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Richardson effect

Richardson. Effects of prenatal mari- CS423 juana exposure on child behavior problems at age 10. Neurotoxicol Teratol 2000 22(3) 325-336. CS424... [Pg.113]

Here we shall prove the two formulse which we gave in the text for the thermionic emission of electrons (the Richardson effect) firstly on the basis of classical statistics and secondly on the basis of the... [Pg.338]

Ogden, M.W. and J.D. Richardson Effect of fighting and storage conditions on the stability of ultraviolet particulate matter, fluorescent particulate matter, and solanesol Tob. Sci. 42 (1998) 10-15. [Pg.1374]

J. Waschl and D. Richardson, Effects of Specific Surface Area on the Sensitivity of Hexanitrostilbene to Flyer Plate Impact , Journal of Energetic Materials 9, 269-282... [Pg.198]

Kato, M., Inoue, T., Goto, K., Ito, G. and Shimizu, Y., Effect of Dissolved Oxidising Agents and Inhibitors on Pitting Corrosion of Aluminium in Water , Aluminium, 49, 289 (1973) Richardson, J. A. and Godwin, A. W., Localised Corrosion of Stainless Steel During Food Processing , Br. Corros. J., 8, 259 (1973)... [Pg.208]

If it is known that a particular form of relation, such as the power-law model, is applicable, it is not necessary to maintain a constant shear rate. Thus, for instance, a capillary tube viscometer can be used for determination of the values of the two parameters in the model. In this case it is usually possible to allow for the effects of wall-slip by making measurements with tubes covering a range of bores and extrapolating the results to a tube of infinite diameter. Details of the method are given by Farooqi and Richardson. 21 ... [Pg.119]

In 1868 two Scottish scientists, Crum Brown and Fraser [4] recognized that a relation exists between the physiological action of a substance and its chemical composition and constitution. That recognition was in effect the birth of the science that has come to be known as quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) studies a QSAR is a mathematical equation that relates a biological or other property to structural and/or physicochemical properties of a series of (usually) related compounds. Shortly afterwards, Richardson [5] showed that the narcotic effect of primary aliphatic alcohols varied with their molecular weight, and in 1893 Richet [6] observed that the toxicities of a variety of simple polar chemicals such as alcohols, ethers, and ketones were inversely correlated with their aqueous solubilities. Probably the best known of the very early work in the field was that of Overton [7] and Meyer [8], who found that the narcotic effect of simple chemicals increased with their oil-water partition coefficient and postulated that this reflected the partitioning of a chemical between the aqueous exobiophase and a lipophilic receptor. This, as it turned out, was most prescient, for about 70% of published QSARs contain a term relating to partition coefficient [9]. [Pg.470]

Although the fate of Cr(IV) is uncertain, (cf. the alcohol oxidation), some characteristics of the intermediate chromium species have been obtained by Wiberg and Richardson from a study of competitions between benzaldehyde and each of several substituted benzaldehydes. The competition between the two aldehydes for Cr(VI) is measured simply by their separate reactivities that for the Cr(V) or Cr(IV) is obtained from estimation of residual aldehyde by a C-labelling technique. If Cr(V) is involved then p values for oxidation by Cr(VI) and Cr(V) are 0.77 and 0.45, respectively. An isotope effect of 4.1 for oxidation of benzaldehyde by Cr(V) was obtained likewise. [Pg.310]

Several models relating the isotopic effects of U-series disequilibria to the timescales of the melting process have now been proposed (e.g., McKenzie 1985 Williams and Gill 1989 Spiegelman and Elliott 1993 Qin 1992 Iwamori 1994 Richardson and McKenzie 1994). While these models differ mainly in their treatment of the melt extraction process (i.e., reactive porous flow vs near fractional melting), because they incorporate the effect... [Pg.231]

Richardson, N. J., Rogers, P. J., and Elliman, N. A., Effects of comprehensive relaxation training (CRT) on mood A preliminary report on relaxation training plus caffeine cessation. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior 52(2), 313-320,... [Pg.295]

James, J. E., Richardson, M., Pressor effects of caffeine and cigarette smoking. British Journal of Clinical Psychology 30(3), 276-278, 1991. [Pg.304]

Anderson, N. L., Esquer-Blasco, R., Richardson, F., Foxworthy, P., and Eacho, P. (1996). The effects of peroxisome proliferators on protein abundances in mouse liver. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 137, 75-89. [Pg.111]

Richardson DB. 1995. Respiratory effects of chronic hydrogen sulfide exposure. AmJIndMed 28 99-108. [Pg.199]

Richardson WEI, Peng C, Bashford D, Noodleman L, Case DA (1997) Incorporating Solvation Effects into Density Functional Theory Calculation of Absolute Acidities. Int J Quantum Chem 61 207-217. [Pg.283]

The ability of STM to image at the atomic scale is particularly exemplified by the two other chapters in the book. Thornton and Pang discuss the identification of point defects at Ti02 surfaces, a material that has played an important role in model catalyst studies to date. Point defects have been suggested to be responsible for much of the activity at oxide surfaces and the ability to identify these features and track their reactions with such species as oxygen and water represents a major advance in our ability to explore surface reactions. Meanwhile, Baddeley and Richardson concentrate on the effects of chirality at surfaces, and on the important field of surface chirality and its effects on adsorption, in a chapter that touches on one of the fundamental questions in the whole of science - the origins of life itself ... [Pg.258]

Crump K. 1997. Evaluation of the Boston study of effectiveness of soil abatement in reducing children s blood lead, with particular emphasis upon the EPA (1996) reevaluation. ICF Kaiser, Ruston, Louisiana. Report to Seeger, Potter, Richardson, Luxton, Joselow Brooks. March 13, 1997. [Pg.506]

For cationic zeolites Richardson (79) has demonstrated that the radical concentration is a function of the electron affinity of the exchangeable cation and the ionization potential of the hydrocarbon, provided the size of the molecule does not prevent entrance into the zeolite. In a study made on mixed cationic zeolites, such as MgCuY, Richardson used the ability of zeolites to form radicals as a measure of the polarizing effect of one metal cation upon another. He subsequently developed a theory for the catalytic activity of these materials based upon this polarizing ability of various cations. It should be pointed out that infrared and ESR evidence indicate that this same polarizing ability is effective in hydrolyzing water to form acidic sites in cationic zeolites (80, 81). [Pg.302]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.338 ]




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