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Dried Drier

Drakkar Noir Dramamine DRAM cells DRAM devices Draperies Drawdown Drawing molten glass Draw-texturing Drew-Pfitzner ligands Dried algae meal Driente Driers... [Pg.345]

Polymer is separated from the polymerisation slurry and slurried with acetic anhydride and sodium acetate catalyst. Acetylation of polymer end groups is carried out in a series of stirred tank reactors at temperatures up to 140°C. End-capped polymer is separated by filtration and washed at least twice, once with acetone and then with water. Polymer is made ready for extmsion compounding and other finishing steps by drying in a steam-tube drier. [Pg.58]

Sodium Bicarbonate. Many soda ash plants convert a portion of their production to sodium bicarbonate [144-55-8], NaHCO. Soda ash is typically dissolved, carbonated, and cooled to crystallize sodium bicarbonate. The mother Hquor is heated and recycled. The soHd bicarbonate is dried in flash or tray driers, screened, and separated into various particle size ranges. Bicarbonate markets include food, pharmaceuticals, catde feed, and fire extinguishers. U.S. demand was approximately 320,000 t in 1989 world demand was estimated at one million metric tons. [Pg.527]

Oxidation. Inks that dry by oxidation behave much like oil paint films and dry by means of the reaction of drying oils (qv) with oxygen. They contain metallic driers, which catalyze the absorption of oxygen by the drying oil (see Driers and metallic soaps Paint). [Pg.247]

Driers. These are generally soaps of cobalt, manganese, and other metals formed with organic acids such as linoleic, naphthenic, and other organic acids. They catalyze oxidation of drying oils (qv), and thus are used in inks that dry by oxidation (see Driers and metallic soaps). [Pg.249]

The floated mica concentrate is dewatered. After dewatering (qv), the mica is either dried in a fluid-bed rotary drier, flash dried in a fluid energy mill, or sold "drip-dry" to other mica grinders. The dry mica is then ground and screened to a si2e gradation dictated by the customer. [Pg.288]

Vehicles. The soHd pigments are dispersed iato the ink vehicle, which consists of a combination of resia, oil, and solvent. The solvent is absorbed by the paper, leaving a partially dry ink film of resia and oil that biads the pigment to the paper. This film then hardens by oxidation. Oxidation of the vehicle is aided by varnish driers, ie, metallic salts. Cobalt driers are considered the most effective (see Driers and metallic soaps). [Pg.55]

A pressure filter is a plate-and-frame press which operates on an intermittent time cycle. Drier cakes are generally attainable from a filter press. Sludge drying beds are usually used for smaller sludge volumes, which drain and dry rapidly. Thein appHcation is usually restricted to the more arid climates. [Pg.194]

Polyethers such as monensin, lasalocid, salinomycin, and narasin are sold in many countries in crystalline or highly purified forms for incorporation into feeds or sustained-release bolus devices (see Controlled-RELEASE technology). There are also mycelial or biomass products, especially in the United States. The mycelial products are generally prepared by separation of the mycelium and then drying by azeotropic evaporation, fluid-bed driers, continuous tray driers, flash driers, and other types of commercial driers (163). In countries allowing biomass products, crystalline polyethers may be added to increase the potency of the product. [Pg.171]

Boric acid crystals are usually separated from aqueous slurries by centrifugation and dried in rotary driers heated indirecdy by warm air. To avoid overdrying, the product temperature should not exceed 50°C. Powdered and impalpable bode acid are produced by milling the crystalline matedal. [Pg.194]

The octylphenol condensate is used as an additive to lubricating oils and surface-active agents. Other uses of dimer are amination to octylamine and octyldiphenylamine, used in mbber processing hydroformylation to nonyl alcohol for phthalate production and carboxylation via Koch synthesis to yield acids in formulating paint driers (see Drying). [Pg.372]

The second Hquefaction process is carried out at temperatures from 261 to 296 K, with Hquefaction pressures of about 1600—2400 kPa (16—24 atm). The compressed gas is precooled to 277 to 300 K, water and entrained oil are separated, and the gas is then dehydrated ia an activated alumina, bauxite, or siHca gel drier, and flows to a refrigerant-cooled condenser (see Drying agents). The Hquid is then distilled ia a stripper column to remove noncombustible impurities. Liquid carbon dioxide is stored and transported at ambient temperature ia cylinders containing up to 22.7 kg. Larger quantities are stored ia refrigerated iasulated tanks maintained at 255 K and 2070 kPa (20 atm), and transported ia iasulated tank tmcks and tank rail cars. [Pg.23]

The water-wet CN can be gelatinized with softeners such as phthalates and dried on dmms or band driers for the manufacture of CN chips (68). These CN chips can be colored with pigments so that colored enamels can be produced without using ball or roUer mills. [Pg.267]

Paint Driers and Polymer Additives. Paints based on alkyd resins (qv) dry by the oxidation and cross-linking of unsaturated side chains. Metal catalysts are included in paint formulations to promote this drying. Cerium carboxylates, eg, the naphthenate, are used as through driers, ie, to promote drying in the body of the paint film rather than at the film s surface (44). [Pg.371]

The crystalline sodium chlorate is usually dried in rotary driers to less than 0.2 wt % moisture content and is loaded into shipping containers or stored in moisture-free bins or silos prior to packaging. For conventional chlorine dioxide generators, sodium chlorate is shipped as a solution containing ca 200 g/L (15 wt %, 3.4 M) sodium chloride ca 350 g/L (26 wt %, 3.3 M) sodium chlorate and 130 ppm chromium. Alternatively, for newer chlorine dioxide generators, 600 g/L sodium chlorate 30 g/L sodium chloride and less than 30 ppm chromium is used. [Pg.499]

Cobalt in Driers for Paints, Inks, and Varnishes. The cobalt soaps, eg, the oleate, naphthenate, resinate, Hnoleate, ethyUiexanoate, synthetic tertiary neodecanoate, and tall oils, are used to accelerate the natural drying process of unsaturated oils such as linseed oil and soybean oil. These oils are esters of unsaturated fatty acids and contain acids such as oleic, linoleic, and eleostearic. On exposure to air for several days a film of the acids convert from Hquid to soHd form by oxidative polymeri2ation. The incorporation of oil-soluble cobalt salts effects this drying process in hours instead of days. Soaps of manganese, lead, cerium, and vanadium are also used as driers, but none are as effective as cobalt (see Drying). [Pg.381]


See other pages where Dried Drier is mentioned: [Pg.48]    [Pg.1508]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.923]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.1508]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.923]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.263]    [Pg.358]    [Pg.377]    [Pg.381]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.153 ]




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