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GERMANY,GOVERNMENT

BAYER AG HUNTSMAN URETHANE SPECIALTIES EUROPEAN COMMISSION BAYER MATERIALSCIENCE AG ALBERDINGK BOLEY GMBH GERMANY,GOVERNMENT HOBUM OLEOCHEMICALS HESSE-LIGNAL... [Pg.37]

Shabecoff, P. Neo-Nazi activity rises in Germany Government s report meets indifference from public. New York Times, Mar. 6, 1966, p. 14. [Pg.366]

The MTO process employs a turbulent fluid-bed reactor system and typical conversions exceed 99.9%. The coked catalyst is continuously withdrawn from the reactor and burned in a regenerator. Coke yield and catalyst circulation are an order of magnitude lower than in fluid catalytic cracking (FCC). The MTO process was first scaled up in a 0.64 m /d (4 bbl/d) pilot plant and a successfiil 15.9 m /d (100 bbl/d) demonstration plant was operated in Germany with U.S. and German government support. [Pg.85]

As a result of the work of Ziegler in Germany, Natta in Italy and Pease and Roedel in the United States, the process of co-ordination polymerisation, a process related to ionic polymerisation, became of significance in the late 1950s. This process is today used in the commercial manufacture of polypropylene and polyethylene and has also been used in the laboratory for the manufacture of many novel polymers. In principle the catalyst system used governs the way in which a monomer and a growing chain approach each other and because of this it is possible to produce stereoregular polymers. [Pg.37]

With the onset of World War 11, politics began to interfere with his research. Debye was actually forbidden to enter the Max Planck Institute which he directed because he refused to accept German citizenship. Despite obstruction by the German government, he left Germany by way of Italy and came to the United States. In 1940 he was appointed professor of chemistry and head of the department of chemistry at Cornell University. Six years later, he became an American citizen. During the war years his research turned toward the structure and particle size of high polymers. [Pg.320]

FRG (2001) Notification of a draft Order amending Chemicals Orders (organotin compounds) pursuant to Article 95(5) of the EC Treaty. Cemmunicatien frem the Government of the Federal Republic ef Germany te the Eurepean Commission, 9 January. [Pg.46]

The easiest means for assessing occupational exposure hazards associated with materials used in a process is through the use of Permissible or Occupational Exposure Limits (OEL or PEL) which go by a variety of names for example, TLV (U.S. - American Conference of Government Industrial Hygienists), MAK (Germany), or individual company established values. Occupational exposure limits are usually set based on a combination of the inherent toxicological hazard of a chemical and a series of safety factors such as intraspecies variability in test results, nature and severity of the effect, adequacy and quality of... [Pg.242]

Although the imperial government wanted scientists to help Germany become economically competitive, it did not want to finance institutes. In fact, a few days before the inauguration of the first Kaiser Wilhelm Society institute, it was still unfunded. At the last minute, Leopold Koppel, chair of the German Gaslight Company, offered to finance a Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry with two conditions the Kaiser must thank him publicly, and Fritz Haber must be the institute s director. [Pg.67]

To sell DDT abroad in wartime, Geigy reported its discovery in September 1941 to the governments of the United States, Britain, and Germany. Switzerland sat uncomfortably between France on the west and the Axis countries—Germany, Austria, and Italy—on the north, east, and south. Switzerland had mobilized an army to defend its borders, but to maintain its neutrality it could not tell one combatant about DDT without alerting the others. While Muller remained in Basel and served in Switzerland s civil defense close to the French and German borders, his family retreated for safety farther inland near Lake Geneva. In letters to his wife, Muller reiterated that the war s outcome was in God s hands. [Pg.155]

Stief, K., Remedial action for groundwater protection case studies within the Federal Republic of Germany, in Hazardous Material Spills Conference Proceedings, Government Institutes, Rockville, MD, 1984. [Pg.665]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.47 ]




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