contrast and the colour saturation on the monitor. Also, at night, the monitor has a basic luminance greater than 0 cd/m ... [Pg.379]

Boron trioxide is not particularly soluble in water but it slowly dissolves to form both dioxo(HB02)(meta) and trioxo(H3B03) (ortho) boric acids. It is a dimorphous oxide and exists as either a glassy or a crystalline solid. Boron trioxide is an acidic oxide and combines with metal oxides and hydroxides to form borates, some of which have characteristic colours—a fact utilised in analysis as the "borax bead test , cf alumina p. 150. Boric acid. H3BO3. properly called trioxoboric acid, may be prepared by adding excess hydrochloric or sulphuric acid to a hot saturated solution of borax, sodium heptaoxotetraborate, Na2B407, when the only moderately soluble boric acid separates as white flaky crystals on cooling. Boric acid is a very weak monobasic acid it is, in fact, a Lewis acid since its acidity is due to an initial acceptance of a lone pair of electrons from water rather than direct proton donation as in the case of Lowry-Bronsted acids, i.e. [Pg.148]

To 2 ml. of the ester in a test-tube add slightly more than the same volume of a cold saturated aqueous copper acetate solution. The blue colour of the latter turns immediately to a pale green. Now shake the tube vigorously in order to produce an emulsion of the ester in the aqueous layer. Scratch the sides of the tube with a rod, and shake vigorously as before. Crystallisation may be delayed for about 5 minutes, but, when once started, rapidly gives a copious precipitate... [Pg.268]

Add a known volume ofo oaM.AgNOj solution (in excess) and boil the solution until the silver chloride has coagulated. Filter through a conical 5 cm. funnel, ensuring that the filter-paper does not protrude above the r m of the funnel. Wash the silver chloride and the filter-paper several times with a fine jet of distilled water. To the united filtrate and washings add i ml. of saturated ferric alum solution. The solution should be almost colourless if it is more than faintly coloured, add a few drops of concentrated nitric acid. Then titrate with 0 02M-ammonium thiocyanate solution until the permanent colour of ferric thiocyanate is just perceptible. (Alternatively the chloride may be determined potentiometrically.)... [Pg.507]

Schiff s Reagent. Dissolve 1 g. of rosaniline in 50 ml. of water with gentle warming. Cool, saturate with SO, add about i g. of animal charcoal, shake and filter make up to i litre with water. If the pink colour reappears on standing, add a few drops of SOj-water carefully with stirring until the colour Just disappears. [Pg.526]

Preparation of SchlfT s reagent. Method 1. Dissolve 0- 2 g. of pure p.rosaniline hydrochloride in 20 ml. of a cold, freshly-prepared, saturated aqueous solution of sulphur dioxide allow the solution to stand for a few hours until it becomes colourless or pale yellow. Dilute the solution to 200 ml. and keep it in a tightly, stoppered bottle. If the bottle is not adequately stoppered, the reagent will gradually lose sulphur dioxide and the colour wUl return. The solution keeps well if not unnecessarily exposed to light and air. [Pg.331]

Oxidation of 10-undecynoic acid to sebacic acid. Dissolve 2 00 g. of the acid, m.p. 41-42°, in 50 ml. of water containing 0 -585 g. of pure anhydrous sodium carbonate. Saturate the solution with carbon dioxide and add O IN potassium permanganate solution (about 1500 ml.) slowly and with constant stirring until the pink colour remains for half an hour the addition occupies about 3 hours. Decolourise the solution with a httle sulphur dioxide and filter off the precipitated acid through a... [Pg.469]

This product is sufficiently pure for the preparation of phenylacetic acid and its ethyl ester, but it contains some benzyl tso-cyanide and usually develops an appreciable colour on standing. The following procedure removes the iso-cyanide and gives a stable water-white compound. Shake the once-distilled benzyl cyanide vigorously for 5 minutes with an equal volume of warm (60°) 60 per cent, sulphuric acid (prepared by adding 55 ml. of concentrated sulphuric acid to 100 ml. of water). Separate the benzyl cyanide, wash it with an equal volume of sa+urated sodium bicarbonate solution and then with an equal volume of half-saturated sodium chloride solution- Dry with anhydrous magnesium sulphate and distil under reduced pressure. The loss in washing is very small (compare n-Butyl Cyanide, Section 111,113, in which concentrated hydrochloric acid is employed). [Pg.761]

Free cydohexene from peroxides by treating it with a saturated solution of sodium bisulphite, separate, dry and distil collect the fraction, b.p. 81-83°. Mix 8 -2 g. of cycZohexene with 55 ml. of the reagent, add a solution of 15 mg. of osmium tetroxide in anhydrous butyl alcohol and cool the mixture to 0°. Allow to stand overnight, by which time the initial orange colouration will have disappeared. Remove the solvent and unused cydohexene by distillation at atmospheric pressure and fractionate the residue under reduced pressure. Collect the fraction of b.p. 120-140°/15 mm. this solidifies almost immediately. Recrystallise from ethyl acetate The yield of pure cis-l 2 cydohexanediol, m.p. 96°, is 5 0 g. [Pg.895]

If the product is coloured, dissolve it in 2N sodium hydroxide solution on a water bath. Filter the hot almost saturated solution, and to the hot Bltrate add a... [Pg.953]


See other pages where Saturation, colour is mentioned: [Pg.724]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.724]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.3039]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.551]    [Pg.607]    [Pg.624]    [Pg.681]    [Pg.702]    [Pg.764]    [Pg.774]    [Pg.856]    [Pg.860]    [Pg.982]    [Pg.993]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.138]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.526]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.190 ]




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