SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT ARBACAUSKAS,A. - ARBUZOV, A. E.

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ARBkCAUBKKS,A., sportsmen-planerist (g. Uunns) 0 Ap 155. t8 Of Kaunas. Kryl.rod. 6 no.4:1 with glider Pilo (MLRA 8:9) (Kaunafk-Glidere (Aeronautics)) AMCNAUMM, A. [Arbacauskast AA, (g.Vil'rVue) New standard glider &71,rod, 12 no.ZsZO-21.r 161. (MM 14W (hiders (Aeronautics)) -ARBACHLESEW, A. k now Soviet i3tandard glider. Repules .14 nO.7sl7 Ti 161. AGOSHOIlly M.I.; VOROITYUK, A.S.; Angles of inclination of main ore ebutes. Fiz.-tekh. probl. razrab. pol. iskop. no.5:66-69 165. (MTRt 19:1) 2. Institut gornogo dela imeni Skochinskogo, Moi~va. ARBAlp_~-; LFZKOVA, Zazana; LCKGAURROVA, Daria ~-_ 1;-.. Effect of lowered incubation temperatures on Nucleic acid end pro- tein synthesis by a maeophilic and a psychrophilic bacterium. Folia miorobiol. (Praha) 10 no.3:168-175 W165. 1. Department of Microbiology# Research Institute of the Refr ~' emting.. Industry, Bratislava. W, ARBMMV:l B. M. "The Motion of a Solid Body under Constraints Subject to Friction", Trudy Seminara po Teoriy Mashin3 Vol 11, No 51, 1951 . page 16. XXLL - 2 In the same issue: "The Dynamic Investigation of Mechanisms.," page 36 1. ARBATY IY 2. USSR (600) 4. Clubs 7. Club of 500 children, Rabotnitea 31 no. 4, 1953. 9. Month List of Russian Accessions, Library of Congress, APRIL -1953, Uncl. AA6AI', 'rul, ---- -- - ---- - - -- -- -- Moving Pictures They help create films. Rabotnitsa 30, No. 1, 1952. Monthly List of Russian Accessions, Library of Congress, March 1952. Unclassified. I I- ~ . . . I. . . ARBAT, ItNovoye i maloizvestnoye v izuchenii russkogo iskusstva." report submitted for 7th Intl Cong, Anthropological & Ethnological- Sciences, Moscow, 3-10 Aug 64. ARBATOV, A.A. Upper jurassio reefs of the liorthern Caucasum. Neftegas, geol. i geofiz. no.nt3-6163 (MIRA 17 Z7) 1. Vsesoyuznyy nauohno-lssledovatellski7 aeologaranvedoolmyy neftyanoy instituts, Moskva. , lr~, SOLOVIIEV.0 A.V.; ARWOV, A.4 TURPAMAY G .1,0 Carbonate reservoirs in Mesozoic sediment,3 of Ciz;caiicasia and the Northern Caucasus. Geol. nefti i gaza 0, no.6:40-4.4 Je 165. 0~1-11',A 1-6:8) 1. Vaesoyuznyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy geologorazvedochnyy neftyanoy institut, Moskva. , T. D. Jul 53 USSR/Medicine - Dysentery "Characteristic Traits of the Epidemiology of Dysentery," T. D. Arbatova Zhur Mikro, Epid, i Lmun, No 7, p 24 The incidence of dysentery varies from one city rayon to another and within the individual rayons, depending on sanitary conditions. The relative weight of summer infections with dysentery in the total annual number of infections is decreasing. The proportion of adults infected with dysentery is on the increase, while the number of infected children is decreasing. The proportion of dysenter7 in the total incidence of intestinal diseases shows a slight rise due to better methods of diagnosis. 267T39 Teclmolo_y - Cheracal h-oducts and Their if. Application. Fats and oils. Waxes. Soaps mv! Deter--- rents. Flotation Arents. Abs Jour Ref Zhur Ehirlilra, 116 10, 1959, 36654 Author 'Bronizz, H. i -Arbatowalm, M., LesczynsIm, H., OledzIm' R.; Inst Title Thl e Deten-Anatio-n oftthe Peroxide Nunber at the Evaluntioa of VeGetable Food'Oils. Ori Pub Roczn. Panetwi zald. IAG-) 19531 9, 110 3, 255-266. X)stract The causes and the characteristics of peanut, soybean and rapeseed oils durin,-, production and the aiumal stora,,e in warehouses havd been investie,-ated. It was established- t.hat t1he increase in liquid and solid oils is not an indi- cation of rancidity, bedause such oils possess littleaci- dity; for exa;rple, 0.84ri (0.25%. taking oleic acid into account), and-the peroxide nuxaber )PN) is equal to, or Card 1/2 ARBATSYAYA, A.N.; ZHEIDDEV I.S.; ZIRNIT, U.A.; SUSjjCj!Tj,7SKjY, ',',.I,',. Low-frequency vibrational spectra of single cL'YsUils of tviglycine sulfate and Rochelle salt In phase transitions. Krista-lograftia 10 no.3:335-337 MY-Je t65. (MmA 18:7) 1. Institut kristallografij. AN SSSR. ZOGRABYAN, Suren Gegamovich; ARBATSKATA,Yu.D., redaktor; GLUKHOYEDOVA, G.A., tekhnicheekly (Diagnostic surgery in diseases Diagnosticheskie operatell pri nogo mozga. Moskva, Goe,izd-vo of the brain and spinal cord) zabolovanilakh golovnogo i spin- med. lit-ry, 1955. 195 P. (MLRA 9:2) (BRAIN--SURGIRY) (SPINAL CCRD--SURGERY) ARBATSKAYA, Tu.D.; KOGAN, V.H.; PATROV, D.I.; PISOXXNNYY, R.Taos' CH=OYA# I ---wr Studying patients in the first stage of hypertension with an initial cerebral syndrome in connection with their working conditions. Zhur. nevr. i psikh. 56 no.6-.472-477 156. (MLRA 9:8) 1. Xafedra vrachebno-trudovoy_ekspertizy (zav. prof. N.K.Bogolepov) TSentralinogo instituta usovekshen'stvovani7a vrache7 i TSeatrallmy institut ekspertizy trudospoBobnosti i trudovogo u9troyetva invaltdov (dir. - prof, O.LSokolvaikov), Moskva, (HYPARTINSION, compl. funct. disord, of brain inielegraphers, determ. of clin. manifests) (BRAIN, die. funct. disord. in telegraphers with hypertension, determ. of clin, manifest.) (OCCUPATIONAL DIS&SRS cerebral funct. disord. in telegraphers with hypertansiou..determ of clin. manifest.) BOGOISPOV, N.K.; ARBATSIATA, Tu.D. [Disability evaluation in case of brain injuries] Yrachabno- tridovaia ekspertiza pri travmkh golovnogo- mosga. Kiskft. (MM 10.-'4) Nedgiz, 1957. 101 P. (BRAM-WOUNDS AND INaRIES) (DISABILITY-EVALUATIOII) I SOKOLIMOV, 0.1.; mm, Yu.D.,- DUKHOVNAYA, O.L. Prophylactic significance of rational rehabilitation in sluggish and latent rheumatie fever. Vop.revm- 2 no.3:65-69 JI-S 11" (MI11A 16:2) 1, Iz kafedry vrachebno-trudovoy ekspertizy (zav. - prof. I.I. Sokollnikov) TSentrallnogo instituta usovershenstvovmiya vrachey (rektor M.D. Kovrigina), MoBiva. (W%IATIG FEM) (OCCUPATIONAL THMAPY) - -- -- ~/ - tj E - -- - - A P,13 A-TT I A- 1u; S e" 1 = LAZUTKA, P., mad, m. kand.; BITE, A.; ARRACIAUMUM, L. On the problem of improved mnitary conditions of dairy farms, of the quality of milk and of working conditions for milk maids in the Repub- lic. Svelk. apsaug. 7 no.4(76):36-42 Ap 162o 1. Vilniaus Epideniologijos ir higienos m. t. institutas. (DAIRYING) L ~'2 -60, MI-M011959 SWWE CODE: UR/0070/6~/010/0036/0335/0337 Sushchins!4z" M, M. -AUTHOR: ~~tskmt A* No* Zhaludev, I. S.; Zirnit, U. Institute of CrntallograE~6 AN SSSR (1hatitut kriatallograft AN 3SSR)_.'-:- nTLE LOW-frequency vibra ra.- 6k-iA and rochelle salt tional--.6pedt gj:nin a 1116nocrystals during phase.transitions SOURCE:- Kristallograftya# vs 10, no- 3,.1965, 335-337 TOPIC TAGS: Phase transition, Raman spectrum# Curie point, light scattering, 614tal lattice vibration,-quartz crystal-, crystal symmetr single crystal ABSTRACM Raman scattering spectra ~f monocryptals of triglyvine sulfate are :studied near the Curie temperatur4i (4490C) it and those of Rochelle salt, no" th' a :!Upper Curl-% po:Lnt (4240C). -According to.the Ginsbu~loevanyuk theory, the spectrall stmcturi~.-X the'acattered light-should change markedly near the p1mae transition ;Points of tho second kind. This chanp:sh6uld be characterized by a decrease in the frequency'of certain lattice vibrations when the temperatureia raised. At the :transition point of the second kind the frequency of these vibirations should become -zero ami the corresponding Fa~. lines intensify, Experiments with quartz appear- '.to support the G-L theory,. "Triglycine sulfate undergoes a phango.in oymmetry.upon passing through the Curie lpoiht* A right-angle prismatic monocrystal was illuminated along the Y and then -j along the Z axis, and th scattered light was observed,viong the Z axis in.both cases. A line at 47 ce appeared in'the Raman spectra:when the direction of UDC: 548.0:% 537 Card, 1/2 "M KRESHKOV, A.P.; KHUDYAKOVA, T.A.; AUROV, A.P.j AftBATSKIY, A.P. Chronoconductometric method for determining maleic anhydride in its copolymer with styrene and sodium styromaleinate. Plast. massy no.7t 51-55 165. 1 (MIRA 18:7) ARBATSM,-A.- V.--- - - - - 1. "SpAfi6iis'd Several Homologues of N-Substituted Pyrrole and Pyrrolidine," Zhur. Obshch. Khim., 19., No.9, 1949. lab. Organic Chemistry im. Zelinskiy, Moscow State U. ARBATSTrY, A. V. "N-Phenylpyrrolidine, and Its lReactions." Sub 20 Apr 51, Moscow Order of Lenin State U iment M, V. Lomonosov. Dissertations presented for science and engineering dpgre" in Moscow during 1951. SO: Sum. No. 480. 9 May 55 YURIYEV. Yu.K.; KOR=OVA, I-S-; ARBATSKIY, A.V. ,I, ~I;a Nitration, bromination and carbo3ylation of 11-phanylpyrrolidine. TZV Akacl.naWk SSSR; Xhim.otd. no.2:166-171 Mar-Apr 51. (CLML 20:7) 1. laboratory of Organic Chonistry imeni N.D. Zelinskiy of Moscow State University. P\8 RTSKIY, ts -R ArlA WOW U ZZ, 71SR " ~ ' 1 Nauk No. 1, 83-7(19,1,3i. follmhig romj~Lr. of ilm rm.*h. and % yit-ld givvill gl~pd; froin N fertfit amines with J54 1-pyrt olid iql licuumv-solfoa% I chin ride,jo, agrccmcnt%iith theory(CIA, Z,~URV)all wt-rc fit, , A 1,10t inv nctiv ~* inst vftra sti flic wcw tt 41 e- ~ c y p p ; ' 'L 11 f ff M rom ho ivatex) , 193 4 . , 11, 2-py ( red,-broivn amorphous powdet- sol. in ni(h, (pbik) and alkal- in (yellow), dmomp. 315', 60-8; 11)7.6* (from gincial AcOll), 61: if, cyclohrx).1, lirlit -dolet 298 * (fifint glacini AcOll), 71; 11, C11,C111011, I 2~.O (from ivater) 73%v. A. 1 M .1 WEVERM , ME.' Rv * li~-'- then rtt%m icstd. 0"t lkrtsl u uqaito~f 4;~rs*. to , ' h pbo d wi id L hw i A rile a matc t x . il c' [us 30" PA6 * 'HCI:*pd AcOHj freO of M-with Na~SM and ilPtd- -Ad WTMnb;Uvd 4 t %: I ENH n -tatto. cave-w t 011 OU5% of the - I h:aq~. No he 'as OM- ' Nfrom ficrolae); whicir 9-hsi~ C 218~17 A . . q i r reitivolor Ju dir. To tA Uichler~-; ketone Wat W d dS ro."All 4 =dk sak': wlth~ N OH t , th t. WAS fd give (CM" 't Uut bolW *Itb dit. HCI I hr.' . . out t e'"L ividi NRCI) 7050' bis(p4imethymmino- l Y la i !t Ml I = f l fi . l t 'Wvlolit' wh Ch lost it 0 truent WI, P1 OM tM' MINn4 b4$V. 0010t- Ifiv*t3YI)ji~ 'd kwl~ 1A is znl. con ItCl an& 15 mi. ~wemv-%*W h l in (A toO*,uvatedivith4g.KCi~6O~;ati(ist e i a d f Z C v n t jn~ o W1 A ew l, g hat MZ=60~ In the fotmeorem ZnCt? It 'C sjM#C jKZA; tW gives gre"S-Eoltm W &nd anilin, In oreg~nc Y L. K joiT -j",-J V. AID P - 3582 Subject USSR/Chemistry Card 1/1 Pub. 152 - 19/20 Authors Yurlyev, Yu. K., A. V. Arbatskiy, 1. K. Korobitsyna, and V. M. AndreyeV - ---WA Title Preparation of N-phenylpyrrolidine from 114-butanediol and aniline in the presence of aluminosilicate Periodical Zhur. prikl. khim., 2-8, 7, 781-782, 1955 Abstract Under optimum reaction conditions the yield of N-phenypyrrolidine obtained was 66.1%. The-prepara- tion is described in detail. One table, 5 references, all Russian (1937-1950). Institution None Submitted Je 30, 1954 JIRBATSKIY, A.V.j GRIGORIYEV, A.A.; KLIMNKO, M.Ya. Preparation of a new flotation reagent - 1,l,3-triethoxyIr:t&ize. Khim.prom. no.3tl76-181 Mr 162. WRA 15W (Batane) ALIIEV, A.D.; _ApkTpk~y, SHISHKINA, M.V.; KRENTSELI, B.A. Stereospecific polymrization of trans-l-phenyl-1,3-butadiene. Dokl. AV SSSR 153 no.2033-335 N 163. (NIRA 16:12) 1. Institut neftekhimlicheskogo sinteza AN SSSR. Predstavleno akademikom V.A.Karginym. RMAIMAINIMI'M M, -I 'WWRIVAll rVI'M IM IRA71Y) 'Sa A. APP_`,YEV., S. A.--"The Polytherm of Solubility of Sodium and Potassium. Chlorides in Sucrose Solutions at 20-60 Degrees, and The Solid Phascs.11 Acad Sci Kazakh SSR. Inst of Chemical Sciences. Frunze., 1955. (Dissertation for the Degree of Candidate of Chcmical Sciences). SO: Knizhna)m Letopis' No. 27, 2 july 1955 DRUZHININ, I.G.; ARBAYET. S.A. Solubility and the solid phases of ternar7 systems consisting of sucrose, sodium chloride, potassium chloride, and water at 20. 40, and 600. I%v.AN Kir.SSR.Ser.est.i tekh.nauk 2 no.3: 95-im 6o. (MIRA 13:9) (sucrose) (Salt) (Potassium chloride) ARBAYEVP.S.A. Thermal solubility diagram of the ternary system sodium chloride- sucrose-water. Report No. 1. Uch. zap. Biol.-pochv. fak. Kir. un. no.7:189-205 158. (MIRA 15:10) (Salt) (Sucrose) , (Solubility) DRUZHININ.-I.G.-I-BAKASOVA Z--- -ARBAYEV ---IMANAKUNOVj - Bi-p- otNT.- red.-;- - VAZHEYKO, I.V., red:'iz~-~,-ARKHih, M.G., tekhn. red. [Reaction of saccharose with sodium) potassiump calciump and magnesium chlorides]Vzaimodeistvie eakharozy s khloridami nar- tiia, kaliia, kalltaiia i magniia. FrLmze, Izd-vo Akad. nauk Kirgizekoi SSR, 1962. 145 P. (MIRA 16:2) (Suorose) (Alkali metal chlorid0o) (Alkaline earth chlorides)- DR70ZHININ, I.G.; BAKASOVA, Z.; ARBAIEV'_Z.A'; IMANAKUNOV, B., otv.red.; .VOZHEYKO,I.Vog redoizd-va; ANOKHINA, M.G., tekhn. red. (Reaction of saccharose with sodium, potassium, cal,sium, and Inagnesilim] Vzaimodeistvie sakharozy a khloridami. natriia, kalliap kalltaiia i magniia. I Frunze, Iza-vo Akad.nauk Kirgizskoi SSR, 19620 145 P. ~MIRA 16:4) (Sucrose) (Chlorides) NIKITINA, Ye.V.; AYDAROVA, R.A.; DZHANAYEVA, V.Y..; UBUKEYEVA, A.U.; SUDNITSYNA, I.G.; SJUANOVA, R.114.; GORBUNGVA, N.V.; TKACHENKO, V.I.; FILATOVA, N.S.; CHERNEVA, O.V.; VVEDENSKIY, A.I., nauchn. red.; VYKHODTSEET, I.V., otv. red. [Flora of the Kirghiz S.S.R.; a guide to the plarts of the Kirhiz S.S.R.] Flora Kirgizskoi SSR; opredelitell rastenii Kirgizskoi SSR. Frunze, Ilim. Vol.11. 1965. 606 p. (MIRA 18:11) ARBATT# I.ID I- - .ExPerience-with the continuous method of fermentation. Spirt. prom. 24 no.8:25-27 158. (MIRA 11:12) (Blagoveshchensk (Amur Province-Fermentation)) DIMBARENDik.ER, M.I.; SEREMENNIKOVA, K.L.; TEMOVSKIY, V.A., FrIMAnAll uchastiyes SHAROV, P.14.~ NOVIKOV, L.Z.- LURIYE.. E.I.,- P"i.SIM, y P M.K.; KARABIN, M. [deceased]; KOSTIN, L.I.; FROLOV, V.P., 14EDVEDEV, F.V.; GELIMHANOV, S.G.; DONDAR', V.G.; TIMOFEYEV, P.I.; MININA., L.V.~ AREEKOL F.F.; NIKOLAYEV, N.I.; YAROSLAV, T.Ye.; NUOLL'PUM, V.U. "MUM--Aww Gasification of mazut under pressure in a s+veam.o)Wgen blast. Gaz. prom. 9 no.lls49-50 164. (WIRA 17:12) TAREYEVA, I.Ye.; PRISS, I.S.; ROZANOVA, L.B.; ARBRIINA,:N.S.; WMIELAT) V.M.; PODIYAGELI, M.I. Outcome of Botkin's disease. Vop.med.virus. no.q1254-259 164. (MIRA 18:4) 1. Iz laboratorii deystvitalinogo chlena MIN SSSIR prof','B.M. Tarayeva. ARBENIYEV, A., inzh.; ZOBNIN, A., inzh. Effect e method of winter concreting. N& stroi. ROB. 3 no.10: 23-24 0 162. (MIRA 16:6) (Concrete construction-Cold weather conditions) ,,ARB.'-;N lyev A Placing concrete in winter vith brief electric heating of' the mix. Stroitall 9 no-5:25-27 My *163. (MIRA 16:9) (Concrete construction-cold weather conditiens) - -- - -- -,- -- ---- - -- 51'--- -- --- - -- -- -- - - - - -- ARBENOY.EV, A., insh, Open pit working of clay under winter conditions in Kuznetsk Basin. Stroi. mt. 4 no.9:29-30 S '58. (mm 11:10) (Mi2netak Ranin-Clay) ARBBNIYBV, A.S. inzh. Learning to work with the keramzit unit at a brick factory. Stroi.mat, 6 no.4:26-27 AP l6o. (mm 13:6) (rVokovo-Building materials industr7-3quipment and suppli6s) ARBENIYEVy A.S., inzh. Electric curing of a mixture and strength of concretes. Stroi. mat. 9 no.,10:39-40, 3 of cover 0 163. (MIRA 16:11) aEENtYEV, A.S.., inzb. - ~--- Study of the propertieB of concrete placed in Siberia in the wintertime..Bet. i zhel.-bet. 9 no.11:519-521 N 163. (MIRA V.-I) z _-~ _- ARBEN I YEV A 0 S. I9 Winter concreting with electric beating of the mix. Prom. stroi. 40 no.9:27-29 162. (MIRA 15:12.) (Conc~ete-cotwitxuAio*"Cold weather conditions) M~ ARBILNIYEV A S,. inzh. ARBEWYEV, Aleksandr Sorgeyevich, inzh.; AFTONOVA, N.N., itzli.,red. (Concreting unier winter conditioto, with electrically heated mixes; according to mater-laln of the Novokuznetsk Section of the West-Siberian Br,,mch of the Academy of Construction and Architecture of *,P- Betuniroxanie v zimnikh usloviiakh s elektropodogrevom betonnoi smesi; po materialam llovo:ru,,7netslkl--;gc, otdeleniia Zapadilo-Sibirskogo fi- liala ASiA SSSR. Voskva, Goostrciiz~3-.t, 1963. 33 p. (I-!IRA 17: 10) 1. Akademiya stroitellstva i arkh,.taktury SSSR. Nauchno- -issledovatellskiy institut organizatsii, mekhanizaLsii j. teklmicheskoy pomoshcht stroitellstvu. 2. Ilukovoditell Is- boratorii stroitellnykh inaterialov Novolmznetskogo otdele.- niya Zapadno-Sibirskogo filiala Akaderrdi stroitellstva i arkhitektury SSSi (for Arbenlyev). AFJ-3h S.j, inzh.; KOZLOV, A.D., inzh.; LEPEKBIN, I.P., inzh.; SUDAKOV, V.P., inzh. Winter concreting of foundations with electric curing of the concrete mix, Prom. sturoi. 42 no.9:41-42 5 16!,. (mm -17:3.0) i I i L 05912-67 EWT(m) ACC NRi AP6015957 SOURCE CODE: UR/0097/66/ooo/ooi/002T/0029 AUTHOR: ~Arbenlyev, A. S. (Candidate of technical sciences) ORG; None TITLE: A new method for winter application of concrete SOURCE; Beton i zbelezobeton, no. 1, 1966, 27-29 TOPIC TAGS: concrete, concrete equipment, hydration, transportation equipment ABSTRACT: The author proposes a broader application of the vacuum bottle method which consists of brief electric heating of the concrete mixture before laying. A study is described which was carried out at the Novokuznetsk Division of the Ural Scientific Research Institute of Reinforced Concrete under the direction of Professor S. A. Mironov on the effect of low temperatures on concrete mixture dueing transportation. Grade 200 concrete was used with a water to cement ratio of 0.4-0.7 and cone runoff from 2 to 12 cm with various admixtures of NaCl. CaC12 and sulfite waste liquor which did not exceed more than 2% of the total cement weight. All test specimens were made. from the same batch and held at various temperatures to ensure fully comparable re- sults. The concrete mixture was cooled in a special container and heated by current flowing through.the container walls. The specimens were tested after outside exposure for 1, 3 and 28 days and 28 days after standard storage. The results show that con- uDc: 693-547.3 f 4c~ NRI AP6015957 0 crete mixture cooling during transportation under cold conditions causes intense ce- ment liydration.' Concrete strength can be increased from 20 to 30% at low concrete mixture temperature or by using cold fillers during hardening under ordinary conditio High temperature heating of fillers and long transportation in cold weather produces heat losses and induces concrete hardening which interferes with application. Short duration electric concrete mixture heating before laying does not disturb the structu of the mixture and increases cement hydration. The strength of concrete produced in this manner is 2 to 3 times better than that of ordinary concrete. Electric heating before concrete laying makes it possible to broaden the application of the vacuum bottle"method. This ensures 50% mark hardness with normal physical and mechanical pr perties at temperatures up to 2430K in average structures with surface modules up to 10. The use of quick hardening cements or warming molds makes it possible to achieve 70% mark strength of the concrete before it freezes.~ Orig..art. has: .10 figures. SUB,CODE: 1l/ SUBM DATE: None/ ORIG REP- oo4 kh Card ARM, T Y J. 117dr-auli.- duplex cylinder. Stroj vyr 9 no.7--336 161. 3. VyBbq=y ustav kabolov a izolantovs, Bratislava. ARBET. Jan Braking drum for unwinding of fine fabrics. Stroj vyr 10 no.7:359 162. 1. Vyskumny ustav kabelov, Bratislava. 4vzf"T) Je-n Synch;!arilzing revolutions &nd circumfersttial speeds by mean3 of hydromotors. Stroj vyr 12 no.8--583-584 164. 1. Ru,~:earch InsLitut.P of Cables ~,nd lnsulfit-.~nj, BraOslava. V i', ~~ .,. - ~P", - ~ .% 4 ~ Mi,M -6 ~ R - M, , -. M' I-SIM."M 19 ~"; .0-A. r 91.2, I , . MEMORIES ME.. wt-,:i I TSURINOVA, Ye.G.; ARBISMAN, D.M. Dynamics of protein fractions in the serum of fibrinolytic blood in relation to the period of its preparation and preservation. Probl. gemat. i perel. krovi 9 no.3%45-49 Mr 164. (MIRA, 17t10) 1. Nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut skoroy pomoshchi imeni Yu.Yu. Dzhanelidze (dir.- prof. G.D. Shushkov). ARBIT Ye A - SEREBRENNIKOV$ V.V. Compounds of rare-earth elements and yttrium with vanedic acids. Zhur. neorg. 10 no.2:410-413 F 165. (MIPA 18:11) 1. Submitted JulY 5, 196,10 -""JALjt~A Design and calculation of the structure of artificial fur w4th a woven base. Leh. prom. no.3:63-66 JI-S 165, WIRA M9) ARB.1T.AN,.A1.A.; BYCHKOVA, I.I.; GORDIYENKO, M.G. (Hordilenko, M.H.1; KUCHERp I*Ee Interfacing fabrics for the collars and cuffs of men's shirts made from synthetic materials. Leh.prom. no.1:9-10 1*-Kr 164. (M1RA 19:1) Antensifical-om of the t-tyrerne po)yme'Tizetion pla"al fo- the produrtioL of Wymers with predeternimad propemes. The prelerm: fonnuLl Colltault7d 5t),Tc,;,t !(A. H-O Attt, K Lastc--r oiJ sc~i, 2X~S g , 13.4. And 4~76 minol. C 1r"' el were reproilu~-tA of the mt,i. wt. uf the polymers obtlLtued dur ing diffen mt polymmizadun times, tht kinetic curves at vario-as pMymeyizAti,~n ratr~ ~t difle.~nt texups., uIr M%~ At fifl,~E I ec-- . -j the i f ~ 1,; 1 hr sysLeln ARBIVANT, S.11,1.$ Gand Tech Sci (diss) I'Study of the process and"apparatusI4 of ivater-emulsion polymerization of styrene.,' Mos 1958, 15 PP (Iqn of H-igher Education USSR. Mos Inst of Chem Machine Building) 150 copies (KL) 42-58) 115) - 29 - .M,17 T "i OR 3 Arbitman, S. Y. Levin, A. N. 64-58-2-5/16 p TITLE, Continuous Water-Emulaion Polymerization of Styrene (Nepreryvnaya vodnoemultsionnaya polimerizatsiya stirola) PERIODICAL: Khimicheskaya Promyshlennost', 1958, Nr 2, pp. 27-32 (USSR) ABSTRACT: A method is described which is initiated by an oxidation reductio 'n system and which takes into account the previous works in the field of continuous processes. The plant consists of an "ideal arrangement" of the apparatus according to the grapho- analytical computation method for the ideal order of aggregates for reactions in homogenous liquid phase- A schematic repre- sentation of the laboratory plant is given and from it can be seen that the aqueous solution of the emulsifier together with the reducing agent, and styrene together with the oxidizing agent dissolved in it are directed into the emulsifier through siphons, in the emulsifier being a propeller doing 1000 revs/Min. From the emulsifier the line leads through a coil in the water thermostat to the three polymerization vessels which are also placed in thermostats. Each polymerizer has a thermometer and Card 1/3 a stirrer. From the given operation technique can be seen that C;ntinuous Water-Emulsion Polymerization of Styrene 64-56-2-5/16 polymerization begins in the last polymerizer, that then the two before this are supplied after each other and that only then continuous polymerization bej;ins by the full connection of the plant. From a table can be seen that the authors worked according to three methods. The operational parameters of the aagregates are computed grapho-analytically and the eiven diagrams (velocity curves) of the function of time- and monomer concentration vs. polymerization velocity are obtained by graphical differentiation. From the obtained velocity curves the steady concentrations of each individual polymerizer are computed according to a formula; the practically obtained mean values coincide sufficiently with those calculated. From this is concluded that the grapho-analytical method of computation can be used for this operation process. The determination of the monomer content in styrene was carried out by bromination of the double bond. It was found that the capacity of the plant a Creed with the calculations, and that it was very hiah in the various methods. The schematic representation of a test plant is also given. Among other it can be seen from it that the Card 2/3 latex of the last polymerizer is coagulated in a coaGulator Continuous .11--ter-Emulsion Polinerization of Styrene 64-58-2-5/116 U -ith a water solution of the coaiulum and is sepaj.-ated from the monomer, or accorc~in,,~ to another variant is directly brought into dryin-j- t--tomizer. The latex su spension. coagulated a,nd treated vilth stezuii can be washed in two different T-lys. The washed polyner is dried in an air drying apparatus. There are 4 fiC;urcs, 5 tables, and 5 references, 4 of which are Slavic AVAILABLE: Library of Conaress 1. Styrene--Polymerization 2. Industrial plants--Operation 3. Industrial equipment--Operation 4. Mathematics Card 3/3 ARBITHO, S.M.; LIVIN, A.Na Continuo-ao aqueoue emulaion polymerization of styrene. Kh1m. prom. '2, 1-96 Wr 158. (KIM 110) n o* -9 (Styrene) (Plolymariration) WTA M=rGBMW, L.A., KOM=", IRM PAYLIMT, A.F., nmpmm, M.K. Z3Terl~tal data about the production of phthallo amb7drIde 'by oxidation of 9-3724 Report to be aulsitted for tjw U-~WWwmn cm b1&% mUcular volgtt devotsd to manow", IWM, 3-T APU 62 5/064/62/000/006/002/003 B140138 AUTHORSs Khoheyan, Kh. Ye., Pavliohev, A. F., Arbitman, S. M., Kurichova, L. N. TITLE: Production of' phthalic anhydride by liquid-phase oxidation of o-xylene PERIODICALs Khiml-,-heskaya promyshlennost', no. 6, 1962, 6 - io TEXT: On the basis of their previous studies (Author's cert-ificate 136538,~' Sb. izobr. i rats. predl., no. 7, 80 (1961)) the authors developed a three-stage process for producing phthalic anhydride (PA) from o-xylene: (1) liquid phase oxidation (LPO) of o-xylene to o-toluic acid by atmospher-!,,,,,/ ic 02 ; (2) esterification, of o-toluic acid with methanol; (3) LPO of the methyl ester,of o-toluic acid to PA and methanol. After a survey of papers in this.field, the method is described in detail. (1) LPO of 20 20 o-xylene (d 0-8700 - 0.8802; n 1-5052, b.p. - 42 - 1450C.) wa's 4 D carried outs (a) catalytically at atmospheric pressure and 128 - 1500C with preliminary addition of 5-,*6 drops of isopropyl benzene hydroperoxidel Card 1/3 S/064/62/000/006/002/00'3 Production of phthalic ... B144/B136 or (b) at elevated pressure without catalyst at 130 and 150 0C. Th e oxidate contained toluic aldehyde and o-toluic acid which were determined with oxime and from the acid value (potentiometric titration), respectively. The yield ino-toluic acid increased with rising pressure and temperature and averaged 90,- 97 %- (2) Oxidation ofo-toluic acid necessitates the esterification of the carboxyl group. This was done with t-O'-71 2222-54 (GO~iT 2222-54) methanol. The reaction rate increased from 45 to 97 % 01 when the temperature was raised from 245 to 300 0. An acid:methanol molar ratio of 1:5 is recommended for indust ' 1 ditions. The rate ~ia con constant at different temperatures were(min t k 245 = 0.0619; k 270 ~ "TO k300 ~ 0.2615. The activation energy was 11930 cal/mole. (3) The ester is catalytically oxidized to Pik at atmospheric pressUre and 125 - 200 0C. At 18000, the LPO of the methyl ester obtained (n20 _ 1-5200) takes place D practically without induction period if 4 - 5 drops of isopropyl benzene i hydroperoxide are added. With a 42 % yield, the reaction time at 18000 decreased from 8 hrs at atmospheric pressure to 2 hra at elevated pressure.~ PA was separated by cooling the oxidate down to room temperature or by ,distillation in vacuo; i-t was obtained with a yield of 90 95 and Card 2/3 S/064/62/000/006/002/003 Production of phthalic B144/BI38 answered the rOC,-T 7119-54 (GOST 7119-54) requirements. There are 6 figures. ASSOCIATION: MISS Card 3/3 KHGHEYAN, Kh.Ye.; PAVLICHEV, A.F.; ARBITIMU, S.M. - KURICHEVA, L.N. Production of phthalic anhydride by the liquid phase oxidation of o-xylenes Xhimeprome no.6:392-396 Je 162. (MIRA 15'.U) 1. Nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut sinteticheskogo spirta. (Phthalic anhydride) (Xylene) V.F., kand. ekonom. nauk ,jtBIYSV,,K.K., gornyy insh.1,PROTASOV, Technical progress at ore-strip mines of the Norillsk Combine. Gor. shur. no.6%6-10 Jo 165. (HIRk 180) ARBIYEV, K.K.t gornyy inzh. Practice of boring and blasting operations in pits of the Noriltok Combine. Gor. zhur. no.7sl5-20 J1 163. (MIRA 16:8) 1. Norillskiy gornouetal-lurgicheskiy kombinat. ARBOLISHVILI, D,Z. Geothermal conditions in c9rtain. areas of the Georgian S.S.R. Geol. nefti 2 no.12:43-47 D 158. (MIRA 12:?-) 1. Obwyedineniye Gruziuskoy neftyanoy promyeblennosti. (Georgier-Zarth-Temperature) ARMLISHVILI* D-Z- Prospecting for oil and gasIn Mesozoic oedimente of western Georgia. Averb. neft. khoz, 37 no.q.:'6-8 S 158. (ICMA 11: 12) (Georgia--Gas, Natural--49ology) (Georgia-Petroleum geolog'r) Oil pools in the Shiraki series of the Patara-Shiraki field. Owl. nefti i gaz& 4 no.11;37-40 5 160. (NIRA 13:11) lo. Treat GruzAeft's. (GeoTgia-Patroleum g901087) 'R DT ~-We-k' Y4. Monday Afternoon Smilon A-$-I (Cootd.) concentration of all thme acceptors. 11to variation of the yield as a function of concentration of the competing acceptors will be Wentlexi. whereas any variation orconcentration of the Inactive sub the stance will not innucnce IcId. 11m qUAlitAtIVID concluilons art home out by the rciulti ofthe quantitative analysts uwd In the Investigation or radioiysit of iron and chromium ions. P~ N~. praut SESSION A--6-1 Biochemical Response of Brain and Nerve% Studlei on the at the Central Ne"out System S. Y-11.1 The distribution of -Vabelled fl-mercapto-ethylamine in the neryout system has been investirrate7. -Thm hrafter administration. the Concentration In the cerebral cortex was found to be higher than that in other tissues. At 6 hir, the amount it% the sub~ottieal tissues had increased. u WK at 24 ht, the drug we$ COMIlItAW in the brilit stem. This drug was found to ilopms tho pfootts Of excitation in the cerebral cortex. The sulphur-containirts radk~ protectors usere found to hava a sedetivc action. truida%olt, 2-carbonlo scid compounds, cu%ing to their sedative action. prevent both excitation and inhibition V In the central nervous syslern, and so protect against radiation ln)ury. Aminasine and phenatin hive been round to reduce the "tent of Impiinment. and shorten the time required for recovery Of a number at uncondifioned responses. It is suggested that drosts which affect the razute of the nerve impulse should be invei6its ed )4.0.0 I_hw-d. Ussit Ir ribport pmeuto& at tbV 204 latl. C*2P*88 of Radiatim ReveUvIt, Mawo-gate/rarkabin, Ot. Brit. .5-11 Avg. 1962, Ar, I, I LC A, I -Iterruhlonship of reactiowdthe bxLiina~d. c: i rzi s --n 1 .1 of and brain uwnds," Chair c-L I Me0j,cE,7 ln~J, ~imi Krasnoyars - - k Regional Hospital for 7-~va- d-- c f P--- t r ioi 1 c War. I ~ ra sn r s k 1956. (Dissertation For the DeLrc:~: (-1.5- L.I)ctcr In letopis No 34, 1956. I;oscow- ARBUZOV, A. MWPMPMRUO .Radiogram from aboard the llooperataiia.0 Radio no.1:13 J& 157. (Bidlo, Shortwave) (NM 10s2) ACC' NR.- AN7001733 SOURCE CODE: UR/9008/67/000/011/0001/0001 t AIJTHOR: Arbuzov,- A. (Guards senior technical lieutenant, Military technologist first craMY- ORG: none TITLE: 'Military airfield kept in operation during a snowstorm SOURCE: Krasnaya zvezda, no. 11, 13 Jan 67, p. 1, cols. 4-7 1- TOPIC TAGS. military airfield, airfield cleaiing ABSTRACT: This is a description of the activity and equipment used to keep a military airfield in operation during a sudden snowstorm that raged three days. It is stated that there was no breakdown.in'the equipment. [N C) SUB COD'E: 15/ SUBM DATE: none/ ATD PRESS: 5109 Card. ARBUZOV, A.W. ~, Our experience In organizing school tractor and field crop team. Politakh. obuch. no-5:44-49 My 158. (MIn 11-5) 1.Zmiyevskaya srednyaya shkola Sverdlovskogo rayons, Orlovskoy. oblasti. (Pield work (Nducational method))- ARBUZOV, A.R. 4V Rural sehoole and their part in the future development; of collective hirming.. Politekh. obuch. no.9:12-13 S 058. (MIRA 11: 10) 1. Direktor Zalyevokoy sradney shkoly Sverdlovskogo rayona orlovskoy oblasti. (Sverdlovskly District-Technica3 education) 0-us System-- ine, - *r* fects of Dr~gs bn' f E Medicine - Nervous System, Physiology Iffecte of Antagonism and S.7nergism Between Drugs and SympathomInatic AmInes on the Action the Central Nervous System pf Vertebrates: :.U, Ch=ges In the Latent Period of Reflex and :rnfliie,nce'of, s ' - Boo Teimperat=6 'Under tbi ympa- thomime-tic Amin6s, an& Their Stimulating Action In Comparison t 3 Drugs,"'A. YEC. - Arbuz&y, Chair of Pharmacol, -iil Yled Acacl imeni S. M. Kirov, pp "Niziol Zhur SSSR" Vol M=V, Nq 34/49T20 MM/Meclicine Nervous System, Sep/Oct 48 Xffects of Drugs on (Contd) ~J*acrlbes experiments on rabbits. Nakeofice" -were chloral hydrate an&'z-sd4ha1,*.-'_:-AmInea, .."Used -were adrenalin, pw~vitin, pheratin 'e2hedrin, and s~mpathol. Results are te ulatea, plotted and discussed. SuInitted 15-Feb 47. A &A-111 a I L A- a. -x J- ~ 4 , A -11- A-kx~m A -01, A?TJ POP- 01110I.- ftv Acetal of campbar. A_H_Amnvzt)%-., J. Him. Pkvs.-Chrvi. Sw. 61, 7 0 (JOV).-Accial of camphor was first obtained in 11M from camphor and IICIt)l-*t)j 411" -Adv% it product bq 8-1 3' was obtainr(i. suppowdl~ 00 4 juvwrive ( .;Oj~ Rt "Impil. 01 camplikir Stitt ale, Ollict Itivrstilistors (C A~ 21, IN,7) f%fit-atril 60 1 i , tIICW V%pt%, And stritt4i that tht ShAt *A% 0 11116t, (4 1IC(OIjl)j Still comillmr *0 to more recesit work Arbutov fidled to obtain a definite fraction b. 82 3% atilt stalv% that, apparently. the above comild. wail not formed. Ilowrvvr, lit also failed it) oh 004 tain a traction coutit. HC(ORt),. Tire yield of camphor arttal wits Of 41"'C' of thr 00 a theomicill, otlivra obtained 24-30%. It is very Stable, but Ill lirt-wilcv Ill Ovid. Watrf splits it easily into sic. and camphor. 144,11mir 00 ') 00 09,, so 7 001 ar 11 -1i L U I it to Al rittit it 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 c'6 a 0 6 0 6 0 0 o 0 o o 0 0 0 I 1 41 OW a a IF I W 11 0 a a 3 a W I No a 1 1'.' 6 0 0 Olis 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 * 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 6 0 0 * * 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .0 .00 .00 moo '00 '300 roe coo see goo 00 goo '00 '00 Joe so 0 6-6-0 a 4-0-0~0-0-0 0-6- 6-0-6-0 4-0-0-0 0 I A 5 a Y A 1 1. 11 li W ism 11 111 "M I U V illi b)db UJIM a -it R 9 M 14 a k V x it 4 b . I I V 2__kL as CE I nj. j. j. r 'to, ~ 14M.1,10 '.Pl' .4 Uc- dsc=WAinganuymm*WWpboophorussioaL A. E. 00 _. ARimutoy Amu B. A. Axamov. A Ross. Phyj,-0wft. Sm. 61, 00 C JWW attempts to prep. optk*Uy active immurridem of phumphinic acid derivatives ' - am briefl ommiLdwd n4 th f I i id 1 . % e prcM o e or 101 h). y *s d *%y (Ol . litt-1110" tlcCWI CACOmli and phrxyi-a-pkozpAvwpvpioxlir arlidi OPIOC117 i is 00 t . . es, t mcribeil. Phenylphosplimiscetic acid, at. was obtained as the Et ester. 00 th 195-8*, do 1.1=6 by the actkm of thillubutyl phenylimimphite, JlI'h(OCJj.),. 1), - ~* (f 44 h 60 ,- . rom D :4dlrnyI chkwide and W-11trONs). tin UrCH.Ckhtit. The alkaloid 06 salts of the acid c~juld not be reor4ml 811to 211"It active iNullixetornts. pkeplyl'. 0' 4 J A i i d 108 1 . 0 oil Oseprop c "O , tn. P , was per; . by t c sann, trorthod as the fit ester. P b) IUL-3'. d: LHIM.S. front diwwtyl Ithemylphasphite and MCCH111COlit. 11. C A. V go of I ALL UPOKAL LlTtR.TLR[ Ct-ISIFICATION S A 3 M L A Vo 00 It to 00 0 10, so 0 0 0 "a 0 0 0:0 0 "fo '01 o 000000,0000 00000 o 006 1`0 0 4 i 0 0 0 UZ - -0 9 41- e-6 0 40 Q U 1A 41 R . 9 A ._4, .00 !-00 =06 rOO 900 00 0 -00 Mee tsoo 00 0 0 Will 0 0 0 111, 111 0 0a 0 0 0 of 0 Go- 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 6 0 * a 0 a 0 oi a S It I I I IQ it it 1) 4 is to 11 Is 19 a It a n 34 n 36 V a ?I a it It I) m 35 it u Is 111 40 41 Q 4) it a E _r I*- Jip- t A 1 11 L 1 61 1 M m tor A-t- -1 J-A A of is Phooplejeek adds mWaIng an asymmotriCal phosphom at*M A, It. AltutUtiv /0 00 ND IRS1,116 A. Astautovit. J. Reiss. PAYS.-CArse. SAC. 61, 00 ir =Y.1pba hain c, acid and pbenyltriplirnylwcthyipbowphinic acid were synthesitird. 00 nu& ju attempts made to n-A%v them into optical immirrides,by Wt foru;O- -00 Um with alk"Is. Pilemytisobodj4 imic acid, M. 14-5% wes obtained by the action of ieto-ltul t"t the t-our I'llh(ttlifels at WAS.in a tIcedrd tulw. It did not give .00 rMialfilistl4e, salts with alkielive ter alkikloids, J'hr "ter vllittW.11.1. and llb.Clit .00 undrs sunklier condition't Orld"i P".V(IfIP"3WmdAv1 IR" 01,44, its. 2X7 V. 1.00 which grestv ctvst. salts with the alk, all nirlitiq hit[ not wifftalln. .14. Ii. C. A. a 00 .00 400 '60, rof 6 06, 001 a** Coo U 49 '00 No* 00 so 00 If! r a P It It P It M .4 01 it R Q ~,013 n I An 1 5 OW 0 0" 0" '0 0" '0 : : : : 4 a 41 a 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 111! Ww A" s0- 00 A j j i so 00 a 90 00 IF 11 v a M 4 at 1) 41 ad .09 *00 .00 *00 600 coo As goo A 0 Soo too SITALLURGICAL LITCRAU41 CL"SVKAIMN loom SIVISIS" Isom ""&"V 1*"Nv -d wONO Nit Q"V a., 411111911 811121 ftc 0.0 All 0 U IA At,- Sh a w 0 a a I v 61 1a a 3. 1T 0 0 0 0 *~f 'S 6see 0 a 0 0 0 * 0 00000 so IOU 0 0 0 0 0 o o o 0 0 so, o 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o o 0 0 o q 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 ;M70 ~6637'1 0 1 -AA C - :* a 1 11 Q U14 Isis ull 19421abbi as 36 it 36 A ]OP UUMN, 16)) one K-P h I V I V I --A . I '_ ~ 8 1 A L A "-Q-A A A 41 rj43 *uC '. '4 --- Po"I&I'll _11f, pq V,A K" P a th of bW op . b_.y -P h-P .14 b 143 ~ 00 bloride (0.5 p yt I with 8 giving rise to the couipd. CtslfiAP, bs-4 1914'. da 1.2201. which Is hydrolyzed by RtON8 to the Mot. selt, I'M(SHOONs. but the corresponding acid could not Z be obtained cryst. When heated wli~ )Ill In a sealed tube at 130% the thio ether. **a PPh(SEt),. undergoes isoorrintion to form PPhEt(SEt):S. 1),,. 10-70*, 4: 1. 1693, a which, with RtO.Va, gives the cryst, Sa pAwio)ieikviwnswAiophO *owkPI'hEl(ON&):S. i * W roe but the corresponding add was obtained only ax a sirup. isobut)d CIA", I'llb- e sea thi-s 191-2. 49 1.0037, forms S:PPh(SC4IIs)x, with flowers of 8, and, when treated with BrCHiMH, Yields woduct giving the Cryst. No Wt. S: Pl`b.~ONa)- CH CO th N di d i i Z*0 0 e n correspoo , a; ns ac an ts e , nthonlue and brtstine salts did not lli Th t ti f ICHXH COE h hi o ze. e ac on o a t on t e t Mo oethcr. PPh(SCoH*)s. gives I CuHiPOAP. b&.# 200-6*. but by4rolysis of this failed to giveacryst. acid. Treatment t 2W' of the " eth r with PhCH PIh(SKt) C1 CHWI M S~(? JS e a : . j. . gave %) ) ( ' 14"* m d n d S P h C . an a . an : . .P y comp H,Pb)SEL th 210-8 , d: LIFW. The ( * t 210' ti f PhCII CI th th PPb(SC H h d ) j 0e e e on o on er ac s a gave t 6 e comp .. to, 14" E s . r similarly obtained from the ether. PPb(SEt)t, but vacuum distu. of the residue led to rapid decompri., so that this residue was hydrolyzed directly, with famation oV"Yi. acid. S-PPh(CH,Ph)011. m. I-t3-4*. A. so U -' ~ SETALLOROKAL UT(6ATU*C CLASUMATION C-Z see U 11 AV 00 IS! L I I W 0 09 W It I A 0 31 1 1 ip 4 0; 0 0 0 te OT " P It & 0 0 0 0 Ke We 0 0 0 No ft 0 0 WIP 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 0 .0 4 00 0000000 00 409006696066 0 0 00 0 1 0 a a 0 0 a 0 0 Ce 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 i0096000 eflud"s :Dw nuummiall UU34 11116 limit n itdo III j~tv Joe it ago _.Z.3 31FAI-NAL11 1-3104411T1 10.00 ~I.009 61, 0 OR 00-11 009, -fie 0 *:, lit 0 too It Me 003 0o= Poo C, 0o go= C, 00 W&V 9 -ddv j%a&ojdwj-*(oWj)Mt-*j It powpqy 1"PoWid "I"T sow AZoo -Pvnnsm *-'*Iqdap A-I"Wj lip 00 00. too so. So-: 1) Me 09 00 nt _f_ M-K - T_T__ 9" Nit 9 a IT It it IT w a IT if a a or it 1Z It to 0' 0 0 - W.: Or A, 0600 0 iL 01, ii ,- &SAM Ilk so 0 to 0 0 0-0- 0 0 0 a 0 - ~Vw am *WOOD sow a-* ewe m~ govese 0 1 1 0#9*06096960411160090: 1 31 j i a A & I a 0 AG it it 11 U is it a) to to A )1 12 23 Is 1 0 C M 31 V x 1 .1 42 AS 449 -A 1 , . PP Z I A_ A- A I I - A- 0, I 4, --T- 60 , : , - it-Butyl *star of phosphoric add. _A..A"1JU)V_ AMO 1. AROUROVA. J. RNA 90 ed l:~vs.-Chrm. Sor. 62. t533-O(IM.-By acting with ITI, on BuON& was obtain 11 t hi 011 id ti l i b %1i1 b h h h h d ki d ) 1) 1 00 ,t u en ca w t -p te. t t e peut ict pt,,N. e a an . o p ( . ( y 4 Il 4 13 th I tl oll t 11 S h Ai (r MS) b t PCI . ac tlwg . . . e n erac un u . ant w . y . ' 0 0 action of flu Ion I gives the brimerk di-Bu butanefibusplumate. Bu I 0(0Bu)j. (U).%hicll go when aspond. with TICI products butimphosphonic acid, (Ull. Krpd. purl.-First sea, prejul. BuONts by br%Ung an the water bath 9W g. of freshly di~td. m-RuOll. It. ' 7 i i d 1*0 117 . with 0 it. of metall c Na. thm wh 1e cooling. were adde Euo anti IVu the d 110' d A O ll d d h ti t di 9 M 0 uc wits expe e . an e nmc on pro on stn. ta%v at mm an t itemp. t A l b 6 f d L Cl f i b i l th) 174 68 i i ibl h ) - 0 jr; :0 ow. a . o cru e ract onat on e ycero e mposs e. t ng g. ( g % fraction b, 11"9' (07 g.) ts-as added to 4.5 S. of Na wire suspended in dry EtA). then .00 0 heated I hr. an the water bath. poured off from unchanged Nat and redistu.. producing ,so _V.6% of I ths 119.5-200. d3 O.M, djl O.Ml. In the distil. 111ask there remained =00 I'(0Bu)0X&. When 129S. 61 Urlsaddedtoll g. of I and then distd. them is obtained 00 1.91 g (01.5%) of C.11*8r. IL 981. The isomeritation of I to U is effected on heating go 8 hr%. t IW-,00* in a scalcit tube a mixt. of 20 g. of I and 12 g. of Ire-bly di%td. Bul 00 (b. 129-31"); the reaction product on redijtg. gives IIM' g. o( 11, No oe 0.9634. de 0,9M. colorless and odorlen liquid. It Is sapond. to III on heating 3 hr% r a at 170' in a sealed tube a mEtt. of 6.3 g. of 11 and 2 vols. of IICI (1! 1); the uplirr layer ' 4 lluCl. in tlmwvt"l yield. was Prpd.. and the aq. wAn. was repmtedly rvapd. W, th A, lift P tits a water bath. the heavy mass was treated with lirt), the wixi crV,tals filtemt WT. IK41C.1 In IW with ardmid charcoal. filtered, anti evalml. to drvness; yirld,,f Lnide III 3.M X.. m. W4)0*; recrystd. from ligroin and dried over IIS06 it m. lilt 3% the acid I% dibasic. CHAS. BLANC 6 a.:, .,so :'99 Ow 00 A I t A j14t14,CrKAj LiTtItAILAtt CLASSWK411C. t z woo - __ _ it ,_ - - 00 - _ rX4 4 0 U It AT C1 IS, ' 09 An L S a 411 0 V 04 !5 a ~ 1 ~7 9 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 if it it 11 61 IT It R CE K tt it it or 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 9 w1a n o ia 0 Sit 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 6 0 0 a 0 0: ,4=2a" ---- 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 O-CCI-0-04 04AT-0 0 0 0 0 gw__wwwv-ww---o :0006#400008 000000 so-00-0000004 *too* beef 0-0-s0- 4 it r 0 A [A. L-ft AA -00 A. H. An U)NM Min. (ProCiesi ('ken. 190-253(IM).-A feW-w-ol-ak wcgk done un the triplwoyluicthyl hydratitm WW~O(ftm mdicmls witb & Phy%kxvhvai" digcuukn,. F. "P=y MRc, Am 1-00 00 all .410 -00 -go 0 C. J 00 00 al ~46 0 00 1 of u me o I zoo lie a 00 s zoo goo :00 -,06 00 t-0 0 k to 0 As.-SLA AEIALLUrGKAL LITFRA101t CLASSIVICATICN lee 09- Ma., .11 C-2ak '-r-, I %--I" -F' 0 1 "Y-11 --Wb U 11 AV 10 it s I . 4 1 to An I I a Od 0 It IS It 4104 40K It el ou K a ft It tog 64L0 w 0 0 00 0000 0 00000, 0 0 a so 000 0 so 0 i 0 O~b 0 0 0 0 & a 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0~ IF 5-4 0-6 0 d 0 0 6 0 411 * 9 0 go 00 00 00 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 '*~* 0 0 0 0 w 11 It M U'M 4 M v X 0 A$ A) 41 is !I IS is is f Aa 8-01 r 9 It 11T R d cis 06 C I, w crystd., SivillZ 30.7% I'llsCO. in. 4 re Us" ImUzOllYsit"I 0111 In. d, 7.4', ow It 13.4% twus.pin" IIII), In, -6 Oil, .1 lm - 9 .2-9 of is \(!V). tit. MAP M is based on the &mL J P14CO limed its the reaction). The fonnatiots R 00 OkIlleft products can lie explaine4l 1j). the scliclue: + Call* Nlgllr --te, Ph, Q** -,"ONIXO)c I-C.1141. The rM'vvMI I'Itlet) ilia v lee (lie triallt"Of ol'i'lation vwit It coo 00 111110 k1m,%multu. with list) is protlistvil ast utc. which ou d6tti. l~,s 1t.0 aud siva,s M. (ONISHOCall., + "go "IC(Off)C41111 - 1120 ---P- P14CX.Ifla. BY the combination of 2 ketyl Milicals and the action of 11,0 is exeduced IL By mutual &0 9 oxidation slid roduction of Call,, and ketyl must be (orm"t Cattle and I'lli(firmilo)c ".. + Coll,, ... --asa llh,Cll(O.Nlq + Calif. The Intrfaction .I I'llict, mild C.1106tal pwdu" 10,9% MXO. = WQ :'P~0;28 " It. 7.7t-0 dievelohrii).1 IV), ht Mi. in. 711".5 1,'; IV, and ZIA% tetraphenwl. villatic (VII). tit. suld no Ill. Thus PWO with C411n.N1191 gives V and VII. zoo not obtained with C4Ifu.MgBr. The formation of V ilia$- be thus explained: Under the, conditions used the intemsediate Celin and 1Ihr(1.\Ij;O)C. . . . do not underso the ivaction of mutual oxialsilion and rMovtion as in the caw of C*11,,NlgDr but combine 0 wee a 1, i7_5, t 1~ --I I -' . i - r A i t Ew 0 4 ~ , , I It It 11 at RW is I ~llk .9 IT to t 0 0 0 0~0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 41' 0 OTOO 000 0 *so 00 9 0 ol 0 9 0 0 4 o 0 0 0 00 00 0 so 0 - I 00 90 0* 00 00 thuv 4- W#16i ----o CsIluCsIln + Vh,C(0\l9l)C(()NlgI bs. which may explain the formation tit mmch It and nonr of 111. The (twolation (A 441., ,ow difficult to ewlaiu; it must be caused by mduction. Vic mquired lie ]wing probably x froul Calla,. CHAA, OL"C 00 06 00 W-O-V* ~4)0 0-014 QU 141% bit SIMI it 4) at 0 is r0 Ott 00 A 00 A 06 t Cate" dwmapedda of tW hplaues of othyl itolase. A. 1j ARD V. A. Rotstautt.. A (;to, C". (U. S. H. R.) 2. 307AX hQUI).- By totpnakGr of A. and Frisuf (C, A. 1. 350) the catalytic dmmpn. of F.1 krione phanylb rs mWky1A)J4a&k (11). A mixt. of 0,07 1. of ZtjClj anti 75 g. (of frnhpy 43:. 1!)e144.: #a heated lit a metal both from 180 to 2211% the cmt. rvAidue In the re. 0; "tin dask was distd. at I I mm. preaure: the fractioux In , 150-05' (40 S.) and 170-11' (3 g ) wem Combined and rcdbtd.. giving 40 S. (09% yield) of 11, his It.3*. in. too the d, CRAIL BLANC '31 pkrose in. 16O.P. We 0 go Go* !21 016 ~000xslr be 0 90 ts 7' U; It"I 411 - ----- - ------- too 'I a I V 10 I ; 4 R 0 1 W KO A , 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 111 0 q * 0 a q e 0 0 0 o j 0 0 0 0 0 IN 0 00 *10 4 a 9 0 0 0 0 1111, 0 0 9 9 0 9 0 0!, TO I 000 00 *as sees I Is OfNISMONAll 11 9 u id a k v a 0 it 4,1 Aj it a *V0, 70r010;, Mi ~jv M- A is 0 P. 0 4 11 1, Y-1- I'mil J.... -.11 A a -1,00 'at f K, ArL4uuv and It. 11. f.uSnvkjjj. urdAl,434. Ott. :0 A we bealrd under Prtmm In a dild. pho%phuric acid sWil. .00 00 .00 00 1 V 00 0 co -go 20 0 Ot %0 0 St L40 use ASM-S A PITALLOCKAL LITERATURE CLAISWKATICO 140%, a,,-0. -F An L o w a i or m i d3 a 3 2 K (at tat I IK *1 in OU LOW go, *1 *19 00000)00 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 001 0 0 A as 00 00 C 00 2 06 00 00 00 a 00 00 004 go's T. 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 a a 0 00 .00 -00 -00 -00 .00 000 nsee xage 690 &40 0*0 ago 00 = see "oe age -041 nee PROCISLIS A.0 PROPIRMS .1,11. Di --so acid chkilds sad prepazation of -V howl It. A. 9, Alliumv still "AEE BxAWm Init. Ckew. Tech. v. P;w. ason No. 10 28-M(1934).-ne previous wnrk on the '7vs, niers of varknis P acids b discussed (cf. Arbuzov and Arbusogra. C. A. 25 2414 3019- 26 82 2168) The maw of 1 99;",h~ ;Q cKlorid., was improved by Producing first IluOPCI, (1) from P" and Bu0H (d. Mensbutkin, Ann. Win. 139,W), wbkh !with BuONa Is then converted to (Buova (n). ii with (DuO)sPollfs gives butylpyioplicophorous strid, (Bu0)&P-0.P(0Bu)j (1U). A yield of 171 g. (about 50%) of 1. bit W-7'. resighed by dropping, with inech. stirriag. 149 g. BuOH into 27A g. PCJs (the yield of I is roduced (6 3=2A Y dropping BwDH alcm0de of the Omsk wWb directly Into PC4). 11, be 01.5-1 2.5% dj* 1.014. uV 1.445, was obtsiw4 in &I, g. leld It intradigeing, with , . stirring, a caled. amt. of CON ~!Itrltlgrlgtediad Ego% Into 173C.orlin Etl0. Five 'of W. by 117"17~ d46 0.9PW, aV 1.4451. resulted by drop- ping 13 *of into (BuO)*PONa (from 1.4 g. Na in ,120 cc. J**y Rt%O and 10.9 g. (BlOO)tPOH). M with .H#O Is dmot: Into 2 mols. of (BuO),K)II, and with ~Ilrl gbrvgi a tem-Dr product. Chas. Blew MR J~j ASm-SLA 04TALLUASKALLFTERATURECLASUPSCATION I Isom IIIqtI/ 1#4600 -0 1 q"It amIV-Ogg U U AV sa Alli " j, '11;11 man it 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0- 0 0 0,0 0 0 0 Nee see TAAAI to ado lgWllflN9d34 29 VX4 11 1 U 0 0 q * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 a 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 0 quiluumem it 10 it a tvmx~, k a 'is x a a it v a Id a is v a P a n a a a 0 rate Eml a L&UPS112 I _V U V f I AA 0 CC,jR 0 4 dn lot AWD J."o-9699 00 A. FROMM AND P200101,111 1.016 .00 -00 00 A -00 -00 CAW* decoanwilaidas of ad 0 90 a dW1 Mpyl ketose phayl so a I hydranse. A. 13,Arbumv an 1. A. Zaltrev. Trans. 0 flagarw too. Cim, Tak. Kamm No. 1. 33-8(1934); cf.- 00 C A V 201 -RtPrC-NN]tPh bn IM". d,' 0 W12 151 .00 g.)i -hZQ with 0i g. CuA at 2OD-W- a'~d thrice 00 7 1 re2.'in mw, ring Of g. of a product. bs 107'. d: .00 1.0243, analyzing C Hj&N, and may be either 2,3-di- 800 ethylindole or 2,11-pro ,,~,yhrwtb8iindcille. The.pkrate m. .3 1144"wWartallywafor ullaN~ fle(NO.,011 C. if. use 041 so go so ij: if a00 '00 '00 '00 ties A I a. S L A OFTALLURGICAL LITERATURE CLASSIVICATION I[.Z!-! (M. Got aw C*', M a,, go Ill on .1 in .1 on a, a Zo A 'I an An JL S 0 tw a a 6 .1 if so 2 a a I V-111 U 1111 AV a 0 0 0 0 0 0 & 0 0 a 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 a 0 C a 0