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Institute of Paper Chemistry

L. K. Nealey, Phe Isolation, Characterisation of alKyloglucan from Suspension Cultured Pohlolf Pine Cell Medium, Ph.D. dissertation. Institute of Paper Chemistry, Appleton, Wis., 1987. [Pg.36]

T. J. McDonough, Kraft Pulp Bleaching Technology A Brief Overview of Basic Principles and Current Trends, Institute of Paper Chemistry, Adanta, Ga., 1992. [Pg.285]

Institute of Paper Chemistry The Ohio State University,... [Pg.4]

A. L. Wigsten wishes to acknowledge the financial support provided by The Institute of Paper Chemistry and Mr. Gunnar Nicholson, New York. [Pg.443]

Portions of this work were used by one of the authors (ALW) as partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Ph.D. degree at The Institute of Paper Chemistry. [Pg.443]

Franco, R.P. Stratton, R.A., Unpublished work, The Institute of Paper Chemistry, Appleton, Wisconsin, 1978. [Pg.443]

This review was made possible only through the help of many individuals who provided unpublished reports and critical, but valuable, suggestions during its preparatimi. In particular, I would like to thank Dr. Richard P. Anderson (Argonne National Laboratory), Drs. Robert E. Henry and Hans K. Fauske (Fauske Associates), Dr. Thomas M. Grace (Institute of Paper Chemistry), Dr. Thomas McRae (Lawrence Livermore Natumal Laboratory), and Dr. Walter E. Wahnsiedler (Alcoa). [Pg.203]

White chemists E. P. Kohler of Harvard and Ernst Spaeth of the University of Vietma also nurtured Julian s career at critical times. Blanchard and DePauw President G. Bromley Oxnam recommended Julian s appointment to the faculty. However, the Board of Trustees rejected his appointment. Like many white universities of the time, DePauw was not ready for a black professor. (Some thirty years later, Julian was elected to the Board.) According to Borman (1993), the University of Mirmesota declined to appoint Julian as well. Consequently, Julian applied for and was offered a position as a researcher at the Institute of Paper Chemistry (IPC) in Appleton, Wisconsin. This failed to materialize as well because IPC executives discovered an Appleton statute that forbade housing of a Negro overnight (Borman, 1993). [Pg.13]

Starting Material. A drum of concentrated, mixed, southern pine kraft black liquor was kindly supplied by the Canton, N. C. mill of the Champion Paper and Fibre Co. Analytical data for the liquor indicated 49.7% total solids and a methoxyl content of the oven-dried solids of 5.54%. The pH of the liquor as received was 12.3. (All melting points are uncorrected. Infrared absorption spectra were determined by Mr. Lowell Sell of The Institute of Paper Chemistry Analytical Group.)... [Pg.161]

This paper represents part of the results obtained in the research program of Group Project No. 2274 at The Institute of Paper Chemistry. Acknowledgment is made by the Institute to those who sponsor this project to publish these results. [Pg.168]

III. American Chemical Society. Cellulose, Paper, and Textile Division. IV. Appleton, Wis. Institute of Paper Chemistry. V. Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry. Wood Chemistry Committee. VI. Series. [Pg.4]

The author wishes to express appreciation to K. P. Carlson for acquisition of the Raman spectra of the disaccharides and for much valuable discussion. The spectra of celluloses were acquired by R. Whitmore. Support of this work from institutional research funds of The Institute of Paper Chemistry is gratefully acknowledged. [Pg.74]

Woitkovich, C.P. M.S. Thesis Dissertation, Institute of Paper Chemistry, Appleton, WI (now Institute of Paper Science and Technology, Atlanta, GA), 1988. [Pg.43]

B.L. Browning, The Nature and Sources of Acid in Paper. Paper presented at the Institute of Paper Chemistry, Seminar for Conservators of Paper Objects, Appleton, Wisconsin, October 1971. [Pg.30]

J. Byrne and J. Weiner, Permanence, The Institute of Paper Chemistry. Bibliographic Series No. 213, 1964 J. Weiner and V. Pollock, Suppl. I, 1970. [Pg.31]

Following World War II, extensive investigative effort was initiated to find new uses for the mountains of bark generated as byproducts of the West Coast forest products industry in the United States and Canada. This work was carried out at the Institute of Paper Chemistry (sponsored by the Pacific Lumber Company of Scotia, California), the Oregon Forest Products Laboratory, Rayonier Incorporated, the Weyerhaueser Company, and the Forest Products Laboratory on the University of British Columbia campus. [Pg.165]

Graff, J. H. A Color Atlas for Fiber Identification The Institute of Paper Chemistry Appleton, Wisconsin, 1940. [Pg.353]


See other pages where Institute of Paper Chemistry is mentioned: [Pg.356]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.8]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.114 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.161 ]




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