SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT KUSAKIN, P. S. - KUSAKOV, M. M.

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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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S C) -vr./ I ~ i ~ (~ .4 .' 8 () 5 On the Mineralogical Gon-tposition of Fluxed 25 3 5 o/o -Ca ferrites crystallize out on fic 1,P wl~it 1~ in. Inc si lic .1"411, "l I It-1, rous glass. Addition of 9 - 120/6 CaO iyoc tke N, A III,'\!I It' ~!!( -ea-CS 'MIL'U'l- of L,P. decreases the melting point. of the COMPO'iet" Cres, 150 1001)/6C, ;r creases the strength, and improves th6 qualiiy of 'lic Ni agglornera-e Z' 1, Ki~ Card 212 SOV/1 37- 59- 3 - 5550 Translation from: Referativnyy zhurnal. Metallurgiya, 1959, Nr 3, p 87 (USSR) AUTHORS: Moleva, N - G ., Kusakin , P. S, ivanova, S. V - TITLE: On the Mineralogical Composition of Materials Through the Vertical Cross Section of a Nickel-smelting Shaft Furnace (K niineralogichcs- komu sostavu. materialov po vysote shakhtnoy pechi nikelevoy plavki) PERIODICAL: Tr. In-ta metallurgii. Ural'skiy fil. AN SSSR, 1958, Nr 2, pp 195- zoo ABSTRACT: The changes in the principal mineral components of the sinter cake of Ni oxide ores along the height of a furnace were studied. The 5ulfiding of the charge materials prior to melting proceeds mainly through the action of the gaseous phase. Intense sulfiding begins in the central zone of the furnace at the 800-900-nim level and at the periphery at the 1600- 1800-mm level from the tuy~res . Most of the Fe is in the form of magnetite. The principal cementing material in the sinter cake, namely, rhombic pyroxene, is transformed in the shaft of the furnace into clinopyroxene and then into diopside, i - e -, monoclinic pyroxene, in the course of the concentration of lime in the liquid Card 1/1 phase. The peripheric process is clearly evident in the furnace. L. P. 78-3-4-12/36 ATMIORS: Moleva, If. G-t Kusakin, P. S., Vetrenkop Ye. A., Diyev, N,,P,, (Deceased) TiTLE: On the Phase Diagram of the System Iron-Cobalt-Sulfur (K voprosu o diagramme sostoyaniyt sistemy zhelezo-koballt- sera) PERIODICAL: Zhurnal Neorganicheskoy Khimii,1958,Vol.3, Nr 4,PP-904-910(USSR) ABSTRACT: The ternary system iron-cobalt-sulfur in the field of the alloys of the quasibinary section FeS-Go S till alloys con- taining 15 ~ sulfur was investigated. Tbi investigations were carried out by thermal and dilatometric analyses as well as by the determination of the microstructure, the specific weight and the microbardness. The phase diagram was con- structed with the results obtained herein. The investigations of mutual solubility of the components of the system show that the sulfides of cobalt and iron have limited solubility in solid state. It was found that the solubility of cobalt sulfide in iron sulfide at the Card 1/2 eutectio temperature of 4294 % decreases to 24,5 % at room On the Phase DiaGrams of the System Iron-Cobalt-Sulfur 78-3-4-12/38 temperature. The solubility of iron sulfide in cobalt sulfide is about 20 % FeS. The solubility is not affected by the temperature. In the system Fe-Co-S the pure components do not crystallize, but their solid solutions do. Microscopic investigations showed that the structures of the alloys of the ternary system have 8 structural types at normal temperature. In the systemsCo-S and FeS-Co 3 in solid state in tne figld of the ternary system trinaitions were found at 770-790 C and 810-830 0C~ The point3of the triple eutectic were not determined exactly, There are 5 figures, I table, and 15 references, 8 of which are Soviet, ASSOCIATIONs Urallskiy filial Akademii nauk SSSR>Inatitut metallurgii (Ural Branch of chc AS USSR, Institute of Metallurgy) SUBMITTED; June 25, 1957 Card 2/2 Anisheva. It A . Kusarkin, F S 76 ',1 4-~4/38 TITLEz- The Construction of the Phase Dia6ran of I:on Sulfidq Nickel ~Iulfide .. Cobalt Sulfide (Up t3 3D,4) (K poctroyeniyu diagrLuiimy aostoyanlya aullfid zheleza- 3ullfid nikelya sullfid koballto (do 30','0) ) PERIODICAL! Zhurnal Neorganicheskoy Xhimii, 1950, Vol, 3, Nr 4. PP 915,921 (USSR) ABSTRACTi In the present paper the mutual solubility of the sulfii,~s, of iron, nickel and colal.t., in liquid and solid state as wQi't as the change of the annealing temperature of the alloyi -if the system FeS-CoS-NiS in connection with the content of -,h,, single components, the phase composition and the strunTure of the alloys in individual fields of crystallization in connection with temperature and the content of sulfide components is investigated, Also the binary 91-stems C04S5 N'3S2 and FeS Ni3:~ were investigated., In the binary system CNSO" S in the primary crystallization the o(--solid solution Lcomposes at 4750C into L~- and X'-olid solutions In the system Card 1,/-' FeS-Ni.3S2 the decomposition of thec&solid solution into The Construction of the Phase Diagran of Iron Sulfide 78 3 44 Nick-?.- Sulfidsz- Cobalt Sulfide ASSOCIATION.- SUBPITTTED; P ,Y--,arLd F_ sol4d solutions also o,:,-urs at temperatures of 6 4 r, and 515~')C In the L;ystem FPS-Ni3S in liquid sta-4 there exisO complete miscIbility of all three component,-,,, In the crystallization of the alloys of the ternary system solid solutions -,fo(.ar-1(-;form (Prepresents a solid solution of cobqlt- and nicke' sulftdo in iron sulf ide. co, represent a solid solution of irDn sulfide in cobalt- and nicke'l. sulfide),. The investigations of the alloya as well as of tha occurrer- of the phases were carri.ed ouT according to the following methodgi thermographi-~. dilatometric-, theima' and chemi-.: analyses. dev~rm:inaticn of mi,:roritructure and Based on the experimental resull.s the diagram:j were constri.~-x ed and the polythermal sections were projected. There are 4 figures, 1 table, and I* referencea 10 -~f -ah-n are Soviet, Institut netallurgii Ural'skogo filiala Akademii nauk S23SR, Sverdlovsk (A MpLaii-,Lrj~,-y, Uria--, Bran:.-, Sverdl June 25. 195-1 Card ~/.R KOZHEVNIKOV, G.N.; YUSAKIN, P.S. Diagram representingthe equilibrium condition of the system helenite- sodium oxide. Izv. Sib. otd. AN SSSR no.7:13-22 158. (MIRA 11:9) l.Uraliski7 filial AN SSSR. (Systems (Chemistry)) (Ozocerite) (Sodium oxide) MDLYVA, N.G~; KUSAKIN, F.S. Sulfidising of magnetite. Trudy Inst.aet.UYAN SSSR no-3:15-19 159. (KIRA 13:4) NLgnetite) (Ore dressing) DIY]CV, II.P. (deceased]; YELISIM, I.S.; KOCHIM, H.I.; PADUCHIV, V.V.; VZRMIICR3V, S.A.; RARKISOV. I.I.; MALITSEV, B.V.; MAKIN, P.S. Use of ox7gen in bessemeriziur, coprper mattes in industrial Oonverters. Trud7 Inst.met.UFAIT SSSR no-3:93-101 '59. (MIRA 13:4) (CoPPer-Matallurgy) (Oxygen-Industrial applications) 058~9 5(2) SOY/78-4-11-32/50 AUTHORS: Kuvakin, M. A,, Kusakin, P. S. TITLE: Investigation of the System NaF - AlF 3 - NaCl PERIODICAL: Zhurnal neorganicheskoy khimii, 1959, Vol 4, Nr 11, pp 2577 - 2581 (USSR) ABSTRACTs In investigating this system, it was taken into account that an addition of NaCl could lower the melting point of the bath used for the electrolytic production of aluminum. The melt- ing diagrams were recorded by means of N. S. Kurnakov's pyro- meter. The binary systems are described at first. NaF -AIF3: here, the publication data (Refs 2-4) are confirmed in general. The melting temperature of cryolite was determined to be 10089 The compound NaF 'AIF determined by M. Hordion (Ref 4) could not be confirmed. Solid solutions did not appear, NaF - NaCli slight corrections to the diagram given by Plato (Ref 5) are given. VaCl - AlF i was first investigated by the authors up to a content of 6~70f AlF (Fig 1, Table 1). The mixture with 3 68~ NaCl has the lowest melting temperature (7140). k complete investigation of this system was not possible because of the Card 1/2 volatility of AlF and the reaction 3NaCI+AlF -A Am 31W. 3 3V__ 3+ 0 i '79 '8 '_1 S ov~~'~ Investigation of the System NaF - AlF NaCl / -, 1-32/50 The phase diagram of the ternary system was drawn by means of 12 sections (Table 2, Figs 2-5). It is represented in figure 6 as a projection on the composition triangl6. The iso- thermal lines of the primary crystallization are entered, The addition of NaCl lowers the melting temperature of a mixture consisting of NaF and AlF~. Chemical compounds do not appear in this system; solid solu ions do not develop either. There are 6 figures, 2 tables, and 5 references, 5 of which are Soviet. ASSOCIATION: Ural'skiy filial Akademi-* nauk SSSR (Ural Branch of the Aca- demy of Sciences, USSIt) SUBMITTED j July 2-1- 1958 Card 212 KUSAKIE.-F.S., kBnd.takhn.nauk, otv.red.; SMIWKINA, N.Y., takhn.red. [Use of oxygen at metallurgical enterprises in the Urals; materiole of a coordinating conference) Primenenie kislorods na metallurgichaskikh Dredpriiatiiakh Urala; materialy koordi- natsionnogo soveshchanlia. Sverdlovsk, Akad.nsuk SSSR, In-t metallurgii, 1960. 152 P. (KIRA 13:10) 1. Koordinstsionnoye soveshchaniye po voproasm primenaniya kislo- rods na metallurgichaskikh predpriyatiyakh Urala. Sverdlovsk, 1956. (Ural Mountains--Metal industries) (Oxygen--Induatrial applications) MOLINA, H.G.; XUBAKIN, F.S. Microscopy of the products of sulfidizing metallic oxides by elementary sulfur. Trudy Inet.met.UFAN SSSR no-5: ; 105-108 160. (MIRA 13:8) (Metallic oxides) (Vapor plating) (Microscopy) . USPEESKIY, N.F.;,PSAKIN. P.S.; DIYEV, N.P. [doceaned]; FIRESTOROVIS. A.A. ; -FIJIBHLETWY, D.Y. ; YBUIN, L. I. Shaft furnace melting of an oxidized nickel ore sinter with use of highly sulfurous coke. Trudy Inat.met.UFAN SSSR no.5:123-135 160. (MIRA 13:8) (Nickel-Metallurgy) (Sulfur) MAKIN, M.A.:,KUSAKIN, F.S. Electric conductivity Of MeltB of the system hanAlY, - XaCl. 160. RA Trudy Inst.mot.UYAN SSSR no.5:145-147 fH1 13:8) (Aluminum-Blectromotallurgy) (Liquid metals-Zlectric properties) MOLEVA, N,G.; ZHUCHKOV, V.I.1- MIKULINSKIYt A.S.; KUSAKIN, P.S.; YEFREWIN, V.V. Change in the phase composition of materials in relation to the height of the thermal ore furnace in obtaining manganese sinter. Trudy Inst. met. UFAN SSSR no.7:119-125 161. (MIRA 16:6) (Sintering) (Manganese ores) MOLEVA, N.G.;.p Xt-j.6,.,t-IVAMOMj S.V. PAKL Changes in the c=POsition of the charge iLixture along the height of a stack furnace for nickel smelting with a blow containing 40-percent oxygen. TSvet. met. 36 no-4336-40 Ap 163. (MIM 16:4) (Ii eke 1--Me tallurg3r) OKIJNWI A.I.; KIISAKIN, P.S.; VAT01,111, N.A.; MIMY'I(Novp P.A.; ZAMORIN, 1,.?I. Obtaining metallic nickel directly from a liquid matte. Tnidy Inst. met. UFAN SSSR no.8:75-82 163. (MIRA 17:9) KOZYREV, B.P. ; KUS"U4;j _,,I Electron-induced conductivity, of thin layere of PbS. Bi2 630 and copper-activatnd GdS. Izv.vys.ucheb.zav.; fiz. no.3:16-22 159. (Hlph 12: 10) 1. Lnningmdakiy n1aktrotnkhnicbnskiy inatitut imeni V.I. Ullyanova (Ionina). (se,iconductors) (Sulfides-lilectric propertieo) 30120 3/194,/6L/000/007/036/079 9, 70 (ldr D201/ '305 AUMOR: Kozyrev, B.P. and Kusakin, V.F. TITLE: Electron bombardment of photoelectric switchirg elements PERIODICAL: Referativnyy zhurnal. Avtomatika i radioclektronika, no. 7, 1961, 25, abstract 7 G161 (Izv. Leningr. elektrotelthn. in-ta, 1960, no. 44, 100-105) TEXT: The bombardtnen~ of Ge, Si and CdTe photo-elements by elec- trons with velocities'2 & 14 kv gives rise to an e.m.f. and conse- quently a considerable current lin is induced in the external cir- cuit of the photoclement. The graphs of in against the electron velocity show that the increase in the energy of bombardinfl, elec- trons produces a sharp increase in the "amplification" of current lin, the largest "amplification" being observed in CdTe photo-ele- ments. By using the impulse bombardment of photo-clements for the study of their frequency dependent properties it has been establish- C ard 1/2 1 -'4 - to, ; -e, S 4 14 IN - -L to 14 YY KLUAKIN, V.P. Schoolts of advanced practices tit the Yaroslavl Tire Plmnt. Opyt rab. po tokh. inform. J. prop. no.2:27-29 163. (MIRA 16:12) 1. Starshiy inzh. byuro takhnichookoy informatsli Yaroslavakogo shinnogo zavodn. XUBAKINA, A A. Changes in the transparency, sorption capacity, and polarization degree of a frog muscle induced by certain alterative agents (with summary in English). Veot.LGU 12 no.15:119-127 157. (MUSCLE) (MIRA 10:11) Nitt, YXISAKITIA, A.A., Cand 13101 Sc* (diss) 11 xpe--imax.vt in _-,Plyiim allsparoncy the uliotoclectric mct~lod or neasul, C1111111,6VI; lll of tissue in -the cnarse of the parabiotic nrocc~-s.ll Len, 1b pp; 1 of tables (Len Ca-der of Lerdi. 6tuate Jr_Jv i:ri A.A. Zhdwiov) coples (i' 113) 29 I,.- KuSAX11a, A.K. Changes in the transparency of the cutaneous musculus pectoralis of the frog under various alternating influences. Tsitolo,-iia 1 no.2;218-228 Mr-Ap '59. (HIRA 12:9) 1. Kafedra fixiologii cheloveka I zhivotnykh Leninrradakogo wilver-oitnta. (NUSCIX) POLTANSKIT, Tu.I., otv.red.; LOZIIU-LOZIIISKIT, L.K., zowstitel' otv. red.; VOROBITZV, V.I., red.; ZHIRMUNSKIT, A.Y., red.; -EUSA-- KINA, A.A. red.; RUKTANTSRV, P.P., red.; SWIRO, TO.A., red.; MGXMA, G.I., red.i2d-va: BLHTKH. Rju, takhn.r6d. [Problems Of Cytology and protistology; collection of articles] Voprosy tsitologii i protistologii; abornik rabot. Moskva, 1960. 31~ P. (HULA 13:2) 1. Almdemiya nauk SSSR. Institut tsitologii. 2. Laboratorlys kle- tochnykh adaptataii Instituta taitologii AN SSSR (for Lozina-Lo- zinskiy, Runyantsev). 3. Latoratoriya fi2iologii kletki Instituta taitologil AN SSSR (for Voroblyev, Shapiro). 4. Laboratoriyu eravni- tellnoy taitologii Instituta tsitologil AN SSSR (for Zhirmmakiy, Kusakina). (CM.LS) KUSAKINAv A.A. Changea in the transparency of muscle in the parabiotic process. Nerv. siot. no.1$56-67 160. (Min 13:9) 1. Kafedra fiziologii cheloveka i ;shlvotnykho Leningradakiy ordena Lenina gosudaretvanny7 universitet im. A.A. Zhdanova. (MUSCLE) USHAKGV9 B.P.; KUSAKINAp A.A. Lability and conservatism of the adaptation of animal cells revealed at the protein levels TSitologila 2 no,4:428--441 JI-Ag 160. (KIRA 13:9) i Laboratoriya oravnitellnoy tsitologil Institute, tsitologii AN ;;$Rp Leningrad. (ADAPTATION (BIOLOGY)) (LEECHES) ARZUMAIIUVP V.N~;-- PPAKIVA, A.A. Portable Oti=lator for use in the field. 13itologiia 2 no-4: 501-502 J1-Ag 160. (MIRA 3.3-:9) I. Leningradskiy politekhaicheskiy institut i Institut tsitologii AN SSSR9 Leningrad. (PHYSIOLOGICAL APPARMS) KLISAKINA. 1...A. UShAKOVI B.P., (UK"10 "Chan[:e in the Cholinestemse Activity of the Muscle Tissue of Lceches inept at Vai,lous Te:,ij~em)tuj-o.-3. Repox,t presented at the 5th Int'l. Diochenistrj Conp-ess, Mo~~cow, 10-16 AuL-. 1561. KUSAKIIJA A.A. Effect of temperature on the rate of decrease of cholineeterase activity in liver homogenataB of the frogs Rana temporaria*L. and Re ridibunda Fall# Dokle All SSSR 239 no.5:2258.-1261 Agi, 161. (VIRA 11*,:8) 1. Institut tsitologii AN SSSR. Fredstavleno akademikom Ye. N. Pavlovskim. (CHOLUESTERMSE) (TEITLRAThRE-PHYSIOLOGICAL LYZECT) (FROGS) KUSAKINA, A.A. Rest resistance of muscles and cholinosteraae and its correspondonce to the temperature conditions of the specific environment of certain fishes. TSitologiia 4 no.1:6841 Ja-F 162. (MI'U 15W 1. Laboratoriya oravnitellnoy tsitologii Instituta tsitologii All 53SR, Leningrad. (ADAPTATION (BIOLOGY)) (ICAT-PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECT) (14USCIJ,Z) (CHOLINESTERASE') MAUNA, A.A. conouity between the heat resistance of protoplasm proteins and the temperature conditions of the life of a species. Vop. ekol. 4:45-46 162. (MIRA 15111) 1. Institut taitologii AN SSM, Leningrad. (Proteins in the body) (Heat-Physiological effect) USHAKOV, B.F.; VINOGRALL9,VAp A.N.; KUSAKINAj A.A. Cytophysiological analysis of the interBpecific differentiation of whitefish and grayling in Lake Baikal. Zhur. ob. biol. 23 no.11*13 Ja-F 162o (~Mll 15;3) 1. Institlit-.tsitologii AN SSSR, Leningrad. (BAIKAL# LAKE-WHITEFISHES) (BAIKAL,, LAKE-MAYLING) KUSAKINA, A.A. Thermal endurance of the muscles and cholinesterase of the muscular homogenates in crucian carps taken from hot springs and normal waters. Dokl. AN SSSR 144 no.5:1160-1162 Je 162. (MIRA 15:6) 1. Institut tsitologii AN SSSR. Predstavleno akademikom Ye.N.Pavlovskim. (CARP) (ECOLOGY) KUVENA, A. A.; VINOGRADOVA, A. N. "Species difference in the heat resistance of protoplasmic proteins in multicellul2r PoiAlothermic animals." IUNE300 - International &jwpogI-,x on the Pole or Call Reqctions In Adaptations Of Vetazoa to Environmontal Temporat-ure,, Leningrad, USM, 31 FaY - 5 Juno 1963 VINOGHADOITA, A.N,; KUSAKIPIA, A.A.. Heat reeititance of protopla--adc protein, in the rppresentatives of various populations of halia ridibunda Pa.11 . Sbcr.rab. Inst. tsit. no.6tI58-1U163. (21TRA, 16.8) (FROGS) (HrAT-PHYSIOLOGICAL Lii-ICT) (IIWCLE) MAUNA, A.A. Specific differences In iho heat resistance of protoplaamie proteinse Sborerab. Irot, toite no,6zl69-188t63. (XLRk 16a8) il (PROTEINS IN THE BODY) (HE.AT-PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECT) (ANJMISY COLD-BLOODED) KUSAKINA, A.A. Heat resistance of the acetyleholinesterase of muscle and brain homogeaates of white rate with different lipids composition of their tissue. Sbor.rab. Inst. tsit. no.6:213-216163. WIRA l6s8) (AGETYLGHOLINESTERASE) (HM-PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECT) (LIFIDS) , j , , . ", rI, ,., I . ~ , i , i I; , .".. Iri'.erna:,; (wiii i ~-U'l ."i ~ ~ ,, - 1 1:1~'. ; ! , ", , . " !"-,. ~ ~ 5~)! -5~)'? `-~) TROSHIN,A.S., otv. red.; ARRON91",N.I.) red.; BMER,T.V., red.; ZHIRMUNSKIY,A.V red.; KUSAKIIIAA.A., red.; NOLZZ-1 K.L., red.; FOLYAl'iSKIY." YU.I., red.; SUKHPIIOVA,K.M., red.; USHAKOV,B.P.., red.; FELIDMAN,N.L., red.; AMKMD1ROV, V.Ya., red. [Cell and the temperature of the medium; transactions] Kletka i temperatura sredy; trudy. Moskva, Nauka, 1964. 303 p. (1-11RA 18:1) 1, International Symposium on Cytoecology, Leningritd, 1963. 2. Institut tsitologii AN SSSR, Leningrad (for Troshin, Arronet). 3. Laboratoriya kosmicheskoy biologii Instituta tsitologii AN SSSR, Leningrad (for Lozina-Lozinskiy).4. La- boratoriya. tsitofiziologii i tsitoekologii Botanichskogo in- stituta im. V.L.Komarova AN SSSR, Leningrad (for Aleksandrov). 5. Laboratoriya sravnitellnoy tsitologii Institute tsitologii All SSSR, Leningrad (for Zhirmunskiy, Kusakina, Ushakov). 6. Laboratoriya, tsitologii odnokletochnykh organiwov Instituta tsitologii AN SSSR, Leningrad (for Sukhanova). 7. Botaniche- skiy institut imeni V.L.Komarova All SSSR, Leningrad (for Arronet). KUSAKINA, A.A. Thermostability of hemoglobin and chloinestorase of muslces and liver in the representatives of three subsy-acies of the comnon toad (Bufo bufo L.). Sbor.rab.Inst.tsit. no.8;208- 211 165. Thermostability of hemoglobin in five lizard species of the Kara Kum Desert. Ibid.:212-215 (MIRA 18:12) 1. Laboratoriya sravnitellnoy tsitologii Instituta tsitologii All SSSR, Leningrad. ZNIYEVBKIYP P.K.; KUaAKIKL,-G,,Hr- Using a redesigned atmospheric-vacuum pipe still in the Volgograd Petroleum Refinery., Kaftiwdk 8 M-1:31-32 Ja 163. (MIRA 16:3) (VolgogrbA-Diatillation., Fractional) ZMIYF-.VSKlYp P.K.; KLYUKANOVAp T.N.; KUSAKINA, G.M. Investigating thermal-cracking and retarded coking gasolines an raw olouX ror oxo-u)rn1buB1B& Nort. 1 gaz. prom. no.41 48-49 O-D 164 NTRA 1W) P.Y,,; DA'-1, V.I.; KUSAMN/i, G~Jl. e~ Inveatigattig the noking distl1lateu from the roflning 'asiduori of Volgogral olla. Izv. vys. ucheb. zav.; neft' I gaz 7 no.3., 59-62 164. (M-*,",'~ 17t6) 1. Llnt-,prop~ArcvskAy khlmiko-t.eklinolloill,clieikiy inntitut, KUSAKINA, N.P.; YAKIMETS, Ye.M. Preparation and propprtips of the sodium salt of Ce (III) ethylenedisminotetreacetate. Zhur.neorg.khim. 10 no.4:1010- 1012 Ap 165. (MIRA 18:6) KUSAKINAo N.P.; YAKIMETS, Ye.M. Preparation and pro rtie.5 of hydrogen aquapthylenedisminototra- acetntoeprista (111~." Zhur.neorg.khim. 10 no.4tlOI3-1014 AP 165. (MIRA 18:6) KUSAKINA, N.F.; YAKIWTS. Ye.M. ~4~', - Trilonomatric method of analysis of lead vanadates Trudy Ural,politekh, Inst.no.12101-94 162. (MIRA A:5) (Lead vanadates) (Acetic acid) . I-., : ~ 11 , f !,!: ~~. , 1 " : I ; I : 11 * I , ~j I ~ I . )'' ; 1. ; I r, -11 ~, n, ~,, '"'* 7,'.-'l : 1 ~ 0 .1 .~'. - I -.. I Yilt',AKINA, N.P. OxV, ticn-rtdu,~ Lion ~-ro~)erties of' P-:,-',i r-1 eark blua, ~hromwen.I bltc?c ard mwexl.de indicatoro. Trudy *al.rolitekhlnqt. no,.00r42-47 163. (MIRA 17,10) 0 0 0 0 oz, 1 0 0 a 0 9 - 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 * 0 1 ki if U to 1$ 4 it So Is a A R U AS A a At So a e At it (A it j I AA f p I 00 00 Pkysks of Uld iturface Phenomena In petroleum fech- 86100, M Kilwak.v. V. s. Kultictons agKI N. A. rwifit fictolUr - TOSS 4. I*kyf. ( U. S, S. R.) 4. 1 t477, W -00 So Ovkti).- 0014 jUr %JVjrjj 1,4 file .11.41-tkKI A iW-AtttVl .0411, offe., p1rarw achl otrid ukw SACO ott life IM1111141,11Y **I,I- M.1wal Od, Suffouv tru."s tic 41%vil I'St vou-0 "Kivict ptifultum MIA am Irfinfil littAwts 1,4 Of 14-tithl- .00 miles (Sil-fastrif and ad-oir 'lite data air xf,,cil 14) 111114T t J re(minit iJ life %wi,w, 1" 1114, tif"11. .00 11411111,411n 00 j IS , 00 Do i&411,1111 6 is** I 0 r99 .400 00 90 -41114111 r ulllif 0 - t L A SCIALLOWAL W(gaTtwit cLAsurK&jKS, so 9: 1) IUOO Solo., wo* It I --v- A - of I I v -Tj 00 U 11 At 10 "I"a, N11 ** 11 11 ff A , , *A I I a (Nd 0 U a I N ow 3 a 0 1 i'-, ;f4 4, 0 'Dolt, so 0 * 0 * 0 0 0 * a 00 - 0 6%4 a 4 0 0 0 0 0 off, 0 0 0 0,0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 * 9 9 0 0 off, * 0 0 0 q 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0; 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 00 *1 it U a a U " " " " a " " " *' '" " " A! P-. 0 A. 1-1-11 N CC QP It if 4, 1 P. A Ap U L-~,Oo A 09 0 op#WAd" st Mel X. Le CMI*Utt and the Fulchor- Tenammite wheciesity formetake to tratclor ode &I various 'Y" 0 " M 'u"I". t4 41- , 1 4 _ he ";Z _. h 4 ; 00 - 41 1.kh .. el". .1 111 cm b, 1 1'r wid vnih mmw spjwmimm~m by thr chweliet 44juslion k* kile; V/q. - .4 - B1. whitire v.. Aand 0 ate empirical cmscm.. and log 1,,% q - A - Ht. M, om- clu%Wn is drawn an the 1=6 a# capts. carried imt with 12 different ods. A. A. lkwhtlitigii. 00 jr -00 1.69 -00 .00 a* 0 roe see too 400 0 1 '00 . j: '00 of 400 4 111-11.4 ffiCtAil.41*41clic Utrildr4at CLAIIAPKArfail U00 NJ woo ... ... . J., goo AA-t' 1 4 W 0 li-es W30 64L3 A 1 040 4~T'e 0u 0" 'OT 0- o"0' o 0' 0 o 00 o o 0 0 o o o o o 0 * o 0 o 0609600,199999 0 0 0 0 0 0 64 a a 0 0 0 0 0 o * 0 o 0 0 0 0 co 0 4 0 *009000*9096 K111G%A1'Nf1^1V, M. M. Author, "Methods of Determining Ithe Physicochemical Lharacteristics of Crude Oil Products," United Scientific and Technical Pub. Houses, Leningrad, 1936. About method of determinati(n of the refracticn of cnide oils, in U35R Soviet Source: M: Nefti SSSR, Moscow-LeninGrad, 1945. Abstracted in USAF" Treasure -"b-- - Island", on file in Li rary of Congress, Air Information Division, Report No. 88259. UNCLASSIFIED. 0 0 0 0 of 41 a) a (PA W" call .0 Is 11, tell to 0 # I I 1J.6 1 .0 of two Lwd I~Yeti emod omit offel" up" w at ftdacllsl~ It. Itrryagw &rNI N1. I--** 00 A! K S.M. ". lei, 1'. Jr. S' 'V" (111 It off. mpalk 00 441t. 3-161. ilia. IOU, 741 A21 in'Geinan 'Mill. A twt b-I lar'dele. The rwW " and I hickorm of I Ime ky"s. trul t hi. k - of tw* OW twfgy chisrac(ce-w" cd thch. wilvalf dwalls. 61 41VIN'Titlod. FUt thW COAC 44 Is 1%011.14400 ll%k-M-"NU% 61,11 6 of Ow tellef tj I me; rtmInAy1m ivuw W=Ikmx therrin. Thetwrli"I r%plemoliem4 IsA. kAll for 9,10tilismitism w0 rclatfulatim t4 Iiqwfw 4ystmim, i"Uml u( Iyaphile, vollclid4, and wdiment v.4. and fifirs. ion a( &q. *Am. St (-.'van% zoo rOO too 00 as* fee "we see JA 1use LOS bee -0, too Die jA .0w AT 00 A% I ATJ 1[ 6, 4a of It a a 0 0 o4 0 0 0~0 0 of* 0 0 0 goo 0 u a a it a a If a it M aito is is 9 Is if I) U 4 it 16 It a 11 U : d k 0 t d I #j 4 A-b 1, 9 1 a, _ JF*tt4I"I AWO #*M*1111 saw Its to 00 d"O estat of a wathenutital i v V rm] M H lkf i --go . n a . g Nvah (91,1 Its S S R = - . . . . . ., Was, 107 IIIIII-Mis Vistilish 11-191 2), Th, l I so *00 ited by a thin film 141144U61 fellil, 2 disjolultil; w0ces Cgh phvn (2 Mimllrs of a *AW Or liquitl phaw flom a GuIdAr ~00 of gas) 6 a fundausental pruptity id wAvair ls~jfI 00 QuatsthailwAy. tht 9 his irrit"I h? th~ d- I I " 11 "I f r 00 Puoilictlikk. jKlitictser o the equ . - P C m- ,T T .00 00 1 , (unci lon V - "e" A of the vwa let [Aytt. h 46 z ho =L Is'. an isutherin Of thq rqualkal 44 .141~ 4- M 1 l d fil f l l F ROO .,f 111 11 I' ass his O or 4 Wei tr m on g i iv ayer. .00 00 j a film Of PSMJ%n Od 00 04CWt A pit-AUft! J'0j,'jPJ (ly[Kq lotf I I 00 a ~i x to SQ. fitnt thkknro of lo x 0 hat thr PlivaliOn cfftvt j. nunr tjI,oj tin whi t f XCI qv w i h Add f moo j _ n. o cr, tyrn n a out essunwom. a ace P roo 0 0~ tW cown.. does not affrc(the ordur o((hkknt%% 14 Ill, Wvste layrrs, implying that the divirAtung: wwon I. ska Soo eg ~ ridusivtly duc to the rcpul%kwt of jilluse ~Aju- Uvrl%. " i 00 1 Comawn to loolb surl'ac" ill The sw4vair film. Trivalcm 1 - gee caliotis such its All" hwoe it oittlng 4holvdtiiiji A.. i tloo 00 'd lion- '"lurins ttratly the thk-ktw-A of the wt Ititag film i 1 h i nto 1, wilb 4 and r mIM1 anging rmi&tc wo~z wtm,t an le of L, 3 Th. ft of h d t ffi . . c w a, i o jura n g h h 1 so 111 'In 0M1 (1) IVVITAI Oil iOCICAWS I C t iKkUCU Of tht' (At 6 9mcs itt PCCViOU� S1W, IthiCh 414tifi-Alt% that ttiC 6~1~4p. No: IwaWwAffetis thr thit-lint-Aismi Oi~roinlns rffs~e 4 %d. t:0 0 vote laytro. thus im-traxing w4valk"s, It, PITALLUKKAL 1.0141001 CCASSWICAT000 ---------- it! -id_~ i'47 IF Q., J.( .. ... U IS A' -0 ~ itsi $Cecil at al I 4m 0 4 - I or a 9 a fI 0 6 D nation un 0 4 0 ce 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0*0 00.00 of is 0 a 0 _0 . 6 0 0:9 9 9 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 411, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 :0 0e00000000000000 1 6 1 to p 1 0 to 1) 0 m is is v a III fit A" poomps 09 00 APO" id kcm. l i cerm 01 in the o M. C. A (ITF110114,11[c CW11 so _4&Lj~jl of (fto 4; b u a Lot so it e v ottivenualle 04 14: : 0000 0 0 000000 Nu No 11111111 1111011111 It 10 as -a-mLf"- I 'i a 04 sloe 4114 .0 I- soft actille ..a So hmabe of Le ChattlM and Vert. wismaity Of atmagly ""Ciattisl ~ MMI H. V. L,"yvgin and U. tuve. Pkyri~ki,". V. R.S.S. 7. p The Iturop. dersendencr cJ Ifir vi-CmIly of T b " (I_, ovirrespoMmi to the V. F. T. (wintila 0-140 ZMM The C, (Cf. c. .1. to, tisfairtary. Tworivor -61T,-or"t som.-irosete, ti., ipted. Niki ip too .00 11141110 1,00 Ise* 00, list a It a a I ILII 0 1 ita flow 0 00 off* 0 4 4 a 00 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 F XA.1111.100069? Al 10 .-1 1 4S a I p 3*0 J_ #---1 4 -�-l- k-O _L lit, *0 or. mom al j= tdmag&UM ag MUM- alum. V. Es WAUCUkr WITMO ("Marb") UUM U) the ds"IOPMN" of a meawmaued amant Ol B. DENJAOUIX aM 9- .8.&, 1930. 10, Kv XOT (Act& Pbyalcochlm' U" ng"Cring the 11 M:=An loomed omhod or t tuck,.. of dta; of jjqWd bawem . olld muff,- wetted by them and,babble Is dewribl-d ((*f- A. lgW 1 3%' 1194, Flim). The importanm of ;~ III , J,; ti; C'mcw1on of solvation lknd for the NU ma - d1wumd. P- L C- theory of colkid stabifitY 14 119TAiLUNSICAL LITINAtIlIll CLAINFOCAT" 0 900 =00 400 ! coo too coo so X0 Woo FAo0 so0 C-Z- ~-r. 0.1 Got 4ftT III AV No All ,, 0 ? 4 1, 1 r A I rw 0 0 1 It a 4 31 0 T In a a Ita a 4FA 0 0 0 0-00- 0-0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 004 09 go Ar 9 & 0 0*0 00-3 90 04~ .1 A, t Ramp ol mokcttim ution of nreac" and lee (admwbal) layers. B. '00 D&WAQVtN. X,KTA.zov, and L LKvzt)zvA (Compt. .00 r"W. Aosd- M. XAR. 1939, 23, 671-473; cf. A., 19M. 1, 34*)-ne thickness, A, t4 a film foreur4l Igo by K,O between a gas bubble and mica in - 1.2 Y 10- .00 Cm. Measured vals. of A at various vals. of the excess intenual Pressure P Cors"Pool with ntaks in thermt). dynamlo equilibrium, fixhathW a range (if action of mol. surfsee form of 2-3 x 10-6 cm. For electro. goo lytes, the film oollapses when A becomes small, arml z0 a an upper limit to the thickness of stable wetting Co 0 layers of liquW on solitis exists. [N&vgvrd sub. so a atanca alter the fortu of the P-A curve. The vad. allon of A with salute oonen. shows that A of mlsotbtA 6 at "I tion-4dkl interfson Is -10 1 rtu, The in=t:: of the pressure P I, q. soluti.,. is goo disevissed. W. It. A. so* jiLL' a I L A SITALLMICA, LITINAT1011 CLASWK&TO" AT a U Igo ow 00 0000000000 a : 0 0 o 0 o 00 *0 a *-a * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a goo uo 0 moo ties woo MA I 1 0 FW 0 1 9 0 5 a a 3 UO a I X4 F r--1 0 000 000 0 0 0 0 0 a * 0 6 0 0 so 0 000 * * 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 A a 0011 00 a 00 00 00 I Vff 4 1 4 to a it a Fi- W M A A-11--f-A it I, Aid All-99AL CA- POKII54% ..D PGC*141-ft ..Qfk The Ph"" Chotak" at In at "Cloaclov Of rKMWwM. H. 1=14"u.041"MIS - des tralom 1M. U. Vusakov srW K. 1K. 7=1W. Issi. IstA, 190, No. 4. A. S. 19- 29.-Ten spedow of Petroleum Contained strong oricks O.Ont-0143, weak scirls and pberiols WOOM-0.1115, fire IM&WO 0(,YJ.O.(X%3, butind b"" 0_fkVj 0.010, explud. fetwo 0 120 3 ON, rMbets" 0.01r. 0. IM, silk's gel I us 2.14-16M vird wU paraft I.W12,30%. The outface tensions of porok-um solus. to Doopoloor medicinal oil (surface tensiors at the boundary with water at W is on 61.4 rig/M. cm.) OW In bo"polar Sasollas (antface fensim of the! 40-W* fraction at On bmusdary with water at 20* Is r.. 40.1 erg/oq. cort. I we a Iled. at the boundary -40 1*0 -00 lee -00 -00 100 00 .3 withirrowt. Tb*md..wArterechuwteltaksolpttrokums has an Important effect an the movement of petfaimm in 849o 00 a am vOtable for dctg. a no. of their Properties. The Coo. l t l i i the send layer. The surface-active polar corn $al! '; eum ve compoom s n petro it POW surface-acl j tent of f Petroleum are mainly strong Itrids, bwn and pbenoto, tied 00 the sum C the* components decrease with the dersurso 009 as a of the Initial sufface activity ad petrok-ums. The surface. see active components of all Petroleums investigated wm tow . d b d d d th I t t $00 sor e ecrease e sur a . e., see s. ) at I ( bou;== vss~ter tbgLn at the boundary i1W oil- th t t I l 0110o t t ro. Mo w& er, n ar pe e my Po k-Ams Iftese dittervaces am especiisify great. 1J.& twt fee cambers &Itwd.tv;,Itntly.6ythwckameolikt I* C 4 " d goo stalf of t Polar StIfflCe-WITO COMPOOMti Of Pt t f W M M lee t k 3 inooln. &!d rescoultio more a true rug. soln. Thirtem rtimmes. too . 0 t V%mg, f.'s p'ss f~ W. R. H,IMMI 11100 A MITALLW$C&L L"INOWN CLAMOCAIM see moo 1 - - - ASO U 4 AT M C, 0 0 is 0 a Is Is to a . I 04 to two 0 a IN WIM e.09 Le 0 i q 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 t A *00 *00 0 * 0 0 0 0 i 00 10 : : It 000000 00 10 10 0 0 0 4 a I a a IL A- I- the Phyaks and gliamlacy of sucto4a phou.*10LIA is. 0 f*A01t"tIhPAUtMjMjll. W4Ataf the UkhUn potra. A Cv m farmba". oo 'I V. MA P. vainglus. 0 Clarm jet. Jark. low. No. 5. 49.AH; CL C. .4. 36, IfW.-Pctn"m is bnt WUMI wilb wrak uArm 4 -00 0 * :11calk-9, such as N*,C(-h, Neoli &nil Kolf, at jiq)*~ -00 10 InIn. 4 wo.hing J. tvn,,, 00 1111144116111. PIm ff"vlh" W k 09 0o =0: 00 as 00 00 goo oo 4000 zoo goo No 0 :f. f) is kj~s s L* it too he 0 I L All- OA,Ivall III A a -j I a (. 'T' -I.I..." a a of cl 0 0006 00 0 0 't 0 t,Iso o 0 0 0 00 : : : : 00 0 0 0 0 o o 0 0 66 so sits ~1010- ILA 000 *-G : 0 0 0 q e-e-e 00000000 -& ~l III-, * 0 0 0 0 slay*-101011 via loll lSv boo a 04dap-W I I la IL k t--2 A-A.- A-A L A., a-L' ist -MP I--p'v4lQ(Q 4 r, - 00 00 td 00 ~9 !nd A. TitirvAere. ('"Jw, "%it 009 .4. 54, Cw'A% of cqwluy pfv~w I'l. W."'A tb* ky" of b"id bnwfts pa MW Wdid Wnfam fur vVim old. amphatic bydrmwboas an k" dam mV inwahkvd. The thlrk~ at the 16"Id ky" inert A4 0* with the Im W C slums Is The mol. to a meti, I-V Is Cie V C islipme. Tlw uthd kav a m4ning tilvel stt%,n list lhirkiwo moo I'lliklulilkylta. T%ogmimtkk-kim w"obwvvt1wos loortalur "dam, a lock ON gmt Impm"Ce to hilarkoligul lwwt". Tw towt of dw edw is pwat in the rVelon (460 of c as parittively Me In3nn. The thicknew of witilthaul. 14ym 00 a WIN deptedis, an dw limob of The mob. c4 the 1 Adda, of mA ants. cl m0we-active submtamvs 1 Id. fatity selds). adoosbcd st the out im rawti OWN 2coo -800 NO tie* 400 0 CIO Isom Iii'm a" boo 9.v &Ilt ml 141440 Will 49441 bh u a All to Ll tA I 1 0 N 0 0 9 1 IF It 9 41 44 3 0 9 00 0 0 00 009 0 0 0 0 0 e 0 ~60 0 0 * 0 0 IS 0 6 0 a 0 410 0 0 a'! 040 : : : 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 6 : 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 a a a a 0 0 4~ a 1A, AIL, MLM' *19clsovs A.0 J-00-1614% I-Vf- es Naw'd Pon -um" qg "d dw wi Www"'Of two, got as vft a amw go 0 now be - BOA wow Tim *9 ;am=" coo Of I coo 0* .3 Wp~-" Gov Au abra- upa" role" Wnam ;%i tu w IN'tbe Inn taut "1l Is o""d bflk*:~ :=X= J3 0 3 1 v q AT W !%I a it, 1 g4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 stsil 1-111 k. L_j A P t 4 R.. I ?it~ of the fel"Imptillutor Asimprit I It 04.1410 TIOS"If W IMIUk4twill gas. M -W.6ASAWto hl"Com twill. It I A---- & i -r.-,.U; 1. Ak.,~ ft, Islik. Nauk. Iftil. Moijklol VYj:kojIt Zkrdkas11r_i_K_t ~."Otvm vowimmly.4 1.4quktaft.1 1. IAIJ 1,,%. 1.at jopij%-. the quillity i4A 1111wi- q 4p IF I. . h,, do ih. %J41j,o, .( 114, jrj~-447 1, Vill io-I it" 49,41 .11tips; lot Ill. trilia Will, All V 4 4 *111X 11 T tho, qt.Alll% Ill 1111.1k1oll S -1 1Y .6 1. litilvii a1v ml~gtl,NctmY. A lmk% mrs sporwr IN SUNK-Ocat 1. the quLhty 4 & lalmicatbig 41 with rrwd 1.1 1-111 vi~,.ity levol oplut truip. curfl. (kw paisinwier 6 urviled ill lictisir thv lcvvl at a River, tellili. so and room vir Ivor ifunc. driviulinic m the accuraK-7 dc- ftsop".1orfl. too thawal.tTrite the qNlv 44 lb~ Villoov 9 -./40, In thor ".1-1 to, so ripely mmiw 1111WIll". ,Iql /1. 1.11,11.11116 two- 00 lialsairltrip A Ima It. the ill"KV 4.1 tile lulwilull v0j) =ult. it) a 4 the Imp. "trot (it 9 toy Outing a forisicts-viri of 9 linear fit (titill., (W 9 Welf. ld it '"Sher affar" fajetc.11. A th,rd paisirticler C Is Proodlomi; it laust be Ill ill I its tottl). IN-AACIlls 4 lillo-I - al.ool .-I ot.1 W ld-difictchn, J towilifilift 446. ..1, 411.11 [W WIMI 'Alth Willk-kht fittv- racy with the awl Sol "Ollocialarsm. A, & tbIlv-t%m.I. "Uz. fi,oll, the Vult1+01tvi-Tastinuritu lairtnula In stop. m CIS 1.) is WupuK41 vollk-li, by outatituting luir q the kilw- j # id I,-. 'Ahrit dcusily). bmAmpori, U1W 1-11411WIPFIReio thor Viw- 4-ookly k v% I Oki oil 111fillaft 1114h Imp . %he cWff, C to that chalolm too 1C.111. f-4 *fit, I 11W kilWitlAU.' Vt.-Mlly P "'411.1 u a 00 is to or to to to 0 if a If Ogg VICICS It 11 IS it 8 111 W I v or re I I AA N Q UIP It I c I t .44, -so . . ..... INI. .11h, hill, violooor-Op. I'd" go pmlk -kj~ JI 61.1 J9 Ji. lhat 1, ITIAlt,id) .4,641 lc~ttap, Arloilftm . aliol I Flo,in Ckiwilawntally I.Amij ' valaws 44 1.. 1 . AIM .41 + If can IN in the Imm I'Imp .I C. Tht. Cquotri- '411 bw* bevii b"ttod with,mt excvptim in g,,W spe,mnt ? -00 "ilh ` 0 Pee Iso or I is am* 00 of 0 41p 0 4111 A KOV Y !.P~,iK. S. "Trllnr,f~,tcr a Fle;dhle Ayin for the of 'FrictAi-m Tindr5r Con,lltlon:~ of B-)widary Lubrication." Iz. AK. 53311, Dt.d-]. N-ralky 1. D-~c. 10,43. RT U-155', 14 lbv 1951. KUSAHOV i.i Lalboratox7 of Physical-Cheraistry of Petroleum, in5titviw or 1-.1reral AcaderV of Sciencesi, USSR (-19li4-) "Tempe ra tvre and Concentration Dependence of Qic Viscosity of LubrIcating Oiln wlth H-J-"h-Viscosi1.y and Low-Viscosity A&Iitivesll. Lz Ak flauk SSSR. Otdol) Tcl,.h., Dauk. llo3. 10-11 19114 Ift-52059Oi9 0 0 10 d tl W 0 feace4fda A40 olfoffot4l mts 3035. VARIATION Of V1SCUMTr WIN MUMAMS AND C, 14CINTRATION, IN LUBRlCAT114G wIW 009TA1111194 HIM AND Lori VISCOSITY LDDITIM. r KIA~&k*V# M-M- MU, 64W, 901, VA-4-S-, 1U1 $61, tech., 19", 002 ,i i 612-UAI J'Git. petrol. 1945, 31, 214A). Viscosity deterninationo al.!:; on additive containing *Us were ;L&do Imm Ubbolobdo viscooster in 00 y ge 1!:~ a sp"ial thermostat capable at malstaladq# a wide r&ngo(-50 to .010 09 a 100 Go) or accurately aantrolled 0.2-0-3 ) temperatures. 140 -00 viscosity additive# used vsr* *p4raton,' Rouporol#* and "vialpol,' .000 got go 6 the two latter being polymerized vinyl tot-rs; gasoline was used At low toupwatur*s viscosity goo as low viscosity additive. 00-5 date minstions were carried out with a moll applied pressurel Halting value of viscosity attained (at pressures in region of goo 400 M. B20 ) was taken as true value. Xff*ct of additives may a*. 000 ses-7d by the relationship m: a where o to concoutrotlon --so be 's (W%.*Tof additive sad a If a constant. In the case of v1406" coo additives a to prositive sad characteristic of the additive, goo 1. being independent of tom%maturst. RoUtionship holds for such light No* I J products as gas ollsmA kerosine sad for additive concentrations up to 15-2coL. in the case oraddit1voo of low viscosity (i.e.' gamouns) constant a bteoms negative and varies Ah temperature, increasing 4-ILA MATALLURSKAL W24ATMOM CILASSIFICATO" - -1--,-. ~---- - ---7- .. 7- flow WwAlv gee t 14#1184 44t dMI Off Iola U %0 11 AOL t4hdd 110INNIM 10 10 a 0 0 W a it a No 71 to 0 0 0 * 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 a 0 6 a 0a 0 100 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 9 0 0 A- 0-0 41 .0 a 9 9-9 a 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 o a *a so -I-- so 00 as the latt,r falls. Affect of gasoline I lowering viscosity Is 12 *0 414, n r a arked the Cr#dVr the original viscosity. On (the ooneentratIon 06 1010 o o its original value) to fawd to be a linear Amotiom of temparaturo so 941 are of donsiderable 00 of as valuoin pr*pared3m of blemde having reqttired viscosity chareeterUtles. 00 *0 Affect of both ty,eact additives to to emus* a flattening of the IS : Viscosity ^eBmaturo ewft. I tt" C3,84 of sladtanome 4441tiou .00 0 of viscous and Wavigeo," additiLs the affect of the fbraer is 00 IndeperAeat of that of the l.tt,-r. Results a - - presented graphically 00 In "joerow-41agrameo 0 : 00 00 00 *0 00 ISO 00 00 0 6L 0 Is 0 0 0 0 a 0 6 a e 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 a a 0 0 0 0 a 0 a 0 , 0 00 1 -1 k 0 K 0 N 0 s r IN J& It. A L Q : r , 0 0 - 0 ,: 0: 0 - 0 00 Os 0 0 - go di run AAMA 10 83AIM PrU0011JAva An iv da vas Ilutaq Isnit q vdap plu,41 )a wapaaaam lifill V.)ljUAA,3JdlUjdtRTP'q of n r q 6 1-00 n %uatuw4p eqj AswlmWQ JTV-PlIntorl we M-19 901409" -stjidap I" J*l $403" PlIkIll 44P r '"dop &P No spu-up OB - A419vape" cop- qljtcwi M hb t7 p pl p J n a ilvin 10 splabo 4 VIP= caaffilall 6"Palul W41 Duo" fit = C, (jvjjtdv3 to Mmj 910 u1 ' I nioll -4="" . ) ZAM..U " s * M P a t It t w 1 J114d VVY X It s Im" 1" U4 WIPVM 9M P "J oe- 00- 00. 09'. 0 v I n I w N a - A j I r a v I !!Ole"* Goo 00 6,66 00009 000 J 00000 00 goo so* c oe* 004 set 004 *04 oed go,, *so it. mutt""'t Lf"Nal u 6 AV ;To 0 0 0 A, J[,&.,RAffnS-M.M.AL RLMILAL WfAd A" hadUmaW 40409W kdd by as blaw-fe w4dial In a so volustped dk. 0. VII W Kafthav, aw K. I do. Ack Cf. CA M felt' QU am twkd Is amAimfAe Carl to i";Zll; lim". A umm Wt d %%Jtr-h4W momwaime IS (alum by a Pak to "a l(w All b =7:112111'i py..a-k for -1., 1, -11$ Obkb IIPA S*O -00 t1widt. Aobkm*g tomb" tba Um of I*kI iv- .00 mWkWWMlwP tMg is cquocriam with tbo martow 4k woo bd "Or"Ib"Upwarify a 19049 Q1 -traw FAfMW W-ma ft= gw I. lies - am. TIM mm Ually becortwi so tkw he k wo Ik tow iRt"ftfv&e pattem in 114 ~414. W6- %o 1141tv, lWarmultiorw Werfmaiv hamit, wkkb my be ffbatv=, 9h" vvmgtwr to The fogm 1100 u# the VA%ft -1 an Ow "Wit. im I Itv "1111111 H =1 .00 qUW, TM fatufamce pattems tadiat he arwa, Le.. thecalim - beg - dw Sk rate" the $III an ow woo Wd* havkc me W". Appm. mth. "watims bbaw "Ite, dat mcwtivalm Nq" dwaM gtw waiOt bsrvfs ,fl. mabs hum tow 0d&. L We rAft-Mmankm I*kf'6 0*0 am" 64" to I i%" wkkb dlvvtv ftm or "ftr Itw too mix%, ?bow - - I won comfirmad quW. by cipt. Thus a pktwe is A - I , dbwdy ad the d"wbdVkV Of 411410 Agwiffs rtrum ~m V11- For Uquido awwing Its* adomialaw vistfallf. Th"WI-ri-ti, f1sa"Im Mr be ah4domd him a skile vitpt, fitik U00 d im #*qi*qd aw tiveml "if. I* qmkAIT 1k. Of I-11% M tKWkft&jt (0 &H tAt Itity t4lilt d "WTOMW dorts6twe of %k"f%d Mvv~ an v"Mity woo Owsr T. woo alif Vv 141-- a- ~;- I -T o4resook OV000*990090*11TA 00 0404000000*0*0000011 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 !17 If IF I rrFTm L I! f I "OUL--, NO A&A d I W-S!un- pows"s ado Odwealas 91094 O*A g A I dig. WMIft.- llfft =~. U.N.S.S. 20. -"l 47 , go a , ;; g 1 t rind C W A&W.6 at ism" Fi -d ANI Irb mi " W l d trem-O sm a * o 2mvira l insm. "I V VIA (man Ywhith of the wvd r tat wkkh m h a ft g . . c w g bobw Wm den "W. The sdm. perisks caka. o* 041 Of um SOM 061 thS * Of air tXWtl 40 tbl MI(WO of UN 00,0 kuH fift beks bbma off the watp sorfam. nw remak is Isfift 6W OMN s d i 1 2 d d 0*4 - S ue - asc m ( own.& % an 11 for Newtaftlam GqW& a set of straight Nem divaging front do ar4*- nii comfinme am damum previo"y =,- i d r 040 vm sa agma witb it"t. a Uqtdd of known g 009 Viseaft liptith upetbod cad be used to dct. the vkaity , 40'46*bw so" " tnamv Rack Is blown From th" 0 d d we* I a W 0 Om cos tbm ( ak preaut. b1cwhod time. I tWhiteffenum paltanit ut meamIRA pa"d M-dircedna W blowial at suave fixed twor raciks~ (o &C s Okkk Is the disc, (Tom the mir iftlat to the Com- The vlacesity of I be unknown is given by Owar T Oid,"h . y UVAILLOWAL MIAMI CLAMMAM see off* s"I"Itive 0 444 0.. 4,4 u V AT 0 is AM A I a ad a V a 9 a 4 3 6 9 it A10 a ff IX m 2 1 a 0 0.0 0 0 0 is 0 e 0 0 0 0 0 . ef4 0 at 0 0 * 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 40 * 0, fS.!!fft"w#1 a tit 'A is I-A-1-1-11A 4. -M .1 1 -A, _u A-4- -X-j A ckAmAb"fak d IM awltanful pfs"c*# d Ikulds of i 000 Obwad r MOVIStd 12614111 a HIM layer In a Flaw 16 4, patallA 1. 11, todkov anct K. Krim (A,-AI. a ' ..I. I*. 10. M41609131" c#. ( fi j L 1 1 I 1 *0 qui- .. " pAflwu u 1114ti =7-4 fi Th b "I b 4b i 4 b e ri4al e ng- , cma mf 4 y q a nmIW air etrmrn In a natfow plaft4wralk-1 slit. This l h O h O i i scus n t e wnct t e inethucl perutits the drin. a ty ofenornalow viscosity. the charaderfrAtiew d The motnz. 4 the 41 vahte It such AM 11W dr(ft kvu viectially 994 . , .OF e ova t1w rnctmi of blowla %6t% The a4vanta . c c g In a narrow wedge4baptO Or is the higis amsitivity to b " f ~ b dl l t, nwu m etwrcnt t oirath.vv at yieldvaltmes. I b d i 100 00 'S senmc n toom, of the %W. wW tbc intoUrtme rings a chummlic B61 Rrv drwiwed. When the gfiffteemA. W 1 b coo e9w t 11"91 fict.M11 (hC td'Id U1 tlk~. fiftS. t. II ICC 4C44124 t too wyal. login Is more afnindavif than the ""07M. focto Its mile of Na, Cu, Al, and file tPut the Inverse was true foraxides eml TI and Ply. No 10 goo A 0 - 5 L A MTAk,&W"JCA%. L"ItIATURI CL&%WKITIC& r 0e - b u Av 10 as! VP " 0 IP 1W At v 14 oa jL I d N 6 v v 1 IN 9 a 4 3 a x a or 9 Ken C*KWA fix-1 0 0 V* 0 9 000000000 101 V V, t 11 13 U M to 16 17 s 1 ism 1 L~A_ 11_ 10, A QJI -A., A. ORa A-4-1t. 00 4 .!V" 00 00 J A 06 00 3326o BLOWING MMCID FOR CIMCTERISING FLUMITY OF LUBRICATING OIIA 00 AS FUNCTION OF MWdRAIVRE. Roussakov, U. (Compt. Rand. Adad. 06 Soi* U.R*S.S.t 1946, v01. 64. 146--147). If R film of oil an a *0 8fil smooth plate is subjected to an air curract and a temp. gradient &0 is maintained across the fils; porpondiculor to Us air ourroot, 06 .!it an interforstias pattern Is observed LC the film surface is viewed 000 by ref looted monochromatic light. The pattern can be photorrophed 000 end measurements of Lhe uistanoss bototeen the interference fringes can be-,=ads, and compared with measurements made with a standard 001 oil imider the some ooncitions of tamp. and pressure gradients. AA.! From these measurements the fluidity of the oil at any temp. within the range of the teap. gradient applied can be cale. u if ar IQ 1; .1 a, I V, P Ina 10,40 $*INNS A& 0 3 4 1 10 it to it it of it a It Jn 0 KA 04 -00 .00 ~00 -00 -00 800 :800 C*0 9*0 000 goo coo see le me I 0 0 V40 4 Gio a 0 0 0 a 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41 0 0 0 ol:::,Ooo:loeoooooooooo 000-0 00-0 - 0 0 a 0 0 0 4194141410041~0041 41 0 0 0 * 0 'low of 440 1%, r'lopil A 123), KSMURWENTL OF THE VLZOLITY AND UrMaNINATI(iii M' THE 00 FUNDVENTAL PMOIDGIC CILVACMULITICIi Of' U4LUS BY F.Wk; OF THE BLOW-W METHOD IN A WEDGE-SWED SLIT. Deryagin, B.V.p Au4AkQv, XM. nnd Frim, C. (J. raptl. Theorst. 1hys., 191,6, 16, 179-861 Chem. i6tr., 1946, 42, 5922). so a '0 1 Ir ISO he blow-off method, described above, when combined with the i 00 of 'a wedge-shaped WUtj gives interference patterns that show directly 00 a whether the liquid examined, is following Newton's vircosity law. 09 Straightline pattemn of common oils indicate agreement with this lawl upon addition of Al naphthenate the Interference pattorn, In curved showing an trcrease of viscosity near the wall. T MV so 7-4 #A L I a 'W a W go $0-i-i-i U 00 01; W '00 V 11, rie 4i too is* 0 0 4 0 0 00 00 00, 0 &W MW 0 IVIS W_GAV_#_w_a q Is v w_W-w_E a 0 a : : : 61* 0:e#06q0sq0#*0****# 'I AWM*00 ease 0000o000 dice W it 13 1) 14 11 16 It 0 90 111 itv u Ads 16AI 011140414424 0 vil A IL S..., a,. ?-a .1 A _ I - _4LfffL_L_ AA _21-A W. 'T; 4 U2*4032: :82 A CURACT-RISTIC OF T1.',L MECRAYD:M, PROPERTIFS :F L14T,'IDG CB:;.1?,'D T 100 RAD-ALLT A LIJIS L:.Y-i!; IN L VAPRG, :'Lt- ONJLPIUL SLIT'. 00 rugs, kovs and Yruim, K. J. Exp' Theor. Phys., 1f; (no. 3) 266-7P as (IIA-C) in ~urAgne U,' nothod rivea infomaticn or, ttv rheol,^.-Ical proporti lijuidn such fkn lubricatiog oils. A A 1 9 1 L a 011TALLURGICAt UTFRAT60f CL41,SWICAT" -10 4 1 . Z_ Z.11 I--r-4 1- -3 -I,- -- 1 s a 4 3, s v Is . If KW 484 ,,9f,O us so '00 0 ~ 00 1 00 *0 all, R*W* 0"0 0*10, 0 0 We 0 0 0 0 111 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 a 00 see 0 0 46 0 0 10 : 0 0 * : 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0! 46 q Is 0 0 0 a 0 0 4 00 0 sea **a as se :04 .00 1,40 I so ),$0 see owe --A all 11 16 11 ILI L" a, 1q,u I P T iV A, I I AA (0 4 W 1, L A go 01 A Is 41 M2. CILWL;TERISTICS OF FLUIDITY TS"PEMTLIM RELATIO11 FOR LIQUIDS BY BLCWINO-OFF UETHCO. Kusskov,,,M._,and Rastnovskaya. H. (Ao ta _4141 PhysiooohirA.0 VOR.S.300 1947, 22, 289-302; Chem. Abstr.. 1947, ;-00 a 41, 7185). kn app. to describ-al which enables the fluidity- I raaperaturt curve of a lubricant to b-% obtained in a single short expt. The method Is a variant of the blowing-off method su&&ast*d by K. and consists of photographing the interference -to 00 patterns when 2 oils are simultaneously blown off a narrow plane- 40 e0 parallel alit with a temperature gracient perpendicualr to the 4 00 dirsotion of blowing. The orpt is rapid enough (usually 2-3 00 00 min.) to obivato the need of using a thermostat. The temperature :I;** distribution in determined expertly by simul tansously blowing '-,,coo off 2 oil&, one of which in a standard. With the distribution moo known. the fluidity of tha oil under investigation can be calculated -00 for any temperature. 91pindle oil, whose dynamic viscosity was Aso measured by an 'ordinary capillary viscometer, is used as a standard. a** Viscosity values for zaachins oil determined by this method and -;** values determined by an ordinary capillary viscometar fall fairly i:ae close on a single curve. I The method is still prillminary, but jo Amproved m1crophotametrio treatment of the interforenoo pattern. too photographs should result in rapid and accurate raeasure-omts. I W 1W 5 i2 I *fee A A A 11 11 14 11 11 it 14 Is it )"Y"W"bumme to Is 0 go $Y 4p 04P t~oovkqA .4.~qsj F OM' '00 *0 0 04 Lubricating INIs. An Volmniftallaft of Ploollible Krttoli~'hltft- %1 %1 Ku-,'A~qy, %. 121, jkll~ 1949. to. ranplated fmin -N)nkjm1%l%is,l -m Ow vo WA nm( 0,11,ti'llit SAutwit"', A~rad.tlky I ck111 uf tilt- USSIC. 0 joi runfined t,o the hydr,A)iiamic th--tv sr tsbriva(itm. Camm-h-ra %is-pity smb%, istarnei' 00 Coo imr, %tor,wily ri,lisirrittenis. Imidjam--toLd pwl, 11"Ill.,irtam V~,b:v+ r"I'lXammatim f-trmuln, and pra,twast 1111in ofe pbAll'i. ~'.N Ago so Ve to: L1TfW,1vAt (L&%SlFKjo1jQb L z so It u it AV K3 1% fee r An I Vroo . I, v 0 0 0 0.* go 0 000000 0 40 0 0 00 0! 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 is 0 0 0 010 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 * a 0 4 0 0 0 A.01 - 0 __ 4 6 4 a 6 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 Chemical Abstracts ~--fe-mp-ar-a-t-ure-rel-ati-o-n-s o-f-ind'e-i-a-f r-efract-io-n-- -d- dil-f-r's-c- lion~of I quid hydrQcarbonspt low tcrnperatures. (1. 1). ' Vol. 48 No. 5 -T-r-u-J-v " 1, A Konovalova and M. M. Kuqakov~'. ` Y 5 i lo.=_2J-43kI9W).-. A%auk . ... ~.. R. f InTs. " 's ka Mjjr. 10, 1954 Olsfellnov's method (C.A. 39. 159.53) was used. based on the General and Physical Chemistry - xTiffir-action viax. and min. at th-- boundary of a lfquid/glas~ plate. resulting from the interference of 2 branches of a nionochroutatic light ray, one of %%hich pames through the liquid, and the other through the plate. The n3 and dif- fraction OfAseptantethylionane, itiethyidicy,l,)pent3-1c),clo,'tevaFi,,, and butylbenzene changcd linearly between +20 and -60'. With a sufficicutly high-grade monochromator perinitting (fie isolation of a 2-A. spectru-n range. and a sufficiently great range of standard glasses. change-i in the is can be detil. %vith a high degree of accuracy in the app. uqed; the accuracy of the inca5urcusents was within +0.0001. Thv sp r fraction calcd. by the Lorentz-Lorenz formula i, ' tion of the temp., and i~lo%%cr at lowerleml-sq. :t illue W. M. SICtIlbelc 4 affect of th Orare Rod the teas"cature an the surface - locusloo of ?9=0:013. wt. M. Ku*qkq~j N. Xf. Lutmwait. "t A I K Vol (1111ttillewn hit., Ac%J. Sk I U.Ssik.). "'1'.4L'Wy AL. NdaA S.S.S.R. 14. (19W .-Measurvinelits UP to plenvot of 300 ks.ill. Cm. were out& by method of hanging and of lying liquid rope and checked, with satisfactocy agreement, by the method ;i ) vubabble. Pora Mvon Petroleum. the 'algainst No was found to doervaer regularly with Increasing Inessurv. the l"ter the lower the temp. (20, 60. and M*); c.a.. at 20'. # fell from 25 to 13 efts Isq. can. Wwrert I atul 250 kg.isq. cm. However. The surface tension In contact with HoO. at 20' retuak" unchanged to3ookii./sq,cm. Lilmorioc, u44cr the coast. pressure ks./sq. rm . v at the boundary with HoO Is indqendent of 4W WHIP. The contact angle of calcite. in a No Mm York* vvty little with The pressure, N. lium FUXS, G'I.; KEJSAIOV. M.M., professor, redaktor; LIVOYA, L.A., vaduahchiy redRT6-r";'?MIIA. A.B., takhnicheekLy redalctor [Viscosity and plasticity of petroleum products] Viazkost'i plastiohnoot' nefteproduktov. Pod red. X.M.1usakova. Moskva. Goso nsuchno-tekbus isd-vo neftianoi I gorno-toplivnoi lit-ry, 1951- 27 P- [KicrofilS3 (MIRA 10-.1) (Patrolauz products) USSR/Cbamistry - Petroleunj Jul 52 LIquid Fuels "Deter=I-ning the Surface Tension of Liquid Hydro carbons and Petrole= Crudes by the Drop-Size- Measurement Method," M. M. KusELkov,'T;. M. Lubman A. Yu. Koshevnik "Trudy Inst Kefti" Vol. 2, PP 53-72 p, A criticLai review of methods for this type of measure=ent. Authors describe equipment Jhr thii3 purpose which they designed. Show on the basis of their data that the surface tension at the boundary oil-water of nonpolar oil and of crude 243T11 petroleum is practically independent of the teW in the range 20-800. Established that the method of surface- tension measurement in question canbe used when other methods fail, and that it is ap- plicable to highLy- viscous liquids which wet glass well. 243TIl C) An atteiniol to reduce tholwadp action polym;leiulu liq lac" to the A46frox scoul load 11clusin WL Ku&aktjvMHj COW), Zirst?. flt KAjAV. 20, 1& -'Mion A, 43. 49Vo) the Nuld films remaining between a LVble and a solid are equil. formations; the light Inter- F.Unce patterns shown by these films ase different from -IhTe !e~"qt-F4 In Elton'*. paper._ man A :nd L. 1. ?Witn"tda .4 ~~44~7. '~gfl. .6- --,Szj-fac MI i'llu i0a ;:x On a &=Pk of 'Nin..zin'sk rjlo~- Q6, h4ving 1,-' Cj.g,'kwA; klatmatic vEc'~.Ry at 211, 15Z ctntq~'vwl~ wpb3lt Unit 46%. S "meat 1-51%. In adda-. h~,.~rfa,--xal lftmm wr-rr rr"dccf tiie 5-ola. e. tbe o tul'~ At if. t'cm'~' 'x:talle. cyc1rhrlarle, bcmi-lit. and lj-~ene I t T- ft,(Md that thc TuhvrivnA, crule oil ci:ouum, voL: ~uh- i i;cts w1 In IN! frai O~m li, h j' - - - - - - - - - - - - - KUSAKOV,)(.M.; KOSHILEVA,I.M. Determination of the surface tension on the boundary of two liouide by weighing drops with torsion balances. Trudy MNI no.13:171-180 153. (MLRA 8:6) (Surface tension) InI AtIon 0( ui~~, A.-I of Chemical Abstracts May 25, 1954 General and Physical Ica 1 ' fauls (IP otl th Chemistry &,) e calclIs. "I 11-d h~jgj'~t Yen for de Ba I'Sessill: Eli. t9, VArface OPS. i~g . ~ 0) - r-I USMI/Chemistry - Lubricants, Juthors Razumovskaya, E. A., and Kusakov, H. H. Title Two-dimensional characteristics method expressing the thermAl derAndende of the viscosity of lubricants by the method of thtn layer blow-off Periodical Zhur. Fix. Khim., 28, Ed. 5, 936 - 9144, May 1954 Abstract A method, based on the blow-off of a thin oil layer in a narrow plain-par- allel slot and leading to the derivation of a curve expressing the thermal donendence of volatility (value of reverse viscosity)# is described. The method is called two-diwris*ional because with one test it is possible to obtain not.only one point but a continuous curve. The method is also'ap- plicable in obtaining curves which characterize the rheological properties of lubrication oils. The instrument (themorheometer), used in combination with this new method, is described. Six USSR references. Graphs, drawings, illustrations. Institution Submitted Y: Acad. of Se. USSR, Petroleum Institute, Moscou Nov. 18, 1953 MAKOV, M. R Subject USSR/Engineering AID - F-190 Card Authors Kusakov, M. M., Lubman, N. M. and Koshevnik, A. Yu. Title 3 Measuring Installation for Surface Tension of Oil and for Boundary Angle of Wetting In Strata Conditions. (rart I). Periodical Neft. khoz... V. 32, #2, 27-32, F 1954 Abatract Method and optical apparatus for measuring of the surface tension of oil, water and gas are described with five detailed drawings. The test procedure and conclusion are given in the next issue (#3, p~ 20). Institution Experimental Mechanical Plant of the Petroleum Inst. of the Academy of Sci., USSR. Submitted No date KITSAKOV, H. K. AID P - 203 Subject USSR/Engineering Card 1/1 Authors Kusakov, M. M., Lubman, N. M. and Koshevnik, A. Yu. Title Measuring Installation for Surface Tension Oil and Boundary Angles of Wetting under Stratum onditions (Part II) Periodical Neft. khoz., V. 32, #3, 20-22, Mr 1954 Abstract A description of the general arrangement of testing equipment and of testing procedure for the determination of surface tension on the boundary with gas and water and boundary angles of wettin One diagram and , 6 Russian references (1930-M institution None Submitted No date rXtk.S AJ 0 v AID P - 1102 Subject USSR/Mining Card 1/1 Pub, 78 - 13/21 Authors : Kusakov, M. M., Lubman, N. M. and Koshovnik, A. Yu. Title : Surface tension of petroleum on boundary of gas and water phases at stratum conditions Periodical : Neft. khoz., v. 32, #10, 62-69, 0 1954 Abstract : The study of surface tension and density of petroleum of three types (Tuymazin, Termiz and Nebit-Dag) is described. The study was conducted at temperatures and pressures corresponding to the stratum conditions (about 800c and 250 atm). The surface tension decreases with the rise of pressure and is faster at lower temperatures. The charac- ter of decrease is more complicated at a boundary with a water phase than with a gaseous phase. Eight charts, 1 table and 2 Russian references out of 12 (1950-1954). Institution : None Submitted : No date Subject USSR/Chemistry Card 1/2 Pub. 78 - 24/25 AID P - n46 Author : Kusakov, M. M. Title : Review of the handbook Physicochemical Properties of Individual Hxdrocarbons, Vol. 1V, edited by Tillcheyev, Gostoptekhizdat, 1953 Periodical : Neft. khoz., v. 32, #11, 93-96, N 1954 Abstract : This is a review of a new edition of a handbook prepared by different professional specialists. Chapter I on heat of evaporation of low hydrocarbons C, - C4 written by M. Kh. Karapetyants, specially analyzes empirical and semi- empirical relationships and evaluates the degree of pre- cision or reproducibility of data. Chapter II on pressure of saturated vapor of the hydrocarbons C9 - C40 was pre- pared by M. D. Tilichev. This chapter contains data on more than 200 hydrocarbons. However, most of this data Neft. khoz., V. 32, #11, 93-96, N41954 Card 2/2 Pub. 78 - 24/25 AID P - 1146 is related only to the liquid phase, and some to the crystalline phase at temperatures about 80% of the critical temperature. Chapter III was prepared by A. B. Iogansen and contains information on ultraviolet spectra of hydro- carbon absorptivity. Other chapters discuss.the thermo- dynamic properties of alkanes at the liquid phase, the co- efficients of expansion, compressibility, and the meaning of the difference Cp and Cv for these hydrocarbons. Institution : None SubmItted : No date KUSAKOV, M.14.: M73KENITSKAYA, L.I. [On thm thickness of thin layers of connate water] 0 tolsbcblne tonkikh solov "aviazannoi" vody-, doklady na IV Hazhdunarodnom neftianom kongress" v Rime. Moskva, Izd-vo Akad.nauk SSSR, 1955. 43 P. NLRA 8:9) (Films(Chardstry)) (Petroleum engineering) ORKIN, K.G.; KUCHIHSKIT, P.K.; KUSAOT . M . prafAssor, doirtor fiziko- kbimlebaskikh nmik. retwenzent; GNTKAH, M.A.. redaktor; FW;UZA, Ta.G., redaktor; THOFIHOV. A.Y., tokbnicbeekly radaktor. DVsics of oil reservoirs] Visika nef tianogo plasta. Kookwa, Goa. naucbno-tekbn.izd-vo neftlanoi I gorno-toplivnoi lit-ry. 1955. 299 P~. (MLRA 8:10) (Petroleum engineering) ANDIWEV, A.B.; ANTONOV. A.I.; ARAPOV, P.P., BABNASH, A.I.. BEDBYAKOVA, A.B.; BIEN, G.S.; B ICH. T.T.; lZRNSHMN, S.A.; BITM5107, V.I.; BLTUMEKBERG, Y.T.; BONCH-BF41TWICH, X.D.; BORMOTOV. A.D.; BULGAKOV, N.I.; VIKSLXR, B.A.; GAVRILEIKO, I.Y.; GENDLER. To.S.. [deceased]; GULIVANOV, N.A., Edeceasedl; GIBSHKAN. To.Te.; GOLDOVSKIT,Ye.M.-, GORBUNOV, P.P.; CORTALMV, P.A.; GRIMBIRG, B.G.: OWUNIR. V.S.-, DAIR)TSKIT, N.Y.; DZIMISKIY, V.M.,(d*co&9ed3; DRIKAYL40. P.G.: NBITS, S.G.-, D'YACHWO. P.F.; DYURMBAUX. N.S., [deceased]; YEVORCHMMO. B.F. (deceased]; TICLIYASHKMCK. S.JL-, ZMGMOV, L.P.; ZATZLISKIY, A.S.: ZAVELISKIY, F.S.; IVANOVSKIT, S.R.; ITKIN, I.H.; KAZHDAN, A.Ta.; KAZHINSKIT, B.B.; KAPLINSKIT, S.T.: KASATKIN, F.S.; KATSAUROY. I.N.; KITATGORODSKIY. I.I.; KOLISNIXOT. I.P.; K010SOV, V.A.; KOHAROV. N.S.; KOTOV, B.I.; LIM, T.T.; LIBIDEV, H.V.; LWITSKIT. N.I.-. LOKSHIN. Ta.Tu; LUTTSAU. T.K.: MANNNNBnGKR, A.A.; HIKHATLOV, V.A.; MIKHATLOV, N.M.; MMV'Tlff. I.H.; 1 1,11", G.M.; PAYLTSHKOV., L.S.-, POLUTAXOT, V..k.; POLTAXOT, To.S.-. POPOV, V.V.; POPOV, N.I.; RAMIN. I.Te.. RZHXWSKIT, T.T.; ROZ100G, G.V.; ROZENTHMN , B.A.- HUMAN, ToX.; RMAYISHRIKOV, V.I.; MIMSKly, B.N. (deceas;dl; EMIN, P.M.; SMIRROV. A.P.; STEPABOT, G.Tu, STWANOV, Tu.A.; TARASOV, L.Ta.; TOKAW, L.I.; USPASSKIT. P.P.; YJCDOROV, A.V.; YMM, M.N.; FRRNKMI. N.Z.; KHWFZTS, S.Ta.; K=PIN. R.I.; KHODOT, T.T.; SHAMSMJR. V.I., SHAPIRO. A.Te.-, SHATSOV. N.I.; SHISIEKINA, H.N.: SHOR. 1;.R.; SHPICH7aWSKIT. Ye.S.; S11PRINK, B.I.; SHUMLING. S.Z.; SHUTTY, L.R.; SHUE14ALITHR, L. Ta.: MATS. A.T.; (Continued on next card) A-NDFWff, A.B. (continued) .... Card 2. TAXGVLbT, A.Y.; ANDRETHY, Ta.S., ratennient. rodaktor-, BXMN- GP.tM,B.M. . retsomsent, radaktor-, BEWLkN. L.D. , rateenzent, redaktor; BOLTINSKIT, V.N., retsenzent, redaktor: BONCH-BRffXVICH, V.L.. retsensent, rodaktor; YXIM. M.A. . ratsan%ent. radaktor; VINOGRADOY. A.Y., retsensant. redaktor; GULTSOV, N.T.. retanntent, redaktor; DNGTTARRV, I.L., rateensent, radaktor,- DEMITARUX. Y.S., retsensent; i-edaktor; DOBW)SMTSLOV. I.N., rateenzent. rodaktor; TIWCHIX. G.M. retsenzent. rodaktor;ZIUMCHKIN, D.N., retsenzent, redaktor.: SHtftVCHMfKO, A.N.. retsenzent. redaktor: ZLODEIYNV, G.A.,, retsensAnt. redaktor; KAPLUNOV, R.P., retaen2ent, redaktor; KUSAKOV, MA.. retsenzent, redaktor; LEVINSON, L.Te., [decna9edgj-rjstiintent",' redaktor.- %IALOV, IT.N., retaenznnt, redaktor; UWS, V.A. retsenzent, redaktor; MMELTTSYN, I.I., retsenzent, redaktor; MIMUTIOV, S.M., retsenzent; redaktor; OLIVLPTSKIY, B.A., retsenzent, rodaktor; PAVLOV, B.A., retsensent, redaktor; PAIIMOV, N.P.,,retBenzent, redaktor; PLAKSIN, I.N.t retsensent, redaktor; RAKOV, K.A. retsentent, redaktor; RZHAYINSKIT, V.V., retsenzent, redaktor;, RINBERG, A.M., retsensent; redaktor; ROGOVIN. N. Te., retsenzent, redaktor; RUDMO, K.G., retsentent, redaktor; RUTOVSKIY. B.N., (decoaaed] retsenzent, redaktor; IffZHOV, P.A., retsenzent. redaktor-. SANDOMIRSKIY, T.B., retsenzent, redaktor: SKRAHTAYEV, B.G.. retsament, redaktor; SOKOV, V.S., retsensent, redaktor; SOKOLOV, N.S., rateenzent. redaktor; SPIVAKOVSKIY. A.O., retsenzent. redaktor: STRAMINTOV. A.Te.. retsenzent, redaktor; STRELETSK17, U.S.. rateenzent, redaktor; (Continued on next card) ANDREYET. A.V.,(continued) .... Card 3. TRV,TITAKOV, A.P. 0 retsenzent, redaktor; FATIMMItN, Te.H., TotgOntGnt, redaktorl KHACHATTROV, T.S., retsenzent, redaktor; CHERNOV, H.T., rateenzent, redaktor; SHYMON, A.P., retsen20nt, redaktor; Slm9T'O- PAL, YA. retsenzent, redaktor; SHESHKO. Te.F., retsement, rodaktor; SHCHAPOV. N.M.. retsenzent. radaktor: TAKOBSON, M.O.. retsenzent. redaktor; SMANOV. Tu.A., Professor, redaktor; DEMITAITM, F.S., professor,,rodaktor; ZHAMSKIY, A.A., Inzhener, radaktor;PLAKSIN, I.K., redaktor; RUTOVSKIY, B.N. (deceased] doktor khimicheakikh nauk. professor. redaktor: SBMGALITER. L. Ya. kandidat tekbnicheakikh nauk, dotsenti redaktor;BRESTINA, B.S., redaktor: ZlWfKNSKIY. A.A., redaktor. (Continued on next card) ANDRETEV, A.Y. (continued) .... Card 4. [concise pol3rtecbnical dictionary] Kratkil politekhnichaskli slovarl. Redaktsionrqi sovet; IU.A.Stepanoy i dr. Moskva, Goo. izd-vo tekhniko-teoret. lit-ry. 1955. 1136 p. (MLRA 8:12) 1. Chlen-korrespondent AN SSSR (for Plakain) (Technology-Dictionexies) - - ., ~ .7 ~!' - .--- . - j - ~ ~ ~., , . I . 'Ir , I )s ~:!,e of Thl'i Lap--ro oll, o'e " -u - - - 4, - . I . . ('-,, , ~ . '1001 "1' '~'! f~' j'r."L,!"-)!Ql-li (~,!~.,,-,."(--:,~,7 -1 11 "The r"fei utivity Ff efuee ' r IJ s s Al. Kwwl-ov. Akad. V(,vk %'. 41 Ouvalpik and M. f'~CEUVJ fittg. 1111 SUgf;LCe fCUSI", W, 11 Mllle. ciN ivc-rc stipl;cil by c=ing. 3 igKIcIzilem WItt iflT,!(t;ot um. mlt3 of Clanponno cf the vib Wirt fLuch CTI)CIC Oil i'A'M 'NO). 1 (1) d.- OA17J4*. W~~ 1.450; ft"Ji. tilt. 210; izvntg. 0.23% rr-. gcMi, 1.31% tar, PSL7-~, mnitrat M '). ~ (M 11' .4 P-1: 1 %Vt. 274; Lortz. 03455 ON' ""f" ITS% tr.- r;Z.Afral ,,I#, truccj ,,? Ggplialtiq Xv. 3 (111) dIf OA~~Vg nj,' I i9fgl, 7, tar con1g. 1.021% org, schb 6 Ino" wt 545 OiM7. M;2 . , , , , ' mutrrl oil, tract-4 of aiplwlts Thc milt niv coutabi(4t th4 IAlowin, "V"C. 11, S. 0 + X, MP., 1. 83-0j, 13.91.0-10. (),W; 11, 80,44. 13.19i 1:9. 0.19: 111. 91C.00. MMO, D -1121, 0-56. All w wtm do,d. at 20 --~ 0.10 Ijj* &. mpalaty-4rop metil,xi. At t1j.- l"tedua wah air. r jin vrgi./sq. cm., wzv: f,V1.5, 0 v bi Wgttf Ent lot wrU f9f th~ cgtln.~" Wag 4E.U f - Crude OIL im o ' A fl W h 4 k f crr t t c u e. 10 c o m e, katL 16 nxp tjv.~ c 1 I st, v. rd p," a the ~ut Ili v k S-hAV44 OMNI t uldch knom s ho jSf;*nWY wff . MIJANd Didlvlduall~. 9"h tadiv mohm was d4- .. . .... -nd la lIgmim i sol I W to 04do" 0 toAj. I ruiftf. 0 to M., VT W41ttr Vill neutmI.-ail) And 0 of i h lutaftw of IM som, And J Cad,. '~ Tim uld 1~ U-1b, W hto -wk* o[,,& I;Zis- altr .4- A&Wk ham Iff LOU; 44m1 from r 112110" ft "'S fmrA 11 325 Q; ViAws f*t' 11 '4426-uovp the fwtbclO~ 'tb imuc. ~Ayt i c ~ ~Jumecu' ldcf-VAM-d -v&K =4'4t'~C4 the- el" ' D C, S. L. Uks aud M. Kim tolsills. It. 87-4f~An atte=pe is made to dct. the cfects of boum4l water In the p'-COUS Mecaulu ca the filzradw rales. of Mhu. d vd~dldwj mkmnl od =4 mpo4r Vroiac, with a4das. a u4htheuic scids. Tbt, bo=d w;ttcr,=upkd a toW cf,20-25% of the Pate vol. arol was boun d El ft:W. fmves whb the wUd phase ~ audace, retniLlaing V*t4nuy '-%fizz ffir nilgratka a thlc~cd thrWgU the pcccl, a-. b1zher the ua?hthtak add coom'. the createf Was the tedw- ThectlAtive pameabilfty thmqh a Vxp" atedium is teductd by the =Ceseut, and with kiW,naphd=k SCO couttnt Is chicay 19cause of tfkt ccutuce of the sluk~cuy woter. The did-of the Wdad water tu"t te tikes into cwmldcmtia4 in the hydrwy~jmic jcompulad4as of the cffl fto~qery when the water CoRtent cictcds 10% of the tGW N.erh ItUt Of P6MV0 Aq4l t9r,!p,-,-4tUrq ~, t ' , V I"j:il, of Trud!y tLl in t.)~.Ivrt with g-I; .\; ', I-" ' I " - ~- Labrvlu cf jr~-Mr--MM'.; L,:;V,, N-. 14 11-1 4-t '~-, i - - ~ - - MZMITSKAYA.L.I.; KUSAKOV,M.M. Selective wett~ing of a solid surface by petroleum in relation to the pH of the water phase. Trudy MNI no.14:148-155 '55. (MLRA 8:11) (Petroleum geology) (Fluid mechanics)