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SAP

CaH24N.,03P2,(Me2N)2P(0)0P(0)(NMe2)z. It is not highly toxic to insects when used as a contact insecticide, but is readily absorbed by the roots and leaves of plants and translocated in the sap, so that the plant becomes toxic to species feeding on it. [Pg.353]

Roos augmented double- and triple-zeta ANO Available for Fl(8.v4/i) to i sAp id) through Zn(2Lvl5/il0r/6/) to (2Lvl5/il0r/6/4 ). [Pg.88]

E. R. Panick, L. R. Smith, J. A. Russell and W. E. Likos, "Laboratory Evaluation of Safety-Related Additives for Neat Methanol Euel," SAP Paper 902156, (SP 840), Society of Automotive Engineers, Warrendale, Pa., Oct. 1990. [Pg.435]

U. Hilger, G. Jain, E. Scheid, and P. Pischinger, "Development of a Direct Injected Neat Methanol Engine for Passenger Car AppHcations," SAP Paper 901521, SAE Euture Transportation Technology Conf. and Expo. (San Diego, Calif., Aug. 13—16,1990). [Pg.435]

Dispersions of flake aluminum powders having surface oxide up to 14 wt % Al O have been pressed, sintered, and worked to a material known as sintered aluminum powder (SAP). This product exhibits high strength at elevated temperatures. Nickel containing small additions of thoria, known as TD-nickel, is also a high temperature cermet. [Pg.191]

The function of the essential oil in the plant is not fully understood. Microscopic examination of plant parts that contain the oil sacs readily shows their presence. The odors of flowers are said to act as attractants for insects involved in pollination and thus may aid in preservation and natural selection. Essential oils are almost always bacteriostats and often bacteriocides. Many components of essential oils are chemically active and thus could participate readily in metaboHc reactions. They are sources of plant metaboHc energy, although some chemists have referred to them as waste products of plant metaboHsm. Exudates, which contain essential oils, eg, balsams and resins, act as protective seals against disease or parasites, prevent loss of sap, and are formed readily when the tree tmnks are damaged. [Pg.296]

Supported aqueous phase (SAP) catalysts (16) employ an aqueous film of TPPTS or similar ligand, deposited on a soHd support, eg, controlled pore glass. Whereas these supported catalysts overcome some of the principal limitations experienced using heterogeneous catalysts, including rhodium leaching and rapid catalyst deactivation, SAP catalysts have not found commercial appHcation as of this writing. [Pg.469]

Paint is one of the most common and widely used materials in home and building constmction and decoration (see Building materials). Its broad use comes from its abiHty to provide not only improved appearance and decoration but also protection of a substrate to which it is appHed. Evidence of the historical uses of paint goes back over 25,000 years to cave paintings found in Europe. The Bible describes pitch being used to coat and protect Noah s Ark. Over 10,000 years ago in the Middle East, various minerals and metals such as lime, siHca, copper and iron oxides, and chalk were mixed and reacted to produce many colors. Resins from plant sap and casein were also used. Over 2000 years ago in Asia, resins refined from insect secretions and sap from trees were used to make clear lacquers and varnishes (2). [Pg.540]

Opium is the dried, powdered sap of the unripe seed pod of Papaver somniferum, a poppy plant indigenous to Asia minor. Theophrastus described its medical properties in the third century BC, but the Sumerians, ca BC 4000, probably perceived its utility. Arab physicians knew of the dmg, and Arab traders carried it to the Orient where it was used as a treatment for dysentery. Paracelsus is credited with repopularizing the dmg in western Europe in the early sixteenth century by formulating opium into "laudanum", which is still in use. More than 20 different alkaloids (qv) of two different classes comprise 25% of the weight of dry opium. The benzylisoquinolines, characterized by papaverine [58-74-2] (1.0%), a smooth muscle relaxant, and noscapine [128-62-1] (6.0%), an antitussive agent, do not have any analgesic effects. The phenanthrenes, the second group, are the more common and include 10% morphine (1, = R = H), 0.5% codeine [76-57-3], C gH2 N03, (1, R = H, R = CH3), and 0.2 thebaine [115-37-7], C 2H2 N03, (2). [Pg.381]

Natural Rubber. To obtain natural mbber (NR), the Hevea hrasiliensis tree is tapped for its sap. The off-white sap is collected and coagulated. This process produces a high molecular weight substance which is natural mbber. The principal producing countries are Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, India, China, and Sri Lanka (see Rubber, natural). [Pg.231]

Another form of equalizing stains is through the use of sap stain. Color differences between the sapwood and late-growth area of the lumber can be made uniform by using this type of stain. Sap stains are usually alcohol-based dye stains that tie lighter areas of the wood into darker areas. Transparency of sap stain and equalizers is important to ensure a natural, nonpainted appearance. [Pg.337]

A good example of the effect of regulations on wood stains is the issue surrounding methanol (qv). Methanol is the most widely used solvent for wood stains because of its fast-drying properties, low cost, and the solubiHty of dyes in methanol. Because methanol is Hsted by the U.S. EPA as a ha2ardous air poUutant (HAP), and because of the extremely low soHds of wood stains, it is most likely that wood stains such as NGR, body stains, and sap stains will need to be reformulated before the end of the twentieth century. [Pg.339]

Maple symp is prepared by concentrating (evaporation or reverse osmosis) sap from the maple tree to a concentrated solution containing predominantly sucrose. Its characteristic flavor and color are formed during evaporation. Maple symp is produced from the sap of several varieties of mature maple trees, eg, the sugar maple (/icer saccharum) and black maple A.cernigrunj). [Pg.296]

Just under the bark of a tree is a thin layer of cells, not visible to the naked eye, called the cambium. Here, cells divide and eventually differentiate to form bark tissue outside of the cambium and wood or xylem tissue iaside of the cambium. This newly formed wood on the iaside contains many living cells and conducts sap upward ia the tree, and hence, is called sapwood. Eventually, the inner sapwood cells become iaactive and are transformed iato heartwood. This transformation is often accompanied by the formation of extractives that darken the wood, make it less porous, and sometimes provide more resistance to decay. [Pg.320]

In America, the Indians had fermented beverages made from maple symp, com, acorns, and other nuts. In the time of Columbus, they were drinking me2cal distilled from the fermented sap of maguey. [Pg.79]

W. Beech, Fibre-Reactive Dyes, SAP International, New York, 1970. [Pg.302]

The anthocyanins are pH sensitive. Their color, in part, is deterrnined by the pH of the sap. Cyanin, for example, is red at pH 3, violet at 8, and blue at 11. However, there are other factors that affect the colors of the anthocyanins metallic salts, notably iron and aluminum, react with those anthocyanins containing vicinal hydroxy groups and produce highly colored complex compounds. Other factors are the colloidal condition of the cell sap and copigmentation (91). [Pg.400]

Vimses are also detectable with imprinted sensor materials thus leading to the first tme rapid on-line analysis for these species that are too small for e.g. light scattering experiments. So we e.g. succeeded in determining the tobacco mosaic vims (TMV) in plant saps as well as the Human Rhinovims (HRV). [Pg.298]

The other class of acrylic compatible tackifiers includes those based on ter-penes. Terpenes are monomers obtained by wood extraction or directly from pine tree sap. To make the polyterpene tackifiers, the monomers have to be polymerized under cationic conditions, typically with Lewis acid catalysis. To adjust properties such as solubility parameter and softening point, other materials such as styrene, phenol, limonene (derived from citrus peels), and others may be copolymerized with the terpenes. [Pg.504]

Natural rubber can be obtained from the sap of a number of plants and trees, the most common source is the Hevea brasiliensis tree. Although natural rubber was known in Central and South America before the arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1492, the first use as an adhesive was established in a patent dated in 1891. As rubber became an important part of the industrial revolution, the rubber adhesives market grew in importance. To comply with the increasing demand on natural rubber materials, plantations of Hevea brasiliensis trees were established in southeast Asia in the early 20th Century, mainly to supply the demand from the automobile industry. [Pg.581]

Polyterpenes. Polyterpenes is one of the first classes of non-polar tack-ifiers to be developed. Terpene monomers are a by-product in the extraction of rosin from wood stumps or tree sap, and from the extraction of oils from citrus fruits. The latter is the dominant source. As such, polyterpene prices generally mirror those of citrus fruits, which fluctuate substantially from one growing season to the next. Terpenes like rosin are cyclic, see Fig. 6, which is partly responsible for their excellent solvent properties. [Pg.720]

Reverse Osmosis. The process of osmosis is used by plants to obtain food and moisture from the soil. The density of the sap in the roots of the plant is greater than that of the soil water surrounding it. The root wall provides a semipermeable membrane, and the difference in suction across it is the osmotic pressure. [Pg.158]


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Ascent of Sap

Cambial sap

Cell sap

Crude sap

Functions SAPs)

Hydrogels SAPs)

In xylem sap

Maple sap

Nuclear sap

Plant sap

SAP (Saturates, Aromatics and Polars)

SAP (Semi-Armor-Piercing) Bombs

SAP APO

SAP SCM

SAP catalyst

SAP kinase

Sap beetle

Sap wood

Sap-feeding

Xylary sap

Xylem sap

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