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Transitions, 13 workers

Other essential disaster workers including police, firefighters, transit workers, public health staff, emergency management staff... [Pg.68]

FDNY rescue workers iron workers ESU police officers technical, law enforcement, construction workers transit workers and cleanup workers... [Pg.576]

Tapp LC, Baron S, Bernard B, et al. Physical and mental health symptoms among NYC transit workers seven and one half months after the WTC attacks. Am J Ind Med 2005 47 475 83. [Pg.588]

Since the development of grazing incidence x-ray diffraction, much of the convincing evidence for long-range positional order in layers has come from this technique. Structural relaxations from distorted hexagonal structure toward a relaxed array have been seen in heneicosanol [215]. Rice and co-workers combine grazing incidence x-ray diffraction with molecular dynamics simulations to understand several ordering transitions [178,215-219]. [Pg.135]

Small metal clusters are also of interest because of their importance in catalysis. Despite the fact that small clusters should consist of mostly surface atoms, measurement of the photon ionization threshold for Hg clusters suggest that a transition from van der Waals to metallic properties occurs in the range of 20-70 atoms per cluster [88] and near-bulk magnetic properties are expected for Ni, Pd, and Pt clusters of only 13 atoms [89] Theoretical calculations on Sin and other semiconductors predict that the stmcture reflects the bulk lattice for 1000 atoms but the bulk electronic wave functions are not obtained [90]. Bartell and co-workers [91] study beams of molecular clusters with electron dirfraction and molecular dynamics simulations and find new phases not observed in the bulk. Bulk models appear to be valid for their clusters of several thousand atoms (see Section IX-3). [Pg.270]

I.P.P.D and its relatives have become standard procedures for the characterization of the structure of both clean surfaces and those having an adsorbed layer. Somoijai and co-workers have tabulated thousands of LEED structures [75], for example. If an adsorbate is present, the substrate surface structure may be altered, or reconstructed, as illustrated in Fig. VIII-9 for the case of H atoms on a Ni(llO) surface. Beginning with the (experimentally) hypothetical case of (100) Ar surfaces. Burton and Jura [76] estimated theoretically the free energy for a surface transition from a (1 x 1) to a C(2x 1) structure as given by... [Pg.304]

The interest in vesicles as models for cell biomembranes has led to much work on the interactions within and between lipid layers. The primary contributions to vesicle stability and curvature include those familiar to us already, the electrostatic interactions between charged head groups (Chapter V) and the van der Waals interaction between layers (Chapter VI). An additional force due to thermal fluctuations in membranes produces a steric repulsion between membranes known as the Helfrich or undulation interaction. This force has been quantified by Sackmann and co-workers using reflection interference contrast microscopy to monitor vesicles weakly adhering to a solid substrate [78]. Membrane fluctuation forces may influence the interactions between proteins embedded in them [79]. Finally, in balance with these forces, bending elasticity helps determine shape transitions [80], interactions between inclusions [81], aggregation of membrane junctions [82], and unbinding of pinched membranes [83]. Specific interactions between membrane embedded receptors add an additional complication to biomembrane behavior. These have been stud-... [Pg.549]

Stigter and Dill [98] studied phospholipid monolayers at the n-heptane-water interface and were able to treat the second and third virial coefficients (see Eq. XV-1) in terms of electrostatic, including dipole, interactions. At higher film pressures, Pethica and co-workers [99] observed quasi-first-order phase transitions, that is, a much flatter plateau region than shown in Fig. XV-6. [Pg.552]

A catalyst may play an active role in a different sense. There are interesting temporal oscillations in the rate of the Pt-catalyzed oxidation of CO. Ertl and coworkers have related the effect to back-and-forth transitions between Pt surface structures [220] (note Fig. XVI-8). See also Ref. 221 and citations therein. More recently Ertl and co-workers have produced spiral as well as plane waves of surface reconstruction in this system [222] as well as reconstruction waves on the Pt tip of a field emission microscope as the reaction of H2 with O2 to form water occurred [223]. Theoretical simulations of these types of effects have been reviewed [224]. [Pg.723]

However, with the advent of lasers, the teclmique of laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) has probably become the single most popular means of detennining product-state distributions an early example is the work by Zare and co-workers on Ba + FLT (X= F, Cl, Br, I) reactions [25]. Here, a tunable laser excites an electronic transition of one of the products (the BaX product in this example), and the total fluorescence is detected as a... [Pg.873]

Recently, the state-selective detection of reaction products tluough infrared absorption on vibrational transitions has been achieved and applied to the study of HF products from the F + H2 reaction by Nesbitt and co-workers (Chapman et al [7]). The relatively low sensitivity for direct absorption has been circumvented by the use of a multi-pass absorption arrangement with a narrow-band tunable infrared laser and dual beam differential detection of the incident and transmission beams on matched detectors. A particular advantage of probing the products tluough absorption is that the absolute concentration of the product molecules in a given vibration-rotation state can be detenuined. [Pg.2085]

One of the first cluster embedding schemes was put forth by Ellis and co-workers [172]. They were interested in studying transition metal impurities in NiAl alloys, so they considered a TMAl cluster embedded in a periodic self-consistent crystal field appropriate for bulk p -NiAl. The field was calculated via calculations, as was the cluster itself The idea was to provide a relatively inexpensive alternative to supercell DET calculations. [Pg.2225]

To facilitate conformational transitions in the before-mentioned adenylate kinase, Elamrani and co-workers scaled all atomic masses by a large factor thus allowing the use of a high effective simulation temperature of 2000K ([Elamrani et al. 1996]). To prevent protein unfolding, elements of secondary structure had to be constrained. [Pg.73]

Evans and co-workers investigated the effect of a number of -symmetric bis(oxazoline) ligands on the copper(II)-catalysed Diels-Alder reaction of an N-acyloxazolidinone with cyclopentadiene. Enantiomeric excesses of up to 99% have been reported (Scheme 3.4). Evans et al." suggested transition state assembly 3.7, with a square planar coordination environment around the central copper ion. In this scheme the dienophile should be coordinated predominantly in an cisoid fashion in... [Pg.80]

The more extensive problem of correlating substituent effects in electrophilic substitution by a two-parameter equation has been examined by Brown and his co-workers. In order to define a new set of substituent constants. Brown chose as a model reaction the solvolysis of substituted dimethylphenylcarbinyl chlorides in 90% aq. acetone. In the case ofp-substituted compounds, the transition state, represented by the following resonance structures, is stabilized by direct resonance interaction between the substituent and the site of reaction. [Pg.138]

Consideration of (i), as in the work of Ridd and his co-workers, would constitute a transition state theory of the substituent effects. (2) alone would give an isolated molecule description, and (3), in so far as the charge on the electrophile was considered to modify those on the... [Pg.175]

Apphcations of ultrasound to electrochemistry have also seen substantial recent progress. Beneficial effects of ultrasound on electroplating and on organic synthetic apphcations of organic electrochemistry (71) have been known for quite some time. More recent studies have focused on the underlying physical theory of enhanced mass transport near electrode surfaces (72,73). Another important appHcation for sonoelectrochemistry has been developed by J. Reisse and co-workers for the electroreductive synthesis of submicrometer powders of transition metals (74). [Pg.265]

S. Uimasch and co-workers, "Transit Bus Operation with a DDC 6V-92TAC Engine Operating on Ignition-Improved Methanol," SME Paper 902161, (SP-840), SME Int. Fuels and Eubricants Meeting and Expo. (Tulsa, Oklahoma, Oct. 22—23,1990). [Pg.436]

M. W. Beckstead and co-workers, "Convective Combustion Modelling AppHed to Deflagation Detonation Transition," in Proceedings of the 12th JANNAF Combustion Meeting, Pub. No. 273, Chemical Propulsion Information Agency (CPIA), Johns Hopkins University, Laurel, Md., 1975. [Pg.26]

A. M. Rosen, 1. G. Martyushin, and co-workers. Scale Transition in Chemical Industry, Khimia, Moscow, 1980. [Pg.85]

W. Kaminsky and co-workers, iu W. Kaminsky and H. Sinn, eds.. International Symposium of Transition Metals and Organometallics as Catalysts for Olefin Polymeri tion, Sponger Press, Berlin, 1988, p. 291. [Pg.433]

No coherent threadline could be maintained and the extmdate flew off the windup as short, brittle, crystalline lengths. Not until many years later did other workers show that this polymer on cooling exhibits a mesophase transition directly from the isotropic melt to a smectic A phase. Good sources of information on Hquid crystals and Hquid crystal polymers are available (212—216). [Pg.306]

Trialkyl- and triarylarsine sulfides have been prepared by several different methods. The reaction of sulfur with a tertiary arsine, with or without a solvent, gives the sulfides in almost quantitative yields. Another method involves the reaction of hydrogen sulfide with a tertiary arsine oxide, hydroxyhahde, or dihaloarsorane. X-ray diffraction studies of triphenylarsine sulfide [3937-40-4], C gH AsS, show the arsenic to be tetrahedral the arsenic—sulfur bond is a tme double bond (137). Triphenylarsine sulfide and trimethylarsine sulfide [38859-90-4], C H AsS, form a number of coordination compounds with salts of transition elements (138,139). Both trialkyl- and triarylarsine selenides have been reported. The trialkyl compounds have been prepared by refluxing trialkylarsines with selenium powder (140). The preparation of triphenylarsine selenide [65374-39-2], C gH AsSe, from dichlorotriphenylarsorane and hydrogen selenide has been reported (141), but other workers could not dupHcate this work (140). [Pg.338]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.19 ]




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