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Hydrogen naphthalene, stepwise

Figure 4. Stepwise hydrogen atom exchange between coal and naphthalene. The starting naphthalene was deuterated completely. To simplify the scheme only a- and f -position are shown. Figure 4. Stepwise hydrogen atom exchange between coal and naphthalene. The starting naphthalene was deuterated completely. To simplify the scheme only a- and f -position are shown.
It may be expected that other, highly structured solvents with a tri-dimensional network of strong hydrogen bonds, would also permit micelle formation by surfactants, but little evidence of such occurrences has been reported. On the other hand, surfactants in non-polar solvents, aliphatic or aromatic hydrocarbons and halocarbons tend to form so-called inverted micelles, but these aggregate in a stepwise manner rather than all at once to a definite average size. In these inverted micelles, formed, e.g., by long-chain alkylammonium salts or dinonyl-naphthalene sulfonates, the hydrophilic heads are oriented towards the interior, the alkyl chains, tails, towards the exterior of the micelles (Shinoda 1978). Water and hydrophilic solutes may be solubilized in these inverted micelles in nonpolar solvents, such as hydrocarbons. [Pg.376]

The high ratio of biphenyl to naphthalene may reflect a contribution from a second path, via the primary decomposition product in stepwise loss of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide, paralleling the reaction sequence known to occur under electron impact. The intermediate species (11) could add to benzene to give biphenyl by subsequent loss of carbon monoxide or fluorenone by ring closure and loss of hydrogen ... [Pg.7]

The mechanism of saturation of naphthalene, as a stepwise process of two-by-two additions of hydrogen, is summarized in Fig. 1. The reaction scheme gives no hint of the mechanisms of adsorption and desorption, nor of the extent and manner of the hydrogen exchange that always accompanies saturation neither does it show whether each pair of hydrogens is added simultaneously or in separate steps. Some of these features will be considered in the following sections. [Pg.21]

Siegel and Judeikis [124] have shown that the photodegradation of polydimethylsiloxane is sensitized by naphthalene. A stepwise biphotonic absorption process, involving the first triplet state of naphthalene as an intermediate, followed by energy transfer, has been proposed. It seems that the decomposition of the polymer occurs via Si—CH3 bond rupture and abstraction of hydrogen atoms by the methyl radicals to produce —Si—CHj radicals. Breaking of the — Si—CH3 bond has also been proposed as the most probable reaction in the vacuum ultraviolet photolysis of polydimethylsiloxane at 123.6 and 147 nm [125]. [Pg.391]


See other pages where Hydrogen naphthalene, stepwise is mentioned: [Pg.133]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.354]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.313]    [Pg.145]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.368 ]




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