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Sizing Sodium

Fluid loss from the wellbore to the formation may be reduced using the less permeability damaging drilling fluid loss additives described above. In saturated brines, carefully sized sodium chloride particles have been used to temporarily plug the formation face (35). The particles may be dissolved by pumping a less saline fluid down the wellbore. [Pg.15]

Vesicles prepared from phosphatidylglyceryl Nanometer-sized, sodium-laurate-coated Fe304 particles In the presence of vesicles, lipids adopted a bilayer configuration around the iron oxide core 792... [Pg.175]

Grain boundaries offer some impedance to sodium ion conduction (i.e., approximately a factor of five increase for polycrystalline jS -alumina at 300 C) " . They also increase the activation energy for conduction by approximate factors of 1.6-2 depending on the temperature and grain size. Sodium ion grain boundary conduction is dominant in polycrystalline 8"-alumina when the grain size is very small (< 1-2 pm) and when the temperature is below 100°C. [Pg.352]

The TFC-S membrane shows a similar calcium rejection to the TFC-ULP membrane, but a significantly lower sodium rejection, which is more typical of NF. The TFC-S membrane shows a relatively stable performance over the pH range. However, neither membrane shows a pH effect, indicating that the ions are mostly retained due to their size. Sodium and calcium ions occur mostly in their dissociated form up to a pH of 10. [Pg.226]

Nabam Peracetic acid biocide, paper sizing Sodium dimethyidithiocarbamate Zinc dimethyidithiocarbamate biocide, personal care... [Pg.4908]

Turro and Lee [16] employed the luminescence method to determine the aggregation number for sodium perfluorooctanoate micelles. The aggregation number calculated from quenching of Ru(bpy)3 phosphorescence was found to be seven. Although this numerical value may be inexact, the aggregation number of perfluorooctanoate micelles is undoubtedly much smaller than that of micelles of corresponding hydrocarbon surfactants. In spite of the small size, sodium perflu-... [Pg.278]

Most solid surfaces are marred by small cracks, and it appears clear that it is often because of the presence of such surface imperfections that observed tensile strengths fall below the theoretical ones. For sodium chloride, the theoretical tensile strength is about 200 kg/mm [136], while that calculated from the work of cohesion would be 40 kg/mm [137], and actual breaking stresses are a hundreth or a thousandth of this, depending on the surface condition and crystal size. Coating the salt crystals with a saturated solution, causing surface deposition of small crystals to occur, resulted in a much lower tensile strength but not if the solution contained some urea. [Pg.281]

To date there is no evidence that sodium forms any chloride other than NaCl indeed the electronic theory of valency predicts that Na" and CU, with their noble gas configurations, are likely to be the most stable ionic species. However, since some noble gas atoms can lose electrons to form cations (p. 354) we cannot rely fully on this theory. We therefore need to examine the evidence provided by energetic data. Let us consider the formation of a number of possible ionic compounds and first, the formation of sodium dichloride , NaCl2. The energy diagram for the formation of this hypothetical compound follows the pattern of that for NaCl but an additional endothermic step is added for the second ionisation energy of sodium. The lattice energy is calculated on the assumption that the compound is ionic and that Na is comparable in size with Mg ". The data are summarised below (standard enthalpies in kJ) ... [Pg.75]

The ability of living organisms to differentiate between the chemically similar sodium and potassium ions must depend upon some difference between these two ions in aqueous solution. Essentially, this difference is one of size of the hydrated ions, which in turn means a difference in the force of electrostatic (coulombic) attraction between the hydrated cation and a negatively-charged site in the cell membrane thus a site may be able to accept the smaller ion Na (aq) and reject the larger K (aq). This same mechanism of selectivity operates in other ion-selection processes, notably in ion-exchange resins. [Pg.124]

Pour the reaction mixture into a 1-litre round-bottomed flaak, add 250 ml. of water, fit a still head and a condenser for downward distillation (Fig. II, 13, 3, but without the thermometer). Distil the mixture until about 125 ml. of distillate (two layers) have been collected. Saturate with salt (about 30 g. are required), and separate the upper layer of cj/cZohexanone extract the aqueous layer with 25-30 ml. of ether and combine the ether extract with the cycZohexanone layer. Dry with about 6 g. of anhydrous sodium or magnesium sulphate, filter the solution into a distilling flask of suitable size to which a condenser has previously been attached. Distil oflF the ether from a water bath—a beaker containing warm water is satisfactory. Distil the residual liquid from an air bath or a wire gauze, and collect the cyclohexanone at 153-156°. The yield is 16 g. [Pg.337]

It is frequently advisable in the routine examination of an ester, and before any derivatives are considered, to determine the saponification equivalent of the ester. In order to ensure that complete hydrolysis takes place in a comparatively short time, the quantitative saponi fication is conducted with a standardised alcoholic solution of caustic alkali—preferably potassium hydroxide since the potassium salts of organic acids are usuaUy more soluble than the sodium salts. A knowledge of the b.p. and the saponification equivalent of the unknown ester would provide the basis for a fairly accurate approximation of the size of the ester molecule. It must, however, be borne in mind that certain structures may effect the values of the equivalent thus aliphatic halo genated esters may consume alkali because of hydrolysis of part of the halogen during the determination, nitro esters may be reduced by the alkaline hydrolysis medium, etc. [Pg.392]

Ethyl bromoacetate (1). Fit a large modified Dean and Stark apparatus provided with a stopcock at the lower end (a convenient size is shown in Fig. Ill, 126, 1) to the 1-htre flask containing the crude bromoacetic acid of the previous preparation and attach a double surface condenser to the upper end. Mix the acid with 155 ml. of absolute ethyl alcohol, 240 ml. of sodium-dried benzene and 1 ml. of concentrated sulphuric acid. Heat the flask on a water bath water, benzene and alcohol will collect in the special apparatus and separate into two layers, the lower layer consisting of approximately 50 per cent, alcohol. Run ofi the lower layer (ca. 75 ml.), which includes all the water formed in the... [Pg.429]

Acrylonitrile reacts with the sodium salt of 4.5-dimethvl-A-4-thiazoline-2-thione (73J (R4 = R5 = Me) to yield 3-(2-cyanoethyl)-4.5-dimethyl-A-4-thiazoline-2-thione (74) (R4 = R, = Me) (Scheme 35 (160). Humphlett s studies of this reaction showed that the size of the R4 substituent is a determinant factor for the S versus N ratio (161. 162). If R4 == H, 100% of the N-substituted product (74) is obtained this drops to 50% when R4 = methyl, and only the S-substituted product (75) is obtained when R4 = phenyl. The same trend is observed with various CH2 = CH-X (X = C00CH3. COCH3) reagents (149). The S/N ratio also depends on the electrophilic center for CH2 = CH-X systems thus S-reaction occurs predominantly with acrylonitrile, whereas N-substitution predominates with methvlvinvlketone (149). [Pg.394]


See other pages where Sizing Sodium is mentioned: [Pg.11]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.569]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.656]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.1175]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.5560]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.569]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.656]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.1175]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.5560]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.556]    [Pg.484]    [Pg.1371]    [Pg.1372]    [Pg.2589]    [Pg.2786]    [Pg.2788]    [Pg.2902]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.401]    [Pg.1121]    [Pg.12]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.451 ]




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