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Physical processing

Starch is insoluble in cold water, but in hot water the granules gelatinize to form an opalescent dispersion. It is made from corn, wheat, potatoes, rice and other cereals by various physical processes such as steeping, milling and sedimentation. It is used as an adhesive, for sizing paper and cloth, as an inert diluent in foods and drugs, and for many other purposes. [Pg.371]

For physical processes, two examples are the elimination of normal paraffins from a mixture by their adsorption on 5 A molecular sieves or by their selective formation of solids with urea (clathrates)... [Pg.26]

Section 10.1 will consider the physical processes which oil and gas (and unwanted fluids) from the wellhead must go through to reach product specifications. These processes will include gas-liquid separation, liquid-liquid separation, drying of gas. [Pg.235]

The starting point of imaging is the modelisation of the physical process implied when using the sensor once known the exci-tator geometry and the conductivity in any point of the tube, one must be able to compute the magnetic field at any point in the measurement area ... [Pg.357]

Successive PCA and Wavelet analysis processes improve small flaw detection (figure 14), because small size involves linear physical processes, where PCA is efficient. [Pg.364]

One drawback to a molecular dynamics simulation is that the trajectory length calculated in a reasonable time is several orders of magnitude shorter than any chemical process and most physical processes, which occur in nanoseconds or longer. This allows yon to study properties that change w ithin shorter time periods (such as energy finctnations and atomic positions), but not long-term processes like protein folding. [Pg.71]

Computer modelling provides powerful and convenient tools for the quantitative analysis of fluid dynamics and heat transfer in non-Newtonian polymer flow systems. Therefore these techniques arc routmely used in the modern polymer industry to design and develop better and more efficient process equipment and operations. The main steps in the development of a computer model for a physical process, such as the flow and deformation of polymeric materials, can be summarized as ... [Pg.1]

Uranium-235 can be concentrated by gaseous diffusion and other physical processes, if desired, and used directly as a nuclear fuel, instead of natural uranium, or used as an explosive. [Pg.201]

Sample Preservation Once removed from its target population, a liquid sample s chemical composition may change as a result of chemical, biological, or physical processes. Following its collection, samples are preserved by controlling the solu-... [Pg.194]

Removing a sample from its population may induce a change in its composition due to a chemical or physical process. For this reason, samples are collected in inert containers and are often preserved at the time of collection. [Pg.224]

Kinetic methods of analysis are based on the rate at which a chemical or physical process involving the analyte occurs. Three types of kinetic methods are discussed in this chapter chemical kinetic methods, radiochemical methods, and flow injection analysis. [Pg.659]

The reaction step in mechanism (5.F) is entirely comparable to the same reaction in low molecular weight systems. Such reactions involve considerably larger activation energies than physical processes like diffusion and, hence, do proceed slowly. [Pg.282]

The physical process of Hquid—Hquid extraction separates a dissolved component from its solvent by transfer to a second solvent, immiscible with the first but having a higher affinity for the transferred component. The latter is sometimes called the consolute component. Liquid—Hquid extraction can purify a consolute component with respect to dissolved components which are not soluble in the second solvent, and often the extract solution contains a higher concentration of the consolute component than the initial solution. In the process of fractional extraction, two or more consolute components can be extracted and also separated if these have different distribution ratios between the two solvents. [Pg.60]

The various chemical and physical processes that play a role ia the deterioration of art objects are not restricted to the present, even though the contemporary environment has contributed significantly to the rate of decay. Revered masterpieces have lost splendor throughout the ages. Indeed, from textual evidence, it is known how artists ia the Renaissance restored works of art from Classical times. These restorers of past centuries attempted to return the object to its original appearance. The fallacy of that idea Hes ia the fact that they could not know the exact original appearance of the work, ie, immediately after its creation therefore, they restored the object according to their subjective opinions. [Pg.424]

Essential Oil The volatile material, derived by a physical process, usually distillation, from odorous plant material of a single botairical form and spices with which it agrees in name and odor. [Pg.19]

Fluidized-bed appHcations in the 1990s may be separated into catalytic reactions, noncatalytic reactions, and physical processes. Examples of fluidized-bed appHcations include the foUowing ... [Pg.70]

Chemica.1 Properties. The FEP resin is inert to most chemicals and solvents, even at elevated temperatures and pressures. However, it reacts with fluorine, molten alkah metal, and molten sodium hydroxide. Acids or bases are not absorbed at 200°C and exposures of one year. The absorption of organic solvents is less than 1% at elevated temperatures and long exposure times. Absorption of chemicals or solvents has no effect on the chemical integrity of the FEP molecule and is a reversible physical process. [Pg.361]

Eoamable compositions in which the pressure within the cells is increased relative to that of the surroundings have generally been called expandable formulations. Both chemical and physical processes are used to stabilize plastic foams from expandable formulations. There is no single name for the group of cellular plastics produced by the decompression processes. The various operations used to make cellular plastics by this principle are extmsion, injection mol ding, and compression molding. Either physical or chemical methods may be used to stabilize products of the decompression process. [Pg.404]

Mainly Co—Pt and Co—Pd have been studied by evaporation and sputtering. Although both processes show different physical processes the MO properties of the films do not vary much. Studies have also been carried out for materials with a lower Curie temperature (109). [Pg.185]

Third, design constraints are imposed by the requirement for controlled cooling rates for NO reduction. The 1.5—2 s residence time required increases furnace volume and surface area. The physical processes involved in NO control, including the kinetics of NO chemistry, radiative heat transfer and gas cooling rates, fluid dynamics and boundary layer effects in the boiler, and final combustion of fuel-rich MHD generator exhaust gases, must be considered. [Pg.435]

Failure Cause. The failure cause is the physical, chemical, electrical, thermal, or other design deficiency which caused the failure. The agent, physical process, or hardware deficiency causing the failure mode must be identified, ie, what caused the failure for each failure mode. There may be more than one cause. Failure Fffect. The failure effect is the local effect on the immediate component/subsystem and the global effect on system performance/operation. In commercial products, the effect on the customer, ie, the global effect, must be addressed. [Pg.6]

The most convenient mathematical method of describing pervaporation is to divide the overall separation processes into two steps, as shown in Figure 40. The first is evaporation of the feed Hquid to form a (hypothetical) saturated vapor phase on the feed side of the membrane. The second is permeation of this vapor through the membrane to the low pressure permeate side of the membrane. Although no evaporation actually takes place on the feed side of the membrane during pervaporation, this approach is mathematically simple and is thermodynamically completely equivalent to the physical process. The evaporation step from the feed hquid to the saturated vapor phase produces a separation, which can be defined (eq. 13) as the ratio of... [Pg.86]

Classification of the many different encapsulation processes is usehil. Previous schemes employing the categories chemical or physical are unsatisfactory because many so-called chemical processes involve exclusively physical phenomena, whereas so-called physical processes can utilize chemical phenomena. An alternative approach is to classify all encapsulation processes as either Type A or Type B processes. Type A processes are defined as those in which capsule formation occurs entirely in a Hquid-filled stirred tank or tubular reactor. Emulsion and dispersion stabiUty play a key role in determining the success of such processes. Type B processes are processes in which capsule formation occurs because a coating is sprayed or deposited in some manner onto the surface of a Hquid or soHd core material dispersed in a gas phase or vacuum. This category also includes processes in which Hquid droplets containing core material are sprayed into a gas phase and subsequentiy solidified to produce microcapsules. Emulsion and dispersion stabilization can play a key role in the success of Type B processes also. [Pg.318]

The treatments used to recover nickel from its sulfide and lateritic ores differ considerably because of the differing physical characteristics of the two ore types. The sulfide ores, in which the nickel, iron, and copper occur in a physical mixture as distinct minerals, are amenable to initial concentration by mechanical methods, eg, flotation (qv) and magnetic separation (see SEPARATION,MAGNETIC). The lateritic ores are not susceptible to these physical processes of beneficiation, and chemical means must be used to extract the nickel. The nickel concentration processes that have been developed are not as effective for the lateritic ores as for the sulfide ores (see also Metallurgy, extractive Minerals recovery and processing). [Pg.2]

Exceptions to the simple definition of an essential oil are, for example, gadic oil, onion oil, mustard oil, or sweet birch oils, each of which requires enzymatic release of the volatile components before steam distillation. In addition, the physical process of expression, appHed mostly to citms fmits such as orange, lemon, and lime, yields oils that contain from 2—15% nonvolatile material. Some flowers or resinoids obtained by solvent extraction often contain only a small portion of volatile oil, but nevertheless are called essential oils. Several oils are dry-distiUed and also contain a limited amount of volatiles nonetheless they also are labeled essential oils, eg, labdanum oil and balsam oil Pern. The yield of essential oils from plants varies widely. Eor example, nutmegs yield 10—12 wt % of oil, whereas onions yield less than 0.1% after enzymatic development. [Pg.296]

Enzymatic Method. L-Amino acids can be produced by the enzymatic hydrolysis of chemically synthesized DL-amino acids or derivatives such as esters, hydantoins, carbamates, amides, and acylates (24). The enzyme which hydrolyzes the L-isomer specifically has been found in microbial sources. The resulting L-amino acid is isolated through routine chemical or physical processes. The D-isomer which remains unchanged is racemized chemically or enzymatically and the process is recycled. Conversely, enzymes which act specifically on D-isomers have been found. Thus various D-amino acids have been... [Pg.278]


See other pages where Physical processing is mentioned: [Pg.263]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.358]    [Pg.598]    [Pg.1210]    [Pg.1456]    [Pg.1985]    [Pg.2715]    [Pg.3005]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.342]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.442]   


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Appropriate physical process

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Basic Physical Situations of Relevance in Gas-Liquid Processes

Batch process physical model

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Catalytic process, physical factors

Chaotic processes, physics

Chemical Potentials Applied to Physical Processes

Chemical and physical processes

Combustion physical processes

Concentrate processing physical properties, effect

Consideration of the absorption process from a physical and industrial viewpoint

Controlled Process and Physical Component Design

Convective mixing physical processes

Crosslinking physical process

Decompression Expansion Processes, Physical Stabilization

Depth resolution physical processes

Development processes physical

Downstream processing physical characteristics

Electrode processes, physical parameters for

Electrode processes, physical parameters for the control

Elements of Physical Transfer Processes

Energy Changes in Chemical and Physical Processes

Energy absorption, physical processes

Enthalpy changes accompanying physical processes

Evaluation process physical properties

Excited molecules physical processes

Excited states physical processes

Fluidization physical processes

Heat generation, physical processing

Heat generation, physical processing screening methods

Hydrogen sulfide physical solvent processes

Intermolecular Physical Processes of Excited States

Key Physical Properties for the New Process

Manufacturers, materials, recycling physical processes

Mechanical-physical separation processes

Microscale physical processes

Microworld Chemical and Physical Processes

Models Including Physical Processes

Modified physical refining process

Natural phenomena as computing processes. The physical limits of computation

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Physical Models of Elementary Processes, Transition Probabilities, and Kinetic Coefficients

Physical Modification Processes

Physical Process Failures and Dysfunctional Interactions

Physical Processing Example

Physical Purification Processes

Physical Removal Processes

Physical Separation Processes

Physical Solvent Processes

Physical Transport Processes

Physical absorption process

Physical adsorption reversible process

Physical aging process analysis

Physical aging processes

Physical and Chemical Processes in Estuaries

Physical and physico-chemical processes

Physical changes during processing

Physical chemistry adiabatic process

Physical chemistry isothermal process

Physical electrolytic process

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Physical forms processes

Physical kinetics relaxation process, time

Physical process intensification

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Physical processes

Physical processes, mathematical models

Physical processes, microworld control

Physical processes, online monitoring

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Physical processes, rubber abrasion

Physical processing chemical reactivity hazard

Physical processing screening methods

Physical processing wastes

Physical processing worked examples

Physical refining process

Physical relaxation processes

Physical solvent process, LOCAT

Physical testing hazard evaluation process

Physical transfer processes

Physical vapor deposition process availability

Physical vapor deposition processing steps

Physical vapour deposition process

Physical vinyl acetate monomer process

Physical vinyl chloride monomer process

Physical weathering processes

Physical, chemical and biological processes involved in the degradation of pesticides

Physical-Chemical Processes

Physical-biological processes

Physical-chemical treatment membrane processes

Physical-vapor-deposition process

Physical/chemical solvent processes

Physical/thermal activation process

Physical/thermal activation process considerations

Physical/thermal activation process mechanisms

Physical/thermal activation process porous materials

Physical/thermal activation process rates

Physical/thermal activation process temperature coefficients

Plutonium processing physical properties

Process control physical models

Process design physical/chemical solvent processes

Process measurements physical access

Process physical characteristics

Process spectroscopy,—characterization physical properties

Quantum physics measurement process

Relevant physical and chemical processes

Resin Physical Properties Related to Processing

Rules of Thumb about the Context for a Chemical Process Physical and Thermal Properties

Scale-down process physical measurements

Silica compounds physical processes

Slurry reactors physical processes

Solid physical extraction process

Stabilizing Wine by Physical and Physico-chemical Processes

Stochastic modeling of physical processes

Synopsis of Mechanical and Physical Processes

Systems instances to be considered for the analysis of physical and chemical processes in a RD unit

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The Simulation of a Physical Process and Analogous Computers

The physical absorption process

Thermal wave physical processes

Three physical processes

Transport coefficients, physical processes

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