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First Volume

This brings us to some very basic principles of cost accounting. These concepts were covered in the first volume of this series Handbook of Water and Wastewater Treatment Technologies), but we will repeat a portion of them here because of their particular relevance to plarming air pollution control projects. The... [Pg.499]

This volume is the seeond of a series of practiee-orientated TLC/HPTLC books published in excellent quality by VCH Publishers. As in the first volume, a series of reagents and detection methods have been reviewed with the intention of helping the practieal analyst increase the detection specificity of routine samples separated by thin-layer ehromatography. [Pg.471]

The most celebrated textual embodiment of the science of energy was Thomson and Tait s Treatise on Natural Philosophy (1867). Originally intending to treat all branches of natural philosophy, Thomson and Tait in fact produced only the first volume of the Treatise. Taking statics to be derivative from dynamics, they reinterpreted Newton s third law (action-reaction) as conservation of energy, with action viewed as rate of working. Fundamental to the new energy physics was the move to make extremum (maximum or minimum) conditions, rather than point forces, the theoretical foundation of dynamics. The tendency of an entire system to move from one place to another in the most economical way would determine the forces and motions of the various parts of the system. Variational principles (especially least action) thus played a central role in the new dynamics. [Pg.1138]

Volume 1 presents the mathematics and general engineering and science of petroleum engineering. This first volume examines the auxiliary equipment and provides complete coverage of all aspects of drilling and well completion. [Pg.1434]

Russell,F. S. (1970). The Medusae of the British Isles,V ol. II Pelagic Scypho-zoa with a supplement to the first volume on hydromedusae. Cambridge University Press, London. [Pg.431]

The first volume entitled Chemical Thermodynamics Principles and Applications is appropriate for use as a textbook for an advanced undergraduate level or a beginning graduate level course in chemical thermodynamics. In the ten chapters of this volume, we develop the fundamental thermodynamic relationships for pure-component and variable-composition systems and apply them to a variety of chemical problems. [Pg.681]

The intended audience of the second volume entitled Chemical Thermodynamics Advanced Applications is the advanced student or research scientist. We have used it, independently of the first volume, as the text for an advanced topics graduate level course in chemical thermodynamics. It can also serve as an introduction to thermodynamic studies involving more specialized disciplines, including geology, chemical separations, and biochemistry, for the research scientist in or outside of those disciplines. We hope it will be especially helpful for non-thermodynamicists who might be unfamiliar with the power and utility of thermodynamics in diverse applications. Given the more advanced nature of the material covered here, problems are only provided at the end of the chapters in this volume. Taken together, the two volumes make an excellent reference source for chemical thermodynamics. [Pg.682]

Preface to the First Volume Chemical Thermodynamics Principles and Applications... [Pg.685]

Preface to the Two-Volume Series Chemical Thermodynamics, Pages xv-xix Preface to the First Volume Chemical Thermodynamics, Pages xxi-xxiii Chapter 1 - Introduction, Pages 1-36... [Pg.688]

The notion of pzc is absent in early textbooks. A table with pzc values for about 10 metals (but for only 5 are reliable values claimed) was given by Parsons in 1954 in the first volume of this series.4 After a more complete attempt by Frumkin in 196520 to compare work function, extensive work on pzc was reported by Perkins and Andersen9 in this series and by Frumkin etal.8 in another series. Compilations of pzc values were also made by Campanella, Trasatti, Frumkin et al., and Frumkin and Petrii14 up to 1979. A book by Frumkin10 devoted entirely to the potential of zero charge was published posthumously in 1979. [Pg.6]

This is the sixty-first volume in the series THE CHEMISTRY OE HETEROCYCEIC COMPOUNDS... [Pg.511]

Another publication is the Index of Reviews in Organic Chemistry , complied by Lewis, Chemical Society, London, a classified listing of review articles. The first volume, published in 1971, lists reviews from 1960 (in some cases much earlier) to 1970 in alphabetical order of topic. Thus four reviews are listed under Knoevenagel condensation , five under Inclusion compounds , and one under Vinyl ketones. There is no index. A second volume (1977) covers the literature to 1976. Annual or biannual supplements appeared from 1979 until the publication was terminated in 1985. Classified lists of review articles on organometallic chemistry are found in articles by Smith and Walton and by Bruce.A similar list for heterocyclic chemistry is found in articles by Katritzky and others.See also the discussion of the Index of Scientific Reviews, page 1638. [Pg.1620]

Organic Reaction Mechanisms , published by Wiley, New York, is an annual survey that covers the latest developments in the field of mechanisms. The first volume, covering 1965, appeared in 1966. [Pg.1622]


See other pages where First Volume is mentioned: [Pg.1904]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.764]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.617]    [Pg.601]    [Pg.606]    [Pg.610]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.670]    [Pg.681]    [Pg.682]    [Pg.686]    [Pg.687]    [Pg.649]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.1569]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.447]   


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