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Survivability

There are few coking units in the world, and the majority of them is found in the United States, such that coke production is marginal. Different coking processes have been described, but only two have survived (see Chapter 10) ... [Pg.292]

Figure Bl.7.7. Summary of the other collision based experiments possible with magnetic sector instruments (a) collision-mduced dissociation ionization (CIDI) records the CID mass spectrum of the neutral fragments accompanying imimolecular dissociation (b) charge stripping (CS) of the incident ion beam can be observed (c) charge reversal (CR) requires the ESA polarity to be opposite that of the magnet (d) neutiiralization-reionization (NR) probes the stability of transient neutrals fonned when ions are neutralized by collisions in the first collision cell. Neutrals surviving to be collisionally reionized in the second cell are recorded as recovery ions in the NR mass spectrum. Figure Bl.7.7. Summary of the other collision based experiments possible with magnetic sector instruments (a) collision-mduced dissociation ionization (CIDI) records the CID mass spectrum of the neutral fragments accompanying imimolecular dissociation (b) charge stripping (CS) of the incident ion beam can be observed (c) charge reversal (CR) requires the ESA polarity to be opposite that of the magnet (d) neutiiralization-reionization (NR) probes the stability of transient neutrals fonned when ions are neutralized by collisions in the first collision cell. Neutrals surviving to be collisionally reionized in the second cell are recorded as recovery ions in the NR mass spectrum.
Oq, and, if die trap cycle field couples to die 0 long-range molecular state [57], die second Condon point occurs at 60 <3q. Survival against radiative relaxation improves greatly because die optical coupling occurs at much shorter... [Pg.2479]

Figure C3.2.12. Experimentally observed electron transfer time in psec (squares) and theoretical electron transfer times (survival times, Tau a and Tau b) predicted by an extended Sumi-Marcus model. For fast solvents tire survival times are a strong Emction of tire characteristic solvent relaxation dynamics. For slower solvents tire electron transfer occurs tlirough tire motion of intramolecular degrees of freedom. From [451. Figure C3.2.12. Experimentally observed electron transfer time in psec (squares) and theoretical electron transfer times (survival times, Tau a and Tau b) predicted by an extended Sumi-Marcus model. For fast solvents tire survival times are a strong Emction of tire characteristic solvent relaxation dynamics. For slower solvents tire electron transfer occurs tlirough tire motion of intramolecular degrees of freedom. From [451.
Reactions represent the dynamic aspect of chemistry, the interconversion of chemical compounds. Chemical reactions produce the compounds that are sold by industry and that play a big role in maintaining the standard of living of our society they transform the food that we take up in our body into energy and into other compounds and they provide the energy for surviving in a hostile environment and the energy for a large part of our transportation systems. [Pg.169]

When considering how the evolution of life could have come about, the seeding of terrestrial life by extraterrestrial bacterial spores traveling through space (panspermia) deserves mention. Much is said about the possibility of some form of life on other planets, including Mars or more distant celestial bodies. Is it possible for some remnants of bacterial life, enclosed in a protective coat of rock dust, to have traveled enormous distances, staying dormant at the extremely low temperature of space and even surviving deadly radiation The spore may be neither alive nor completely dead, and even after billions of years it could have an infinitesimal chance to reach a planet where liquid water could restart its life. Is this science fiction or a real possibility We don t know. Around the turn of the twentieth century Svante Arrhenius (Nobel Prize in chemistry 1903) developed this theory in more detail. There was much recent excitement about claimed fossil bacterial remains in a Martian meteorite recovered from Antarctica (not since... [Pg.16]

This reaction sequence is much less prone to difficulties with isomerizations since the pyridine-like carbons of dipyrromethenes do not add protons. Yields are often low, however, since the intermediates do not survive the high temperatures. The more reactive, faster but less reliable system is certainly provided by the dipyrromethanes, in which the reactivity of the pyrrole units is comparable to activated benzene derivatives such as phenol or aniline. The situation is comparable with that found in peptide synthesis where the slow azide method gives cleaner products than the fast DCC-promoted condensations (see p. 234). [Pg.256]

The reaction conditions applied are usually heating the amine with a slight excess of aldehyde and a considerable.excess of 2d-30hydrochloric acid at 100 °C for a few hours, but much milder ( physiological ) conditions can be used with good success. Diols, olefinic double bonds, enol ethers, and glycosidic bonds survive a Pictet-Spengler reaction very well, since phenol and indole systems are much more reactive than any of these acid sensitive functional groups (W.M. Whaley, 1951 J.E.D. Barton, 1965 A.R. Battersby, 1969). [Pg.292]

The nucleophilicity of the nitrogen atom survives in many different functional groups, although its basicity may be lost. Reactions of non-basic, but nucleophilic urea nitrogens provide, for example, an easy entry to sleeping-pills (barbiturates) as well as to stimulants (caffeine). The nitrogen atoms of imidazoles and indole anions are also nucleophilic and the NH protons can be easily substituted. [Pg.306]

It looks as though all that is needed is to prepare the acetylenic anion then alkylate it with methyl iodide (Section 9 6) There is a complication however The carbonyl group m the starting alkyne will neither tolerate the strongly basic conditions required for anion formation nor survive m a solution containing carbanions Acetyhde ions add to carbonyl... [Pg.723]

Some substances under El conditions fragment so readily that either no molecular ions survive or so few survive that it is difficult to be sure that the ones observed do not represent some impurity. Therefore, there is either no molecular mass information or it is uncertain. Under Cl conditions, very little fragmentation occurs and, depending on the reagent gas, ions [M + X]+ (X = H, NH4, NO, etc.) or [M - H] or [M - H]" or [M -1- X] (X = F, Cl, OH, O, etc.) are the abundant quasi-molecular ions, which do give molecular mass information. [Pg.4]

If a sample solution is introduced into the center of the plasma, the constituent molecules are bombarded by the energetic atoms, ions, electrons, and even photons from the plasma itself. Under these vigorous conditions, sample molecules are both ionized and fragmented repeatedly until only their constituent elemental atoms or ions survive. The ions are drawn off into a mass analyzer for measurement of abundances and mJz values. Plasma torches provide a powerful method for introducing and ionizing a wide range of sample types into a mass spectrometer (inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, ICP/MS). [Pg.87]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.174 , Pg.177 , Pg.178 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.401 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.352 ]




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