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National Science Foundation Research

Research on Fe-S proteins in the Johnson laboratory is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (GM45597 and GM51962) and by a National Science Foundation Research Training Grant Award to the Center for Metalloenzyme Studies (BIR-9413236). [Pg.73]

NSF. 1976. Behavior of hydrogen sulfide in the atmosphere and its effects on vegetation. Report to the National Science Foundation, Research Applied to National Needs, Washington, DC, by Thompson RC, California University, Statewide Air Pollution Research Center, Riverside, CA. Report no. NSF/RA-760398. NTIS publication no. PB-262733. [Pg.196]

We thank J. Lucke for computer programming and C. Holley for secretarial assistance. This research was financed in part by National Science Foundation Research Grants. [Pg.28]

We are grateful to R. N. Caron for laboratory work to S. T. Free, M. W. Zacharias, and J. M. Lopez for modeling calculations and to Inland Steel Research Laboratories for petrographic analyses. We are also grateful for financial support provided by the National Science Foundation, Research Applied to National Needs (RANN), under Contract AER 75-13673 by the United States Department of Energy, University Affairs Section of the Division of Materials and Exploratory Research, under Contract No. EX-76-A-01-2295, T.O. No. 26 by the Mobil Research Foundation, Inc. and by the National Science Foundation, through an Energy Traineeship to E.M.S. [Pg.259]

This research is supported in part by the Electric Power Research Institute (Contract 741011-RP-332-1) and the National Science Foundation (Grant MPS75-05364). The purchase of the FTIR spectrometer was supported in part by a National Science Foundation Research Instrument Grant (GP-41711). [Pg.115]

Support from the National Science Foundation (Research Grant 0234895) and the National Institutes of Health (P20-GM 067650) is gratefully acknowledged. [Pg.498]

This research was supported by National Science Foundation research grant DMB 85-00338. We thank Dr. Richard W. Hemingway for the samples of the dimers. [Pg.169]

This work was supported by National Science Foundation research grant PCM 81-18197. [Pg.239]

This work, a joint project of the Department of Chemistry of Boston University and the Solar Energy Conversion Unit of Exxon Research and Engineering Co., was supported by the National Science Foundation Research Applied to National Needs Program under Grant No. SE/AER/ 72-03579. Some of the research on solution kinetics was supported by Energy Research and Development Administration Contract No. EY-76-S-02-2889. Many valuable discussions of various aspects of this work have been held with Morton Z. HoflFman. [Pg.305]

The work described herein originating in my laboratory has been supported by the National Science Foundation (Research Grant GB 21261), by the General Medical Sciences division of the... [Pg.77]

United States, National Science Foundation. Research In Industry Roles of the Government and the National Science Foundation. [Pg.146]

This work has been supported in part by National Science Foundation Research Grants PCM 79-23041 and PCM 77-23603 and by the Italian Research Council (CNR) through grant N.78.01129.03 and through a Travel Grant to A.C,... [Pg.488]

National Science Foundation. National Science Foundation Research and Evaluation on Education in Science and Engineering (REESE) Program. http //www.nsf gov/funding/pgm summ.jsp pims id=13667 org=EHR fr om=home (October 20,2006). [Pg.30]

The authors acknowledge the significant contributions to this research by participants in the National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates program at UIC from 2002-2004 Juan Gonzalez, Laura Sauber, Anthony New, Naja Joseph, and Jason Burbey. Mark Liska, a former graduate student of Professor John Regalbuto, conducted the catalytic activity tests. [Pg.160]

NSF, 1972. National Science Foundation. Research and Development in Industry, 1970. Funds, 1970. Scientists and Engineers, January 1971. Surveys of Science Resources Series. NSF 72 309. [Pg.508]

Dedicated to the memory of a contemporary pioneer in hydrocarbon microbiology—Dr. R. J. Strawinski, who died January 27, 1961. The literature coverage for material in this article was concluded March 31, 1961. Preparation of this paper was aided by a National Science Foundation research grant. [Pg.241]

This work has been supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (grant MCB-9314854) and the U.S. National Institutes of Health s National Center for Research Resources (grant RR08102 to the UNC/Duke Computational Structural Biology Resource). [Pg.129]

J. A. Alich, Jr., and R. E. Inman, Effective Etilicyation of Solar Energy to Produce Clean Fuel, Grant No. GI38723, Fiaal Report for National Science Foundation, Stanford Research Institute, Palo Alto, Calif., June 1974. [Pg.49]

Supercomputers are found in many government research laboratories, intelligence agencies, universities, and a small number of industrial companies. In the United States, the National Science Foundation (NSF) has provided supercomputers to several prominent universities for both academic and industrial users. These centers provide state-of-the-art, supercomputer-tuned appHcations for a wide variety of disciplines, together with staffs who are very knowledgeable in optimization for supercomputer performance. [Pg.88]

Department of Chemistry. University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois dlSOh This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (GP 30491X) and the National Cancer Institute (CA 13963). [Pg.26]

Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210. This research was conducted at The Ohio State University and supported in part by National Science Foundation, Grant No. 12445. [Pg.68]

Administratively, the genesis of these Laboratories, which initially were called Interdisciplinary Research Laboratories and later. Materials Research Laboratories, involved many complications, most of them in Washington, not least when in 1972 responsibility for them was successfully transferred to the National Science Foundation (NSF). As Sproull cynically remarks To those unfamiliar with the workings of federal government (and especially Capitol Hill), transfer of a program sounds simple, but it is simple only if the purpose of transfer is to kill the program . [Pg.12]

TRACES (1968) Technology in Retrospect and Critical Events in Science (TRACES). Illinois Institute of Technology, Research Institute published for the National Science Foundation (no editor or author named). [Pg.303]

In the words of a recent paper on MSE education (Flemings and Cahn 2000), chemistry departments have historically been interested in individual atoms and molecules, but increasingly they are turning to condensed phases . A report by the National Research Council (of the USA) in 1985 highlighted the opportunities for chemists in the materials field, and this was complemented by the NRC s later analysis (MSE 1989) which, inter alia, called for much increased emphasis on materials synthesis and processing. As a direct consequence of this recommendation, the National Science Foundation (of the USA) soon afterwards issued a formal call for research proposals in materials synthesis and processing (Lapporte 1995), and by that time it can be said that materials chemistry had well and truly arrived, in the... [Pg.426]

The authors would like to thank Pascal Deprez, Martial Deruelle, David P. Smith, Matthew Tirrell, Alphonsus V. Pocius, and Frank S. Bates for their input on this subject over the course of the last several years. They would also like to thank 3M and the Center for Interfacial Engineering, a National Science Foundation sponsored engineering research center at the University of Minnesota, for financial support. [Pg.135]

The author is grateful to the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy, Environmental Protection Agency, the Army Research Office, Hercules and Cara Plastics for their generous support of this research. Particular thanks are extended to my graduate students and research associates for shouldering the brunt of the research. [Pg.399]

The research leading to the syntheses which are outlined in Part Two was generously supported over the years by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and Pfizer, Inc. [Pg.99]

Acknowledgements—This work was supported by the Office of Naval Research, the National Science Foundation, the Robert A. Welch Foundation, and used equipment designed for study of fullerene-encapsulated catalysts supported by the Department of Energy, Division of Chemical Sciences. [Pg.14]

Electron microscopy studies were performed at the Centre Interdepartamental de Microscopie Electronique (CIME), Ecole Polytechnique Fdddrale de Lausanne. We are grateful to the Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technologic Research (CNPq) and the Swiss National Science Foundation for financial support. [Pg.141]

This work has been supported in part by the National Science Foundation (Grants CHE-9601971 and CHE-9813729), the donors of the Petroleum Research Fund, administered by the American Chemical Society (Grant No. ACS-PRF 31573-AC9), and a NATO Collaborative Research Grant (Grant HTECH.CRG972915). [Pg.163]

Department of Chemistry, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont. Supported by the National Science Foundation Undergraduate Research Participation Grant during the summer of 1964 and National Science Foundation Grant No. G-19490. [Pg.22]

Chemistry Department, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina This research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation... [Pg.95]

Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139. This work was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation and the International Copper Research Association, Inc. [Pg.113]


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