Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Manufacturing, primary sources

Source references for frequentiy used test procedures for determining properties of activated carbon are shown in Table 4. A primary source is the Jinnual Book ofyimerican Societyfor Testing and Materials (ASTM) Standards (61). Other usehil sources of standards and test procedures include manufacturers of activated carbon products, the American Water Works Association (AWWA) (33,34), and the Department of Defense (54). [Pg.532]

Carbon monoxide was discovered in 1776 by heating a mixture of charcoal and 2inc oxide. It provided a source of heat to industry and homes as a component of town gas and was used as a primary raw material in German synthetic fuel manufacture during World War II its compounds with transition metals have been studied extensively (see Carbonyls). Most recently, carbon monoxide emission from vehicle exhausts has been recognized as a primary source of air pollution (qv). [Pg.48]

The alkaloid can usually be obtained from the mother liquors of hyoscyamine, but Datura Metel, in which hyoscine is the chief constituent, was the better primary source but may now prove less valuable than selected Duboisia spp. (p. 66). A process of manufacture has been described by Chemnitius, and a method for the recovery of 1-hyoscine from racemised base by Schukina et al. A method for its estimation in presence of opium alkaloids has been devised bj Wallen and Callback. [Pg.84]

The study performed by Burns and Roe (BSR) shows that valve failures constitute the component category most responsible for the shutdown of PWR and BWR plants. This Investigation, contracted with SNL for DOE, identified the principal types and causes of valve failures that led to plant trips for the period from 12/72 to 12/78. The primary sources of data for the report were searches of the data base, the monthly Gray Books, Nuclear Power Experience publications, as well as discussions with utilities, valve manufacturers, and suppliers. [Pg.105]

Despite the anecdotal nature and sometimes poor documentation, publication of case reports in journals remains one of the most useful primary sources of information on ADRs. ADR reports in the literature can be identified in several different ways. Prepublication manuscripts describing a spontaneous case report or an event from a clinical trial are sometimes provided by authors to the manufacturer of the drug and the regulatory authority in that country. Pharmaceutical companies are required to be aware of the literature as to the safety of their approved therapeutic products, and are assumed (by law) to be cognizant of such. [Pg.847]

Normal butyl alcohol (NBA) was first recovered in the 1920s as a by-product of acetone manufacture via cornstarch fermentation. That route is almost extinct now. A small percent is still made from acetaldehyde. The primary source of NBA, however, is the Oxo process. [Pg.204]

Hexachlorobutadiene was first prepared in 1877 by the chlorination of hexyl oxide (lARC 1979). Commercial quantities of hexachlorobutadiene have never been produced in the United States. The primary source of hexachlorobutadiene found in the United States is inadvertent production as a waste by-product of the manufacture of certain chlorinated hydrocarbons, such as tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, and carbon tetrachloride (ERA 1980 Yang 1988). In 1982, ERA reported an annual volume of about 28 million pounds of hexachlorobutadiene inadvertently produced as a waste by- product from this source (ERA 1982b HSDB 1993). Table 4-1 summarizes information on U.S. companies that reported the production, import, or use of hexachlorobutadiene in 1990 based on the Toxics Release Inventory TRI90 (1992). The TRI data should be used with caution since only certain types of facilities are required to report. This is not an exhaustive list. [Pg.72]

The single largest use of ammonia is its direct apphcation as fertdizer, and in the manufacture of ammonium fertilizers that have increased world food production dramatically. Such ammonia-based fertilizers are now the primary source of nitrogen in farm soils. Ammonia also is used in the manufacture of nitric acid, synthetic fibers, plastics, explosives and miscellaneous ammonium salts. Liquid ammonia is used as a solvent for many inorganic reactions in non-aqueous phase. Other apphcations include synthesis of amines and imines as a fluid for supercritical fluid extraction and chromatography and as a reference standard in i N-NMR. [Pg.19]

Potassium chloride is the most important salt of potassium from the perspective of its abundant occurrence and apphcations. This salt, along with potassium sulfate, is used heavily in fertilizers as the primary source of potassium, an essential element for crops. Over 90% salt manufactured is consumed as fertilizer. Also, potassium chloride is a raw material for producing potassium metal and several important potassium salts including potassium nitrate, potassium hydroxide, and potassium sulfate. Other applications are in electrode cells photography buffer solutions and measurement of salinity in water. [Pg.746]

Documentation requirements are predicated on the types of batches to be manufactured at the pilot facility. For the development of novel formulations, laboratory notebooks are the primary source of documentation. Room and equipment logbooks should be maintained. Personnel training records and SOPs must also be maintained. Once the facility is used for the larger-scale batches described earlier, what was recommended now becomes required. Manufacturing runs need to be documented accurately, preferably in batch records. Logbooks should maintain an accurate record of the product history in rooms and equipment. At this level of manufacturing, it is also important that personnel training records be kept. These... [Pg.315]

Wood forms one of the world s most important chemical raw materials. It is the primary source of cellulose for the pulp and paper and cellulose industries. These industries are well up in the group of 10 major industries of the United Slates. For paper, rayon, films, lacquers, explosives and plastics, which comprise the greatest chemical uses of wood, it is the cellulose component (plus certain amounts of hemicellulose) of wood that is of value. The lignin forms a major industrial waste as a by-product of the paper and cellulose industries. Its major use is in its heat value in the recovery of alkaline pulping chemicals. A variety of minor uses for lignin have been developed, such as for the manufacture of vanillin, adhesives, plastics, oil-well drilling compounds and fillers for rubber. [Pg.1751]

At present 60Co sources are made in England, Canada, and the United States. The primary source manufactured in the United States is the BNL standard source (5), which is in the form of a strip of cobalt metal about % inch wide, 1 foot long, and 60 mils thick, doubly encapsulated in thin stainless steel jackets. The total amount of self-absorption of 7-rays in this source is less than 10%—i.e., over 90% of the 7-rays are available for absorption in target material. [Pg.116]

World War II brought a renewed urgency for synthetic rubber. When the Japanese occupied the Malay Peninsula and adjacent islands, the primary source of natural rubber to the United States was cut off. Rubber companies and university scientists cooperated in developing a procedure for manufacturing a synthetic rubber called GR-S (Government Rubber—Styrene). By the late 1930s,... [Pg.65]


See other pages where Manufacturing, primary sources is mentioned: [Pg.446]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.490]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.562]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.301]    [Pg.1276]    [Pg.1327]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.405]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.11]   


SEARCH



Manufacture primary

Primary sources

© 2024 chempedia.info