SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT PUDOVIK, A. N. - PUGINA, L. I.

Document Type: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86-00513R002202610007-1
Release Decision: 
RIF
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
100
Document Creation Date: 
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 17, 2001
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 31, 1967
Content Type: 
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86-00513R002202610007-1.pdf4.47 MB
Body: 
USSR uDc 542.gi+66t.718.1 Pimng-m- TEREWYEVA S. A. and PUDOVIKv H. A. , Institute of organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzovs; Academy of.Scienobs WSR "The Reaction of Amidophosphites with the H-Phenylamide of Acrylic Acid- Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii liauk SSSR, Seriya Xhimicheskaya, No 3P Mar 71, pp 643-646 Abstracti The reaction of the diethylamide of diethylphosphorous acid W with the phenylamide of acrylic acid (II) at 125-300 resulted in the formation of ti,li-diethylamidoethyl-N,N-ethylpherAylearbamoylethylp~,osphonate (III)l (E:tO)2'Fn't2 (1) + CH2-CHCON1iPh (II) --~, Et EF(O)CH 202CON(PhAt (III). III (b ? 159-600 at 3 x jo-3 mm) eto was obtained. with a yield of 6415. Similarly, the tetraethyldiaalde of ethylphosphorous acid reacted with 11 w1th the formation of the tetraethy1diamide of Ngli-ethylphenyl=ba.,noyletbyluhosphonte acid (Et2N)2P(O)CH2CH2CON(Et)Ph (10. Compound IV $q 165--~?O at 2 x 10-3 MM) was Isolated in 2W, yield. Compound 11 did not react with bexaethyltriami 0- phosphine or 2-ethoxy-N-aethyl-1,3,2-oxaasaphoopholane, Under the action of 1Iv the latter compound underwent ring opening - and homopolymerization. Alkyl halides have a similar effect on oxaasaphosphplanes. 1/1 USSR UDC 661.718.1 + 54Z.955 FUDOVIK M. TERENT1YEVA, S. A., and PUDOVIK, A. N., Institute of Z. M A I Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy of Sciences USSR "Reactions of 2-Alkoxy(Alk-vl)-4,5-benzo-1,3,2.-oxazaD]iospitolanos With Nitriles and Esters of a,6-Unsaturated Carboxylic, Acids" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 43 (105), No 12, Dec 73, pp 2619-2621 Abstract: 2-Alkoxv(alkyl)-4,5-benzo-1,3,2-axazaphospholanes react with nitriles and esters of a,$-unsaturated carboxylic acids in absence of catalysts. The reactions occur with a mig4ation of hydrogen atom yielding 2-alkyl-2-alkoxy(alkyl)-4,5-ben?o-1,3,2-oxazaphosph6lenes-2. 44 USSR UDC 661.718.1 PIMQYIS, M. A., and PUDOVIK, A. N., Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy of Sciences USSR "Synthesis of 2-oxo-3-phenyl-1,3,2-oxazaphospholanes" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 43 (105), No 10, Oct 73, pp 2144-2147 Abstract: To a solution of 2-chloro-3-pheny~-1,3,2-oxazaphospholane in benzene a mixture of water, triethylamine and tetrahydrofuran is added dropwise. After 24 hrs storage and removal of triethylamine hydrochloride, a viscous mass is obtained which becomes crystalline; after recrystalliza- tion from benzene the 2-oxo-11-phenyl-1,3,2-oxazaphospliolane (1) melts at 86-87.*. Two other approaches via hydrolysis~or acidolysis of 2-diethyl- amino-3-phenyl-1,3,2-oxaiaphospholane failed to yield pure (1). Geometrical isomerism has been noted in a series of five membered phospli-ftes containing a n1trogen atom in the ring, from the analysis of 1H and 31P NMR data. - 24 - USSR UDC 661.718.1 PUDOVIK, M. A., and PUDOVIK, A. N., Institute of Organic and Physical Ehemistry imeai A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy of Sciences USSR "Synthesis of 2-0,co-1,3,2-diazaphospholanes" L en ingrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimi-, Vol 43 (105), No 10, Oct 73, pp 2147-2149 Abstract: To a solution of 0.05 g-mole of 2-chloro-1,3-dialkyl-1,3,2- diazaphospholane in 60 ml of anhydrous benzene a mixture of 0.05 g-mole water,.-O.05 g-mole triethylamine, and 15 ml tetrahydrofuran was added at 10-20". After.12 hrs at room temperature the"base hydrochloride and the solvent were removed, the residue disti-lled intigh vacuum yielding 2-oxo-li3-dialkyl-1,3,2-diazaphospholanes - colorless,liquids. The NMR and IR spectral characteristics of these compounds have been inve.~;tigated. UDC 661.718.1 + 547.879 USSR Institute of organic N-, WWVTK It. A., TF_RENTIJEVA, S. A., and PUDO' Acad. Se. USSR KY_~Phys~ical ChemistrY Imeni A. Ye. ArbuzOv, and ospholanes With Hexaalkyl- -4 5-benzo-1*3*2-oxazaph Of 2-AlkoxY "Reaction to triaminophosphines (105), No 8, Aug 73, p 1860 i, Vol 43 Leningrad, zhurnal Obshchey Y-hiln' lanes with hexa- Reating 2-alkoxy-435-benZO-1231,2-oxazaphosPhO hos- t1le formation of oxazap Abstract: intaphosphines at 120-140' leads to t of 9-methoXY-435- alkyltriam system P-jr-P. A Mbcture of 10 'nine was pbol es with a geminal a.Lnophosp an , 2-oxazaphospholatie and 9.7 g hexaraethyltriax le thy lamina) - benzo-1,3, Ig 47% of 2-methaxy-3-bis( Idi *rr 11()-1.300 for I hr yieldil b.V. lljo/0,007 mm, d4o 1.1577, cheated to -1 3 7-oxazaphosphola'apl-P :rom 2-is propo-Ay-4j5-benzo- phosphino-4*5-benZO, 9 v Ig f lar fashion, start" ; 2-isopropo,,~y-3-bis- ijO 1.5610. T-- a s'm' tyltrianinophosphine d hexaett bspholane was obtained, 3,zaphospholane an zo-1 3,2-~o:kazaph L93,2-M no) phosphino- 1 4 . 5-b'eu 9 (diethYlam MMP djO 1,0744, n20 1.5338. b.p - 130.0 /0.025 D Co Isitro 41 .79 Dr, arl % ime ni G RV, ~,olineall 01 0i r r e "t,r-t 0 o~ve 10 -,CC 0 C) 1:,~ d a C, 0 L je Ti a- -lay -9 71 J~ I ,%bbtra i;~e the 0%e al e %;31 01 b0 -rIlter- terr., 11 Ojec C e C-5 atol's r G 'An rn Jill of 01C;6- iroU9 ionl of OE 1-3-119 r,1 t~-,e r1u, brC3~' ion. Volvo volOW-11v'r 01 of t on - I L in n t",e on t _-, 1 lobs of jro rro e rol.. le Coss vro r 1(,1. USSR UDC 541.67+447,31+538.27 SAKTOVI YU. YU. A. XMYAROV, A. I., and XIBAFD11NA, L. K~ "Stereochemistry of organophosphorus Compounds. ill. Nuolear MMnetic Resonance Spectra of-IR and 31P and the Geozetric Xsomerism in a Series of 112j3- oxaazaphospholanes" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimil, Vol XLIII (CV), No 1, 1973, pp 46-51 Abstracts In contaUing the studies in the field of the steraochemistryof pbosphorus-containing hetero cycles, the pxesence of Gl;ereolsomers in the series if substituted 10,2-oyzaa.-aphospholartes was datocted in which is,=erism is caused by the preaence of the chiral =bon atom in the ring and the men- tioned property of the PIII pbosphor= atom. The proo-T of -the presence of the stersoisomer3 iw obt,-Uned by the zethod of gaa-litlixid obroLuttography and nuclear magnetic resonance, the confo=ation of tho hlgh-ele -lent rIng was established by an~ia o2 the nuclear magne-tic raraunance spectra, The serles of 5-ethyl-1,3,2-o7-namphosmholanes .- which axe tubulatad were synthe- sized and Investigated. The pz--do'ninant conformation of the 5-number hetero- cycle is the form of the envelope with the oxygen atom at the top of the vent. 1/1 USSR Urc 547.26,118 PUDOVIK, A. N., PUMVTK, M. A.., and IVANOVA L. K. Institute of Organic and Y-d,. Arbuzov, A ad. Se. USSR Physical 'chemistry Imeni A e "Reactions of 1,3,2-Dia2aphospholanes With Acyl Halides" Leningrad, Zhurnal. Obshchey Khiznii., voi 42 (io4), No 9, Sep 72, pp 1906-1910 Abstract: A series of -2-substituted NpN-di-tert-butyl-1,3,2-dia,?~-tx,)tlospliol--nes was synthesized. It was shown that, depending on the substituent at the phos- phorus atom of diazaphospholanes, the reactions with acvI halides ray occur with retention or breakin,-, of the ring, forming derivatives of 3- or 4-coordin- ated phosphorus atom. With an exocyclic dialkylwaino, group tAvz~ principal reac- tion is the eXchange reaction vith retention of the ring. introduction of an alkoxy group makes the -phosphorus atom a aucleophilic conter, and the reaction goes via the Arbuzov rearrangement. In case of the 2-phenoxy dei-1vatives of diazophospholanes. the reactions occur via one of the cyclic nitrogren atoms breaking the ring and forming derivatives of 3-coord-inated phoaphorus atom. USSR TJDC 547.26,1-18 FUDOVIK, A. N-,.FVDCrV1K,-J4Io,-AI, MEENTI)EVA, S. A., and GOL'Dr-ARB, E. I., Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry Imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Acad. Se. USSR "Reactions of the Derivatives of TrivalentThosphorus With 0--thoeminophenol" Leningrad, Zhurnal (roshchey Khimii, Vol 42 (104), No 9, Sep 72, pp lqol-lqo6 Abstract: A mixture of isopropylpho.-phorous acidteti-aethyldiamide and o- an:Lno-Dhenol war, heated for 1-2 hrr. at lp-14oo to yield 2-isoProPox-Y-4,5- benzo-1.,3,2-oxaazaphospliolane (I), b.p. S15-97P/0-03 mm, M-P- 58-6oO, and 1.6- dioxa-4,9-diaza-2,3,7,8-dibenzo-5-phosphaspJ'.ro[4,4]nonane, m.p. 161-1620. 2-Ethoxy-4,5-benzo--1,3,,2-oxaazaphosphol=e,b P- 77-78'/0-03 rrun, d?O 1-19148, 20 4 "D 1.5553 was obtained in an analogous ranner. Sulfur added to molten (I) folloved byheating for one hour at 100 gave 2-ifiopropoxy-2-tliia-4,5-benzo- 1.3,2-oxaazaDhospholane b.p. 120-130'/0.03 m, m.p. 92-94'. It has been shcrdn that 2-ethyi-4,5-benzo-1,3~2-oyaazapliospholme undergoes protropic iso- merization on storage, converting to 2-ethyl-4,5-benzo-1,3,2-o;caazaphosl~--iolene- USSR UDC 547.26'118 4~,A., TERENTYEYA, S. A., MEDVEDEVA, M. D., and PUDOVIK, A. N., PWQVIK,_,~ Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry Imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy -of Sciences, USSR "N-Acetylated Oxazaphospholanes and Ph6spborinanes" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey 1(himii, Vol 43 (105), No 3, Mar 73, p 679 Abstract: Heating equimolar quantities of N-acylatei! aminoalcohols or N-acetyl-o-aminophenol with complete ataides of phosphorous acid or with the diamides of alkylphosphorous acids. yielded a series of 2-substituted 3-acetyl-1,3,2-axazaphospholanes and phosphorinanes: 2-diethylaniino-3- ace tyl-4, 5-b enzo- 1, 3, 2-oxazaphos ph olane . b.p. 114-115'/0.04 mm; 2-ethoxy homologue, b.p. 95-96'/0.08 mm; 3-isop'ropoxy homolo.gue, b.p. 109-111/0.05 mm; 2-diethylamina homologue, b.p. 92-93' (0.1,mm), and 2-diethylamino-3- acetyl-1,3,2-oxazaphosphorin~ne., b.p. 100-102*/0.025 mm. USSR uDc 542.gt+66t.718.1 PUDOVIK, A. N.j TERFIVY8VAt S. A., and Institute cf Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy of Sciences USSR "The Reaction of Amidophosphites with the N-Phenylaxide of Acrylic Acid" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademil Nauk SSSR, Seriya Xhimicheskaya, No 3, Far ?I, pp 645-6" Abstracti The reaction of the diethylamide of diethylphosphorous acid (I) with the phenylamide of acrylic acid (II) at 125-300 resulted in the formation of ti,li-diethylamidoethyl-N,K-ethylphenylcar-oamoylethylphosphonate (III)l (Eto) 2PNEt2 W + CH2-CH'-O"Hph M) --~" Et U(O)('-1'2CH?.COf'(Ph)Et (III). III (b ? 159-600 at 3 x 10-3 mm) NO was obtained with a yield of 6W,.,. Similarly, the tetraethy1diamide of ethylphosphorous acid reacte(i with 11 with the formation of the tetraethyldiamide of N,N-ethylphenylcarba-moylethylphosphonic acid (Et2N)2P(O)CH2CH2CON(Et)Ph (IV). compound IV Gq 165-70 at 2 x 10-3 mm) was isolated In 2V. yield. Compound II did not react with hexaethyltriamino- phosphine or 2-ethoxy-N-methyl-1,3,2-oxaazaDhospl7.,olare, Under the action of II, the latter compound underwent ring opening and howpolymerization. Alkyl halAdes have a similar effect on oxaazaphospholanes. 1/1 T. Of 0 11 the 't-nictun, ,)-f' V.t- N, AIUFtract. r.C n tal c-.- a n c an -I: 31 P~ J th e P 4 q r2 0 o in is wi~4 ~-j ~trj~~. U L E UO :1, if uuj- n,: we-2 toilial ol--t valollcc t--.r --i t:~; s,CJ I c s n ff,15"U, PRO MhE 1411-MidUrp"A, lik"llmrol VjS_W& liltauk SS~SR pi.) 57,93-5r- Distinct la~~Jl-it~, of' i:i,-, Cj. 'rc)net is u rarked, diffo--ences b~-,twecn -~cvcral sulb~rncjups- in this, nil- i fi;4.-,. USSR UDC 547.26'118 PUDOVIK, A. N., P m. A. TERENVYEVA, S. A., and BEL'SKIY, V. Ye., Kazan' Institute of Orpnic and PhysicalChemistry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, USSR Academy of Sciences "Reaction of 1,3,2-Oxaazaphospholanes With Alcohols and Mercaptans" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obsbchey Khimii, Vol 41, No 11, Nov 1971, pp 2,407-2,413 Abstract: This is a continuation of an earlier study in which the authors demonstrated that 1,3,2-oxaaziphospholanes with a dialkylamino group at the phosphorus atom are readily subject to alcohDlysis, with fornation of the corresponding alkoxy derivatives; here the reaction of certain derivatives of the 1,3,2-oxaazaphospholanes with alcohols and viercaptans is studied. Derivatives tested ware 2-athoxy- 4-methy I-N-methyl--I, 1, 2-ox atizaphospho lane, 2-e th oxy -N-phenyl-1, 3, 2-oxaazaphospho lane, 2-propoxy-:1.,3,2--o:coiyaplio,-plio- lanes, 2-chloro-N-pheayl-1,3,2-oxaazopliospholanit-, and 2- die thy lamino-1, phenyl-1,3,2-oxaazaphospholane; reactants were ethyl and propyl alcohols, phenylan-inoethanol, aliphatic 7mercaptans, propyl mercaptan and thiophenol. It was found that raplacari,,nt of the alkyl group at t~ae nitrogen atom of the phospholane ring with a phenyl group leads to definft(~ stabilization of the 15 USSR PUDOIJIK, A. N., et al., Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 41, No 1.1, Nov 1971, pp 2,407-2,413 ring; further, the above-indicated reactions with aliphatic mercaptans proceed with elimination of sulfur from the mercaptans and formation of the correspond- ing thion derivatives. The reaction with thiophenol produces thiophosphite; that with benzylmercaptan, both thi-ophosphite and dithiophosphate. 2/2 USSR VDC 541.6j547.11'118 RAYEVSXIY, 0. A., KOMOV, F. G., and Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A, Ye., Arbuzovp USSR Academy of.Sciences "Confomation of 0-14othyl(Phenyl)-idethylcblorophosl)boztates'I Moscowi, Izvestiya Akad. Nauk SSSRq Serlya Mimicheskayap No 1, Jan 72, pp 173- 175 Abstracta As a continuation of their earlIer atidy of 'the effect of ths nature of substitutes on the cordormation position of -the eater group in compounds of the general formula RR,,,P(O)OR, the authors take up the problez of the identIfication of conforners In the O-wthyl(pheiiyl)-mothylphosphonates. Infrared spectra show that for these compouxWz# stabilization of one conformer is a characteristic Pmtuxo. The dipole-moment method is used to establish that such confoxmtion can occur either with a form having the cis-position of the bonds P-0 and O-Ch #-or one. having the bauche-position (projection of 00 coming between PO 148 - USSR UDC 541.61547.1'118 BAYEVSKIY, 0. A., XHALITOVt F. G., and A Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A. Ye..Ar U, my of Sciences USSR nConformatim of Some Methylphenylphosphinic Acid Esters" Moscoug Izvestiya Akadeali Nauk SSSR, Seriya Xhimicheskayal No 11, Nov 71, PP~2595-259a Abstract# The authors used the methods of IR spectroscop:r and dipole monents to study the conformation of the methyl, phenyl and para-jiltrophenyl esters of methylphosphinic acid. These compounds are characterized. by stabilization of the gauche position of the ether group relative to the phosphoryl group. A choice between two different gauche fo=s:,cannot to mad* in this series of compounds because of the closeness of the.moments of the P-CH and F-Ph bonds. it is suggested that one of the-causes of gauche form stabilR~ Is the possi- bility of competition between mobile electrons.of the benzene ring and ether oi~rgen to ftU vacant 3d orbitals of the phosphorus atom.~ tit -TTI -T-UM r---f-T USSR UDC 343.422.41547.?91546.183 SuMULLINP R. R., SMUZROV, I. Mv and TERENT - YEVA, S. A. Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry1meni A. Ye. Arbuzovo Academy of Sciences USSR@, Kazan' "Vibrational. Spectra and Structure of Some Oxaazaphospholanes" Rigat Khimiya GeterotsiklicheskWi Soyedineniyp No 12# Doe 71, pp 1612-1615 Abstracti A series of 2-chloro-2-oxc,1,3,2-oxaazaphospbolanes was synthesized and their spectra were studied. To 13.3 g phosphorus oxychloridie in 150 ml benzene kept at 15-200, a mixture of 20.2 g triethylamine, 4Lnd 8.9 g 1-methyl- aninopropanol-2 was added dropwise with stirring. The rewtion mixture was stirred for 2 hrs, the triethylamine hydrochloride was separatedv benzene was evaporatedr and the residue was vacuum-distilledp yielding 2-chloro-Z-oxo-30- dinetby:L-lg),Z-oxaazaphosphol,ane, b.p. 90'/0:1 mm, d20 20 1.4602. 4 162853, Analogously the 2-cbloro-z-oxo-3--zlllenY.1-1#3#;-,oxaazaphospholane, m.p.,96-97 0and 2-chloro-2-oxo-5-aethYl-3-pbenyl-1,3o2-oxaazaphospholanag m.p. 1t4-115 were obtained. IR spectra for model compouria have been repToduCed, anil band assign- nents have been made. On the tasis of the changes obeervect in characteristic frequencleap going from trivalent phosphorus compouMW to totraccorminated ones, ?5 MR SHAMULLIN, R. R-P et al-P Kh'-MiTa, GeterOtSiklichsakkh Soyedlnen'yl No 12, Doe 71# pp 1612-1615 a conclusion wa-3 reached that chazges in the ring confoniation sust have taken places in -the trivalent phosphorus compounds the ring is in form of an envelope with a pseudoaxial. chlorine atom, while in the tetracoordinated phosphorus compounds an envelope is formed with a axial phosphoryl oxygen atom anci an equatorial chlorine atom. 2/2 0. 1,; 1, 1 bW3SR. UDC 514-7.26t118 P :1 -RV -VA. FUDOVIK, A. T T JTIYE S. A., Institute 0 n"a hysical e7ristry imeni A. I~E- Arbuzov, Academy h7S C f Organic EL P 'al of Sciences USSR Reaction of 1,3,2,-Oxazaphospholanes With Glycols" Leningrad, 'Zhurnal Obshchey 1(himii, Vol kl, No 10, 1971, P1,D 2177-216T- Abstract: In a continuing study of the five-merfoered i)hosi)horus heterocycles, the reactions of 2-die-lw-hylamino-i-i-phen,71-1,3,2- oxazaphospholane (L) have been investi,crated wit., .1 -h glycol, 1,2- and 1,3-proanediols. The product of the reaction i,,ith glyco! was identified as 2-f3-(phe'nylamino)etho..,cj--1,3,2-dio,:a-ohosnhola~ne (II). on the basis of and IR anectra and the elemental analysis data. The structure of (I!) was confirned by identity of its and IR sDect.-a with 'Chose of the reaction Droduct, of 2-diethyl- amino-1,3,2-dio--?.-anhosnholane with phenylarninoethanol and by the IR sDect-rum of the product of (H). The mechanism of (I) reaction with glycol Pray involve formation of an 112 50 USSR. PUDOVIKIL,A et al, Zhurnal Obshchey ',Khimii, 1,101 Ill, ~10 10, H7171:2180 1971, pp intermediate 2- (hydro-%-Yeluho.~r,,v)-,~,T-nhanyl-1, 3,2-oxazaDhos-nholarie which then rearxian-tzes to a sDiran derivative which in turn changes to -(II). The sz)iran derivative was detected in the reaction 13roduc "U of 2-chloro-IT--.ohenyl-1,3i2-o;cazaT)hos-oholane with glycol in solution at a low termerature and in the presence of tri- et'hylamine, and also in (II) after one month's storaTe. The final products of the (1) reactions with 1,2- and 1,3-pro-oanediol were 2-(fl-(--henyl--mino)etho:.7-)-,-methyl-1.3,2-dio;,a-ahosDholane and 2-(/3-(Dhenylami-no)etilo.,,-Y-1,3,2-dio::aohost)hori*nt,~ne, resnectively. The e=erimental procedures are described and IR spectra of (II) are.shown. 'h ME II I ~AIMIZI ~ ~ ~111_ WIN ~11-11 ~IMIM`H ussi UDC 547.26-118 14. PUDOVIK, At 'No, 1;tiL_ IVANOVA, L. K., Institute of Organic and Physica imeni A. YE. Arbuzovi Academy of Sciences USSR "Reaction of 1,3,2-Oxazaphos-phblanes "'Tith Chloral" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey iaiimii, Vol 41, No 10, 1971, PP 218o-2181F Abstract: The study of the interaction between 1,3,2-oxazaphospho- lanes w th different substituents at the P atom and chloral was p.r previously reported discovery of strong orapted by the insecticid- al activity of some phosphates prepared by the reaction of dioxaphospholaries wiih chloral. Ail reactions were conducted in an ether solution with cooling. The reactions of chlorel with 2-diethylamino-f,T-Dhenyl-, 2-Dhenoxy-11'-methyl-, 2--ethoxy- or 2-Dro-ooxy-N-raethyl-, or N-nhenyl-1,3,'2-orazat)hoaDholpnes, all with only, one ester bond in the rIng, led, via ring opening, to the for- metion of~ reSDeCtively,ff , 0-dichlorovinyl NjN,-d1ethy1-N',N'- (g-chloroethyl)phanylnhosphorodiamidate (I), phenyl, ethyl, or 1/2 51 USSR PUDOVIK, Aj8N. et al, Zhurnal Obshchev 11himil, Vol 41, NO 10, 1971, pp 2 0-2184 propyl P~ -dichlorovinyl N, N- (/-) -chloroeth methylamidophos- pljates~II, III, IV), and ethyl or proDyl/~, Y dichl-orovin-y'l N,N-(/~'-chloroel%-lh7l)-ohenylamidonhos:,,,hates (V, 41). In contrast to 1,'3, 2-oxazaphospholanes, the reaction of 2-propoxy~N,N'-,di (see-butyl)-1,3,2-diaza-oho.SDholane with chloral prooeeds without ring opening. In contrast to dioxaphosphorinanes, 2-Rlkoxy-1, 3,2-o a aphosphorinanes give with chloral open-chain products, e,g.,XP-) , r-7-d-lichlorovinyl. '-N-( ~~-chloroproDyl)amidon-hos-ohate with a stronq- intermolecular hydrogen bond. The structure of the cited reaction Droducts was determined by IR and M-IR spectra. The spectra of (III) Pre given, physical constants and formulas of I-VI comrounds are ta~ulvted, ana pr6naration procedures are described. The 11-VI compounds.exhibited a good fungicidal activity at a sufficiently hig1h toxicity. 11g: . W- USSR Organophosphorous Compounds ISHMAEVA, Z. A., TERENTEVA, S. A., and Associate Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences PUDOVIK, A. N., Kazan State University imeni V. I. Ulyanov-Lenin "Determination of the P-N Bond Dipole Moment" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 196, No 3, 21 Jan 71, pp 630-632 Abstract: The dipole moments of 1,3,2-oxaazaphospholanc-s with a tricoordi- nated phosphorus atom were determined expetiMeTitally and compared to calcu- lated values, assuming valence angles of O-P-N 95% 0-(;-C and N-C-C 1080. A value of 0.26D for the dipole moment of the P-N bond in the direction from the phosphorus to the nitrogen atom gave best agreement: between experimental results and calculations made for a model for N-phonyl-2-inetli3,1-1,3,2-oxaa- zaphospholane and for N-plienyl-2-ethyl-5-methyl-1,3,2-oxaazapho;:-,pliolane. The polarity of the molecule was in agreement with the coplanar nature of the 5-membered ring. The dipole moments of 1,3,2-oxaazaphopholanes with a tetra- coordinated phosphorus atom were determined, Aesuining.that the heterocycle is also planar in this case, the dipole moment of the F-~R bond was calculated. It was found that the change. in hybridizat.i6n of the phoaphorqs atom has a 1/2 USSR ISHMAEVA, Z. A., ge Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 196, No 3, 21 Jan 71, pp 630-632 profound effect on the dipole mement of the P-N bond, which was found to be equal to 0.99-1.13D. Also, insertion of,a. methyl group Into the 5-membered ring changes the coaformation of the rinS. 43 10~ USSR UDC 547-26 1118 PUDOVIKI A. N., RULOVIKI S-, and VA, KH., Institute of Organic and I Physical Chemistcry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy of Sciences U3SR 112-Substituted li-Phenyl(benzyl)-1,3,2.-oxaa-.apfiospiiola-,les'I Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimi.i, Vol 40, No 7, I-Jul 170, PP 1477-14-60 Abstract: Tile interaction of phospi-jorus tric',loride z%~ e n.yj - v e W oro ', 11-i-1) (benzy1)aminoeLha-noI ,~7i F, -N - pnellyl (b er pholane. These acid rewij-ly react witzi L, .1, -o ' e amines ~o form correspcnding amildes and ester ~'h pi u 'e obtained by a ri~actiazi oL so~i~e trivalent -has;~~-,orus acid i- us, .10'atin- G': r, a x'a e L ily!r aminophosphine with /~-pllienylcwiinoethanol in a benzene --clution gives 2-diethyla.-iirio-';t~-,,,',4e,r,.il--I, 3,2-oxaazaphosp)-~olane# The latter on aeat- ing -with al cohol readily beccmes 2-e hoxf .-1, 32-oxaazan-hos- J) I pholane. USM UaIM" 547-391+547-398-M18- PEDOVIK, A. 9-, PCDOVRIK.U,,..A,, and- TERENTIYEVA, S. A. "Reaction of Amides of Dialkylphosphorous- and AlkylarylphospjLinous;Acids with alpha, beta-Unsaturated Carboxylia-,Acids" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii,,Vol 46-, No 1, Jan 70, pp 33-36 Abstract: The =Lxtuxe of acrylic or tiethacrylic acid arJ N,N-diethylethyl- phenylphosphonous a-,Ude kept belmi 900 for one day gave 15 or 38;j, yields, respectively-, of beta-(,;,ii-diet.~iy-leiroanyl)ethyl(isopropyl)-et'v*liylphenylphos- phine omides, liquids identified by their physical constants and IR specLra. ides of P,P-dlallcyl r)hosnionylpropio-,Iic(is,,)butyric) acids (I) iere Diethylami the main P oducts of the react- of N i-diethylaTidoditAk,,Ilpto-- hite wirh P acrylic or miethacrylio. acids, respectively. 'the reaction products contained also a ma)dmir, 5,-a admixLuare of ethyl k,Pd'Lalkvl.,.tmidup~io,-I).~o~i,,Ipropionate (isobutyrate) (11) which were detected by M spectrI, and ~eas-I~quid cnromato- graphy. Pure 1, where a.Lkyl = ethyl, was ol ained in 66,'43 yield by heating at 150b triethyl phosaphite with i4,'44-liethylv:oetoat-bromop;ropir)ii.:imidL,. . ?ure 11, Mhere alkyl=et,~,yl, was prepared. :Ui. 71~ yiehd from L,1.14-diethylaz,,ido(iiethyl- phosphite and ethyl beta-bromopropionate., Physical consta_n-,2; and !R Spectrum of pure 11 differed fron those of the amide I, prepared by the-reaction of N,N-diethylanddodiethylphosphite with acrylic acid. UDC 547-3411139.81+547.391 PUDOVIK A. N., BAWYEVA, E. S., SRACYIDULLT-i, R. 0. MUM(: M. A., institute of Or.-anic and Physical 'AYbUz-o-v, ~lkcademy of Sciences USS, eaction of 1-Mides of Diphonylphosphinous Acid with 3, P.-unsaturated Acids Leninvrad, Zhurnal Obshichei Khiv-,ii, Vol 40, 1, -1202 lo 06, Jun 70, PP 1195 Abstract: 'The mechanism of the reaction of dipher,~,lrj'hoz;phinoua acid anddes with A , P-u:~saturatej acids was L-ivestirm te--. ProtonatUon of tne niturogen aLtom of the amide le--:ts to the fornation of an amine an-i st;-bsequemly the amide of the uns-aturat-ed acid and siphonDrIphosphinous acid. Association of the latter leads to t1!0 final pmduct, nan, ely P--carbamoyl-al~yl-or alkenyl- diphenylpho-sClhine oxial e, deperdi:ig on it-,hother. an I!-,,, ~-unsatuxatei ancid of tne ethylene or acetylene series was used. The proposed mechardsm wa:s confirmed by IR spectrometry. USSR UDG 547 393 + 661. 718. 1 FUDOVIK, A. N. TERENT I YE EVA, S. A., PUDOVIK. aj"11, Institute of Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni- =,YZ._Arbuz0v, Acadeny of Sciences USSR "Reaction of ConTlete Phosphibes With Amides of aC, P-Uniaturated Caiboxylic Acids Leningrad, -1hurnal Obahchey :iimii, Vol 40, No 8, Aug 70, pp 1707-1711 Abstract: The reaction of tertiary phosphorites Tiith unsubstituted Z~i_des of cK-, fl-unsaturated carboxylic ;acids occur.-I with participa- tion of the araide group, 7iolding dialkyl esters of N-tilkylear- bamoylalkylphosphonates and carbamoylalkylphosphonaten, A mixture of 8.5g-m mothaerylamide and 16.6rpn triethyl pho3pbite uas refluxed. for 3 hra at 1400, yielding, 20 d' t' 1-N-ethr1C; b li.'Jopropyl- - _eZ Ig8 anoy phosphonate, b.D. 343-145/0-05 =a, -3 1.0954, Z] 1.4600. When 14,2gm ac lamide was reacted with 33.29M triathy"phosphite for 2 hro at 137, followed by another hour at 1500, a 'Pinploix mixture of products was obtained, which beside some unreacted material and alcohol contained a mixture of diethyl-(L cyanoothylphosphonate and diethyl-,d-carbothoxyethyli,)hosphonate, diethy~-N-ethylcar- 0. 20 bamoylethylphosphonate, b,p., 135-1360/0.02 =, ~E- 1.1205, 1.4590 and solid dieth7learbaiaoylethylphosphonat6, m.p. 76.~-2780. Reacting a mixture of acrylamide, diethylphosphit triethyl- 20 ~phosphite yielded diethyl-P-c:funooth7lp~gaphonatvj 1 1081 n D :1-4361 and diethylearbamoylethylphoup4onate Mp, i 11 t 11'! j." NA"i11 41.0 jM, 1'/ 2 DI ppk DATE--LSSEP70 o i6 UNCLASSTFIE E S S I NG .;TlTLE--REACTtON OF 1,3,2, OXAAZAPRq-'~P,H0LANES WITH ACETIC ANHYDRIDE -U- -~AUTHOR-103)-PUDOVIK, A.N.,. PUDOVIKv M.A., SHULYNDINAt~O.S. OF INFO--USSR -Zfio OBSHCH, KHIM. 1970t, 40( 501-2 ,,SOURCE 0 AT EPUBLISHED ------- 70 ~.SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY -TOPIC TAGS--ACETIC ANHYDRIDE, EXOTHERMIC REACTION1 HETEROCYCLIC NITROGEN ..,COMPOUND, OAGANIC 'PHOSPHORUS COMPOUND? HETEROCYCLIC OXYGEN COMPOUND, IR -.'S?.ECI'RUM9 NMR SPECTRUM ..CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS* -DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PkOXY REEL/FRAME-1985/1406 STEP NO--UR/0079/70/(J,'tO/002/0501/0502 ~CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0101496 UNCLASSIFIrD 2/2 026 UNCLASSIFIED PRor:ESSING DATE-13SEP70 CJRC ACCESSION NO--AP0101496 ~-ABSTRAcr/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. ADDING AC SUB,,-, o'ro I IN C SU36 H SU36 (EXOTHERM) (70 TO 80DEGREES IMAX.) GAVE AFTER 1,,. HR 90PEPCENr AC NIMECH SU82 CHMlE0P(OET)(0AC)r 8 SUBO TI,%tE*SIJB00l 115 TO 18DEGREES, N PRIME20 SUBD 1.4592, 0 PPI-ME20 1.1177. THE Pf~ODUCT ADDED S AND REACTED VIGOROUSLY WITH CCL SU,33 CHO. SIMILAR REACTION OF 11 WITH AC SUB? 0 PEQUIREO REFLUXING 1 HR IN C SUB16 H SUB6, TO GIVE ACNPHCH SUB2 CIA SU-9,2 00 (OET)(OAC), WHICH ON ATTEMPTED DISTN. UNDERWENT DISPROPORTIONAr[aN AND GAVE 47PERCENT ACNPHCH SU82 CH SUB2 OAC, B SUBO TIMES SUB05 116 TO 47DEGREES9 1.5158, 1.1205. IR AND NMR SPECTRAL DATA WERE:GIVEN. -16- - -f-.- - C o- -de - 49 35 CHDIICAL, ABST. 'S- zor gqw"~f a4e y VVMS p feco M- Etz, boo 160-10, -. 1. 3177. Treijiting- 19Z g (EtQ),.PNEjg with 7.2 g CHt: CHCO: ~intaiulng the temp belovy 60' gave, L4567; the pure dicthylamidt, prcpd. in 68% yiddArom 1501 in 2 hr (PrO),.,P XFtj MH below 80* gave go, 1.0372, 14555. . Similarly CMIeCONRtu N 186~7.5*, EtOP(O)(jVEt0CH2CH%MEt, (EtO)jP(O)CH2CHM.eCOIN;Etr, Ir spcMa are shown, ONTEtl contg. some 5% mixed E(OP(O)- , the, mixed 06duct. bit 191"_A.0706, No M-401, 1.0720. I.Af~71, wilf, MtObP M~d T!t,NCOCH.3cAIIBr -[ I g) tr6tcd, W'ith 7~2 & C'% -. Cf 14' Nel'r (PiO)Ip(O)cfIjCH:rcO-'qEt,, hu, 1874 was pnpd. 25% (PrO)2p(O)CH,-. 1.0231;~ 1.4545. Also reported: ba-W 1.0538, 1.4472; Nv 120-10, 1.050.3, 1.4580., G. M. KGSOIILPOff j R E E I F RAIM E 19800941 USSR UDG 547.20*'1118 PUCOVIKo A- Ell -I-Xr M. and SHULYNDIN.L' 0 In s 7, i t I Ie 0 1 ~0 C 1, Organic and Physii! Ghemistry iment. A. Ye,, Arbuzovr JLCa%-Jefl1Y of 6ei- ences USSR, Kazanv "Reaction of 1,3,2-Oxaazaphospholanes lvrith Acetic Anhydride" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khim-ii, Vol 40, No 2, Feb 70, pp 501-502 Abstract: It is shot-in that ring. substituted and unsubstit.uted AN- alkyl.-1,3,2-oxaazaphospholaiies react w,.der mild conditions %.,,ith acetic anhydride resulting in ring cleavage on the nil;=gen-priospho.-rus bond and the formation of corresponding dialkyl acetylphcsphites in high yield. USSR z uDc 542-91:661-718-1 IK--11.. YELISEYETFICOV, V. N., SERKINA, 11. A., and LIPATOVA, 1. P.) Institute o? Organic and Physical Chemistry imeni A. Ye. Arbuzov, Academy of Sciences USSR "Reactions of Amidophosphites with AlItylitethylphosphonic and %:Iiophosphonic Acids" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii.Zllauk SSSR, Seriya Xhimicheskayn, No 5, 1971, PP io3q-1o44 Abstract: The action of alkylrr4thylphosphonic and eak-yL-,,.~thylt'.riiophos-ohanic acids on bis(diethylw-,ido)--Ikyl-~,3hasphites and tris(diet7ny:Lamido)pl,,osphitc- was investigated. The reactions led to mi;xed aWlydxidez of nmthylpliosphonic (thiophosphonic) and aradophosphorous acids. Mae anount of diethylamine (80-95 percent) formed in these raact~ons corresponds to the ayollnt of mixed anhydride (70-85 percent) forzed, showing the lack of side reactions. The diethyrLamine formed can react both vith the anhirdride fom,:!d, as well as form a salt with the starting acid, GH (EO)P(X)OH-M2t2, partially rerriovirku it frc;u the reaction. The reaOllonu ctin ~jccuz, total ln^an orgtnia :W-2-.4, solyent, as well as in its absence, and the yield oP reaction products Ls not affected by the order in which the starting reagents (aeld to phosphite or vice versa) are 1/2 USSR PUDU'%TIK, N., et al., Iviestiya Akademii Hauk SSSR, Seriy- Khimicheskaya, No 5, 1971, PPI 1039-1044 adcled. To increase the yields of anhydrides, the reagents Drast be rdxed in the cold and after removal of the solvent the reaction rdxtiares must be heated at 10-50 mm and 6C)-120' until diethylunine is no longer formed. The ndxcd. anhydrides obtained are saponified vith water, forming, the diet~liylamroaium salt of phosphorous acid; they add sulfur with evolution of heat, forming pyrophosphonatothiop.liosphates- 2/2 114 OZ5 UNCLASSIFTEQ` PROCESVING OATE--IBSEP70 'TITL.E--CONOENSATION AND ADDITION T07H&S.k~IURATEO COMPOUNDS OF ,.',,--Tr--TRAETHOXYDIPHOSPHONOMETHANE -U-~- AUTHOR-(03)-PUDOVIK, A*N*t YASTREBOVA, G.YE.t PUIDOVIK, O.A. .:.COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR -,_S0URCE--ZH. DOSHCH. KHTM. 1970v 40('21# 499 ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 -SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY JOPIC T4GS--CONDENSATION REACTIONi ORGANIC:PHOSPHORUS COMPOUND, ETHYL :,.:.--ETHERp COMPLEX COMPOUND, ACRYLONITRILE, AcRYLATE, IR SPECTRUM Zf.~WTqOL MAPKING--NO PESTRICTIONS DOWN I EN TCLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME-1985/1405 STEP ND--UR/0079/70/OerO/002/0499/0499 C IRC~ ACCESSION Nr-)--AP0101495 UNCLASS IFIED 7_'.~2/2 025 UNCLASSIFIED, PROCESSIt4G DATE-18SEP70 ACCESSION NO--AP0101495 .ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. CH SUB2(P(O)COET SUB2) SUB2 (1) HEATED 9 HR IN C SUB6 H SUBb IN THE PRESENCE OF SATD. ET(MA,ETOH WITH ELECTROPHILIC REAGENTS GAVE THE CORRESPONDING ADDUCTS. WITH CH SU82.:CHCN THE PRODUCT WAS 54PERCENT INCCH,SUB2 CH SUBZ) SUB2 C(P(O)(OET) SUB24 SUB2v M. 78-90EGREES; ME AGRYLATE GAVE ((ETO) SUB2 P(O)) SUB?-:CHP((])(OET) SUB2 GAVE 30PERCENT' ((ETO) SUB2 P(O)l SUB2 CHCH SU132 CH SUB2 P(O)(OET) SU132v B SUBO.08 183-5DEGREESv 1.1805, 1.4540t WHILE BZH REQUIRED HEATING 22 HR IN XYLENE IN THE-PRESENCE OF PIPERIOINE WITH CONTINUOUS REMOVAL OF H SUB2 0 AND GAVE 10PERCENT ((.ETO) SUB2 P(O)) SUB2 -C:CHPH, B SU80.5 186-SDEGREESP 1.16261 10'4980. TR SPECTRAL DATA WERE 'GIVEN.- UNCLASSI FTED USSR UDC: 547.261118 PUDOVIK, A. N. YASTIZEROVA, G. NT-- . and P111MVIK 0' A. Mixan' State UnivezsitY im-en 1. Ulyanov Lenin, JM1M-i`1tN1St1:y. of Hioher and. con- V So dary Specialized Education RSFSR "Reactions of Tetraethoxydip- s phonorn V"dition .10 ethane Cond-ensation and j'~, to Unsaturated Compounds" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khim, ii~ Vol 40, N o 2, b 7G, P 4 9 9 Abstract: It is shown that tet aeth-'ri e5ter of file dip"IOZ3phon-ic a d cj in the presence of a saturated alcoholic solutio-, o--' sodiura thylate acids to the unsaturaLed ejectrop~.Jjjc collipol 1,JS hjtr~ e -Ioacryl- ic acid, mcthy! acrylate and ci-iethyl viaylp~o Ixenat~ "he a('dition of to,~,raetiioyydiphosphonorierliazie to Aitrijoacryl,ic ci d i V Z; 111 s ( 2 cyai-ioetliyil.diet.vioxypiio;3pliono)tn-~!tl-iax,,c. In them ca$c of ac-vy~jatc- and diethyl vinylpriosphonate I-sub5tit.uted bis(3, propanes are obtained. I M It was found that the coaden-utior. reaction. of tetraethoxyd-Lphosphonor-othane with benzaldehydo proceids unaer con- siderably more severe conditions than analogDus coadensa-cion re-actions of other organophosphorus compounds containing an active methylene Group- MIN 4,0004237r Acc. Nr. Ref. Code: U RO 63 ogalous Secular Variation on Kamchatka A n (Abstract: "Anomalous Nature of Secular Variation on Kamt,-hatka," by I. M. udovkin A. A. Tanichev, T. A. Shadrina, Ye. E. Blagoveshchenskaya a omiroy Lenin~rad DeEartment, Institute of Terri,--strial Magnetism, Ionosphere and Radio Wave Prop!j&qtioa- Mosccv, Geomagnetizm i Aeronomiya, 'Vol X. No 1, 1970, pp 173-175) This is the second part of this study of secular variation on Kam- chatka (for pa 'rt I, see Geomagnatizm i Aeronomiya, Vol X, No 1, 1970, pp 170-173). Geomaguetic measurements were made in a networlK ef stations in southern Wamchatka separated by an average distance of 10-15 14ti. Repeated observations were inade on the assunption that during the stage of farmiation of volcaric lavao deep processes can create localized ant," shal]ow high- temperature hearths. The magnetic properties o[ rocks involvad iii these processes can change relatively rapidly, which should cai;,se clianges in the geomagnetic field and thereby gIve the dynamic ;mgnecic characcertstics of deep processes. Observations were made at .24 stations w:I.th 2 to, 5 obser- vations at each. The results of obsarvations, reduced to the mid-dlse of the year, show that the nature of fteld changes is sir"Mix to -chat observed throughout the regional network. However,I, th-e field chat-..ges ar dif.ferent Reel/Frame 137GOIWA AP0042379-. I . . stations vary. Over a five-year period H charges from -31 to +41T (the me-an _-rrorin observinz this compone - this same period at is8 Y J ,)During, I D varies from -9.0 to 6.0' (observation error 2. The structure ot the field of anomalies of secular variation -6f is extremely complex. The a regions of-decrease in all magnetic elements are found in a relatively Small regiotl (diagra=iatic maps of field components accompany the text). The results, of. o)servations at stations in the local net were reduced using data for.theYughno-Sak-halinsk Observatory and' fiell variation sts- tions. The configuration of the Ffa isopors for annual. periods indicates that the nature of this field c-hanges somewhat from year -to year but the sites of the anomalies persist. Judging from the map of structural geology of southern Kamcnatka, there is a definite relationship between structural elements and anomalies of secular variation. There is alt5o some relatior-- field and solar activity. Since the ship. between the nature of t1he S f a secular variation anomalies on Kamchatka correlate with the e"ements of its structutal-tectoaic structure and with solar activity, it can be as- sumed that~the causal relationship is of a double nature: 1) a change in the~magnetic properties of rocks involved in deep processes and 2) presence of nanuniformity of el"trical conductivity,of deep layers in the crust and uaver mantle. 19760340 USSR D ;:'681.335:516'~ K., Institute of Au-uQniatlon and ElectrQmetry, Siberinn Department of t e cademy of Sciences of the USSR "A Device for Modeling and Adding Complex Quantities" Moscow, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya, Promyshlennyye Obraztsy, Tc-varnlrye- Znaki, No 26, 1970, Soviet Patent No 279181, Class 42, filed 21 Jan 69, P 135 Abstract: This Author's Certificate -introduces: 1. A device for aodeling W-.1 adding complex quantities. The installation contains a flat base on which coordi- nate axes are Dlotted. Fastened at the coordinate origin is %Ln axle covered by a contact sleeve. Inside the sleeve is a linear potentiometer and coL~L_xial with the sleeve is a second semicircular potentiometer. As a distinguishing feature of the patent, the functional possibilities of the device are extended by installing a third semicircular potentiometer and a fourth linear potentiometer on tile opposite side of the flat transDarent base at the coordinate origin symmetrically with the first and second Dotentiometers. The upper end of the case of the first potentiom- eter and the contact sleeve of a fifth linear potentiometer ;..ire movably fastened to :14 an aux . _r-y axle. A sixth semicircular potentiomirter Is :Lmitall,;-d coaxial with this auxiliary shaft. 2. A modification of this device-Odistinguic-hed by the fact that three or more complex qumntitiea may be eAlded. The end of tile case of the fifth and each uubsequent potentiometer is faste-ned to -the noxt aur.1liary axlt with the contact sleeve of the (n+l-st) potentiometer and itv corm-sponding semi- circular uotantiometer. USSR UDC 681.335.516 PUDOVKIN, A. K., Institute of Automation and Electrometry, Siberian mit of" the Acadeany off Sciences' of the USSR "A Device for Determining the Tangents of Functioris" Moscow, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya Promyshlennyye Obraztsy, Tovarnyye Znaki, No 9, '41970, p 134 Patent no 264799, filed,i8 Oct 68 Abstract: This Author's Certificate introduces a device for deter- mining the tangents of functions. The unit contains Iii-Lear poten- tiometers. As a distinguishing feature of the patent, the functional Dossibilities of the device are expandled by installing a guide on ihe base along one axis of the coordi.nate system. Located in this guide is a slider with a securely fastened semi- circular potentiometer. One contact slide -wire of the potentiometer is equipped with a pointer, while the second has two biases, con- nected to the power supply, and.an additional slide wire which makes contact with a linear plastic potentiometer, set parallel to the guide and havincr a middle point superimposed on the other axis ;Df the rectangular coordinate system. 2-5 12 027 UNCLASSIFIED PROUSSIVIG DATE--0MCT7n :TLE--[YNAMICS G FTHE ZONE OF. CORPUSCULAR IN J ECT WINS -U- S.A., PUDCVKI.Nt M.I.v SHUM I L JV tIo I UN T RY 72F INFO--USSR ,'_l)LUlR'_E-i_-.AZDLL IVs POLYAR.NYYE S]YANIY4, 1970, NR 19, PP 42-50 VA T EPU6L I SfiEU------7G .-SU5JECT.AREAS-EARTH SCIENCES AND OCEANOGRAPHY, AST(~014'-',!*,IY#A,ST.R3PHYSI~S, ~_:~,~-_'ATIUSFHERIC SCIENCES JORIC. TAGS--GEOMAGNETIC STORM9 POLAR AREA, 1SOLAR CORPUSCULAR RADIATIJN, SOLAR -;NIND, MAGNETOSPHERE, AURORA RCL FAFKING--N0 RESTRICTIONS '~DIOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED 'P.RUXY ~,F[L/FRAME-1994/0118 STEP NO--UP/3337f'70/GOO/019/0142./Oc")"" CIRC ACCESSICN Nfj--AP0114514 CLASS IF IED U M., 77- 022 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESS113 0ATE-02OCT70 -IRC ACCE.~SIGN NO--AP0114514 AiiSTRACT/EXTRACT-W) GP-0- ABSTkACT. THE PAPER ANALYSES CERTAIN PHENOMENIA OF, THE PLULAR 14AGNETIC STORM, AND DESCRIBES THE ".HARACTFAISTIC DISTURBANCE THE A'CS -FEATUFE-S OF ITS UEVELOPMENT. AT THE START OF THE ARE DISPLACED TO THE EQUATOR. ;!FURTHER FXPANSION OF T14E AUR 15%. These alloys are also 5uperior in impact toughness, relative elongaCion,and relative reduction in area, The weldability of the alloys studied was evaluated using sheets 2 mm thick following annealing for one houx at 2600C. The alloys were found to have good weldability with argon arc welding using wires with compositions differing from the base metal. Two compositions of wires based on Mg are suggested: Zn, O.S-0.7% Zr, 2.8-3.7% Coond Zn, 4.4-7.0% Al, 0.3-0.6% Mn. The former wire is recommended for complex and rigid structures with large vGlumes of manual welding; the latter is reco-,miended for automatic welding of 5tructures to -be subjected to impact and cyclical loading, These wires produce welded joints with strengths at least 90*6 of the base metal, b,-;nding angli! tit leant 1/2 row W .T IM MIT, 110T 11110111010 1111ft USSR RYMMUSEV, V. I., et al., Svarochnoye Proizvodstvo, Ito 't, Jul 1972, pp 9-11 50 and 650 respectively. Overall corrosion of welded seams using these wires is similar to the base metal; the velded Joints are not inclined to corrosion under stress. 2/2 69 ;-Mlimutfa USSR RYAWNTSEV, V. I., PUGACHEV, A. I., SMIRNOVA, Ye. I., BLYABLIN, A. A., cow,.Svarochnoye ProiLvbdstvo' KUDISHINA, T. A., OSOKINA, T. N., MOS No 10, Oct 72, pp 8-10. For welding wire in the mg-Zn-Zr-Ce system, an increa5t;: LIL.%,U -4--- 3.7% or more causes a.5har increase in diffusion penetration o .E t Ihis ele- p ment from the seam into the surrounding zone, significantly increasing resistance.to the formation of hot cracks (A > 0.6 mm/min). -77- ()11.1.74 052-678-1-.66 UDc 621 A - BLYP'B1'IN' vw-Mov'k, le - ~Iloy Y-114N, N - A-) and Os lts of VMD8 KODISviviA, T - of Welde(A joil ohete-rogeneitY 1 72, pp 8-10. vichemi'al ~iicr O&stVo , IL40 10, Oct . eneitY Of n Proizv Cal hete-rOg fanctlo Chem, , k svaroc'n'loye is stuLied as a e ~Ios cow f fGrmation of micsTeoction . -1lown tho't th ave ChallisrR 0 It 15 b cement h 11 the CTOSS pla act.. The me ocheal- PLbstr, throlug wire. of its oed joint of tile welding aatlAre t4icr V~IDS ,,,joy we Composition . , and the 1 . . t metal. . .5 as . I . I heterogeneM f the 301T1 e 'vrl-Se the of the Chem1ca ChC%'jCa rtneSS 0 near-seal~' Zon , o micro , hot sho se,01 int, degree f . n 010 )no avi !.,I the f-ront the into the nf jijenr-e 0 jusioll v a derlsive 1 .. the of elamei~ts O"n(ling I .ve SUTT t f Taelteu 'neity 3- "butiOn t~ I 'aeteroge redistTl. a from - enrirctlr"en OqTain aTeaS ca of di f f LIS 1011 _S .ji-re) aTl fusion t of the ~5 a -result. ,One (Ce for Well as overisIvnell I'llell 14claing 5-7 Wirel , as cc aild imp N of surround"19 e tablished t1lat'-lb-Ution (Va f Or t)'p h elements as It is es dis - :)JTil)o- seLu" 4ith slIc e I ~Ments - the . the C4 claries e c11,11ge III boun arY in tl"esel the system 1"g ch that no near the boll"G, , kiires 1-1 O-M 10110 is 5U OTtnQS5 ,a 11ith the fusi in hot is perfOrm'f nts in eductioll '?~Tlct elcme e a r th-e wire Can cal 0- USSR UDC 669.293.5'29(,'/'P,6.018.44:621.785.7,0,3 ZVEZDIN, YU. I., POVYSIIEV, 1. A. I PUCAICIIEVJ G. S. , YAF.OVLEV, V, A. "Lffect of Heat Treatment on the 'Mechanical Properties of Nb-Zr-N and 14-D-zr-C Alloys" Metallovedenive -- V sb. (Physical Metallurgy -- collection of works) , '111o 14, Leningrad, Sudostrovenive Press, 1970, pp 233-237 (from. RZIII-Metallurpiya, No 4, Apr 71, Abstract No 41784) Translation: A study was made of the problems of beat treatment of dispersion- hardening alloys of the llb-41X-N, and 'Llb-I"re-C systens. It was demonstrated that hardening of the alloys is achieved by separation of the interstitial Dhases in the aging process at 1,000-1,100'. The alloys have i_-.aximLMi strength after suecial heat treatment consisting in annealing at 1,300' with subsequent aging in the 1,000-1,100' range. There are 4 illustrations, 2 tables and a 2-entry bibliography. USSR UDC 620.172.251.224 YEFTIKHIN, V. A., ZVEZDIN, Yu. I., KAPRIZOV, V. A. , and La1QjLV, G. 5 "Device for Creep and Fatigue Strength Tests of Metals at High Temperatures in a Vacuum of the Order of 10-9mm Hg" Moscow, Zavodskaya Laboratoriya, No 2, 1971, pp 228-230 Abstract: A device for creep and fatigue strength tests of metals at high temperatures in a vacuum of the order of 10-9mm Hg is described. Its main components - vacuum system, electro-supply and control systems, charging deirice, heater, and deformation measuring system - are discussed in detail by reference to a diagram. Results of fatigue strength tests of some nio- bium alloys in a vacuum of 10-7 - 10-9mm Ng are demonstrated and compared with tests conducted on che PB-3012 unit producing a vacuum of 0-6mm Hg. It is concluded that a vacuum of a~ Icant 1 x 104nm Fig which Is free of oil vapors must be used to obtain the correct otrength characteristics of the investigated metals. 1/1 MCA 7:;~~_ND40629 IM 0482 4 Soviet Inventions Illustrated, Section I Chemical, Derwent, 235699 CITUTVATiON-OF HICROORGAkh JS such as yeasts in alnedium&c ntainiing dispersed solid paraffins ad a~cajrbon;4ouiice is impraved by increasing the degree of di~oarsion of theopura- -prepar in& a IA/ ffins. This ip iiehieved-by: suspension of aoltd ParsViiiAn water; m-Ating the dispersed paraffin by heatin -1 g~ the suspensid. to 0 55-60 C;_ pu;Vinff them suspension -into an atontser underla pressure of 8-12 arm, gaage, o4here -the susp.ension is: divided Into A:nmaqber of stremns is directed that they collide producibg uIttasonic vibrations. By-this metthad',tha,aize of the paraffin particles is reduced to 5 U in average. 28.7.67. as l175954M-l3,:(;ORTAiW, et,al. Chemical Sciehces,lnac. Acad.; Sciences Kazalcii. SSR. (16.6.69) Bul. 6/24.1.6�: Class 6a, Int. Cl. C 12k. 19750187 77UEW UDC: 51 PUGAQHEV, V. F. , AARTYNOV, G. V., MEDNITSKIY, V. G., PITELIN, A. K. "Multistage Optimization With Specific Forms of Local Criterion" Ekonomika i mat. metody, 1973, 9, No 2, pp 204-217 (from, Kh-labernetika, No 7, Jul 73, abstract No 7V534 tauthors'Antroduction'l) Translation: In RZhMat, 1973, lV737 a scheme of multistage optimization with local criterion of general form is considered. Using specific forms W, corresponding modifications of the general scheme ct~.n be nade, compu- tational experiments can be formulated, a comparative analysis can be made, and conclusionu of a mathematical and economic nuture ean be dravn. The paper deals vith just this class of problems. ma 62-50 USSR PUGACtW, V. S., Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences 'USSR, Insti- in Control (Automation and Telenechamics), Eloscow Tu "Normal Stochastic Systems" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Fauk SSSR, Vol 208, No 3, 1973, PP 566-569 Abstract: Simplified approximation methods for the study of stochastic systems are of great value for the stuay of c9mplex systems with nopdeterministic be- havior. Such methods can bedeveloped on the basis of a stuay of a clage of normzal stocliastic system-s which reproomits the stochaistic axialog of' a clazz of linear deterDdnistic systems. The at~ticle shows that airj normal system can be regaxded as the series connection of a chain consisting of a deter- ministic linear oystem with operator L and a noise goneratoi.- which produces the normally distributed noise Y', which does not depEmd on the input signal, and an ideal deterministic adder, all of these being larallol-connected. Theorems are formulated which, in conjunction with the formulas for the deci- sion functions of stochastic system connections previousiy derived by the author, show that any connections of normal systems are normal systems, 1/2 .......... USSR PUGACHEV, Y. S., Doklady Akademil bTauk SSSIR, Vol 206, No 3, 1973, pp 5056-569 The results make it possible to use the appaxatus, of linear system theory for a statistical analysis of normal systems~ The only thing to be considered here, aside from the usual parasitic and noise sources in deter- ministic systems, is the interval noise in a normal stochastic system, created by noise generators connected to deterministic linear systems in the ele- ments of this system. This immeasurably simplifies the study and, in particu- lar, the modeling of normal stochastic systems as ccmpaxad to the study of stochastic systems which are nonnormal.,, A general method for soDiing the problem of the normalization of a stochastic system is described, 2/2 23 USSR ".Tile -lumber of Excess es of aPandom Process" Distribution of the I Moscour, Kelineynyye i C)ptiraYnyye Sistemy, I 971, PP Y(4-38-1 Abstract: A rando.-in quantity, equal to the nw,-ber of e;rcesses of a random process beyond a fixed level during a fixed interval o4.' time, is studied. Ifne distribution of this quantity is approxim-teC, by part of an exp-Insion of ort-ho3onal polynomals, related to tlie Poisson rule. Approximation for.-ulaS are derived for the moin--nts of the distribution, plus f;~Pproxftla-tillg C~rpressiono for the probabilities of various values of th~~ nwtber off excr~~&res. USSR UDC 519.9 na- 5 Corres-ponding Member VSSR Academy of Sciences# Institute of Problems +oC-oftzrol (Automation and Telemechanics) "Differential Equations for the Probabilities of States of a Systere' i Moscow, Doklady Akademli Nauk SSSRt Vol 198, No 1, 1 May ?1, pp 44-45 Abstracts In queueing theory and in the dynamics of' averuges Kolmogorov's differential equations are ordinarily used for the probabilities of states of a system with a finite or denumerable set of possible statesp wherein i-I is assumed that the process of change in the state of a system is a 1,:ark%ov- ian random process (a process vithout aftereffect) and therefore all trap*itions from one process to another must be Poissonian in nature. However, it is also true that Kolmogorov's differential equations for the probabilities of states of a system are valid not only for Eirkovian random processes but also for a wide class of processes with aftereffect. This axticle proves this statement through the uze of four equations, and discuzzion thereof. The author discusses the probability of rejection in the case of a Poinsonian process but states that the non-Poissonian.procass a.3 concerns rejection probability must be solved in some other =mer than that discussed in the present article. 1/2 NL USSR PUGACM, V. S., Doklady Akadamii Nauk SSSR, Vol 198, No 1, 1 Pay 71, pp 44-45 At the moment of time when the respective -function has singularity the probability of the state in which the systen was located before this suddenly jumps to zero and the probability of thestate into Rhich the system changes becones equal to unity.. The condition,for the existence of the limits in e uation (2) as generalized functions ir. obviously necessary for equation (3 to describe the change,in probability of states of the system., This article contains four equations and a bibliography of seven titles. USSR UDC 62-50 PUGACHEV, V. S., Corresponding [ember of the LSSR licademy of Sciences Stochastic Systems and Combinations of Thee' Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 197, No 6, 1971, pp 1288-1290 Abstract: The basic types of combinations of systems in automatic control theory are parallel combination, series combination,and closure by feedback. These concepts are extended in this article to stochastic systems by generaliz- ing them correspondingly. All possible combinations of systems are obviously combinations of the three basic types of combination_-~ Investigated. Three prop- positions are stated which establish the comple-teness ot tue ciass of stochastic systems with respect to all possible combinations and define the relations among the decision functions of the embinations and the decision functioqs of the combined systems. These propositions offer the theOTetiCal possibility of find- ing the characteristics of any combinations.of stochastic systems by the given characteristics of the combined systems. 64 USSR UDC 519-21 F UGACHEV, V. S. "Distribution of the Number of Rejecting of a Random Process" Nelineyn. i optimalln sistemy - Sbornik (Nonlinear and Cptimal Systems Collection of Vorks), I-loscow, "Nauka," 1971, PP 374-381 (from, Referativnyy Zhurnal - Matematika, No 8, Aug 71, Abstract No 8V140) Translations A random value equal to the number of rejections o--F' araziam process beyond the given level for a given time interval is considered. The distribution of t1his quantity is approximated by a segment of the expansion in orthogonal polynomials associated with Poisson's kpproxL%ation formulas are obtained for the noments 'of distribution, along with appEroximate exprvssions for the probabilities of different values of the number of rejections. (Author's abstract) USSR UDC 911.3.616.981.455(574) KONDRASHKIN, G. Az, KOINDRASHKINA, K. I., KALYAZINA, I. M., PROSHIN, V. G., LUA ~RCIIEVSKAYA, V. A., KORCHEVSKIY, P. G., and POLYAKOV, V. K. "Landscape-Epidemiological Regional Division Into Tularemia Districts in the Trans-Ural Area of Western Kazakhstan" V sb. Probl. osobo opasn. infek~sL (Problem, of Especially Dangerous In- fections -- collection of works) Byp. 5(15), Saratov, 1970, pp 91-105 (from RZh-Ifeditsinskaya Gpografiya, No 4. Apr 71, Abstract No 4.36.96) Translation: The Trans-Ural area of Western Kazakhstan consists of four land- scape-epidertiologi.cal areas: the Barbastau.-Ileko-ULvinskiv area (steppe), the Chelkaro-Ankatinskiy area (dry steppe), the Cliidc-rt,T-UIL-nty-Buldurti.iiskiy area (semi-desert), and the Kaldygayty-Ui.l'sIdy area (semi-desert-desert). Each area is described. Characteristic for the steppe and dry steppe areas is the steppe type of tularemia focus; while the estuary semi-desert type of tularemia focus is typical for the semi-desert. The prolonged epizootic "calm" of tularemia foci in the Trans-Ural area is due to the progressive drying out of once extensive local river delta floods. Because of cattle slaughter, xeraphyt plants take over with river land turning to desert. 1/2 IliN ti i USSR KONDRASIKKIN, G. A., et al., Probl. osobo opasn. infektsiv (Problems of Especially Dangerous Infections -- collection of works) Vyp. 5 (15), Saratov, 1970, pp 91-105 (from RZIi-Meditsinskaya Geografty No 4, Apr 71, Abstract No 4.36.96) The projected irrigation of the Trans-Ural area by construction of the Volga-Ural canal may activate local native tularemia foci. Numerical tables are provided for small. mammals and their ectoparasites in the areas defined. 1/2 Wu iCL ASS I F180 PROCE'SSING DATE-- 20i'XV70 u TITLE--LACTiC ULHYLROGENASE 150ENZYPJES~[N THE URINE UF CHILiREN' iilfl-l CHM_:1i1C 11YI-LONEP~-,QTIS -IJ- AUTHOR- Kz I-VUGACHEVA V.I., YURKOV, YU.A. cr-UNTRY UfF IPJ~G-USSR :~-_'S0URCE-PEL;(f"%1RIYA Itl)(2). Vt-d4t 1970 DATE PUb! IS1tEG-----7G SUBJECT AREAS--81CLCGICAL ANU MEOICAL SCIENCES TOPIC FAGS--LACTArE OEHY!)PU:'~ENASE, ISCENZY14-L-, URI,"IFt PEOLATFICSw NEP110ITIS, DIAGNOSTIC :-mitoos %-'CNTRGL MARK I NG-NO i~'E S' TR IC T IONS C E -7 LLA" A,,L- - 3-0 Y-3 4 L ~Pk`jXY tQi`L/i C 1 R L A C C E: S S I C N NP0 135334 L S S 1) -- -- --- 1 rd q 111511 IFS t v $1, 21,2 -czo U'ICLA.S~S I ~F I Eb: Pll 0 C ES -S ING DATE--21)i'\,OV70 ACCESSION l,iG--A,')01,35t!34, C-P-6- f'iJ'-TxJ CT Tf-.E TECiill~,L)E 01~~ UEVE'~,MINING TOTAL ACTIVIlY Pit,k) ciff- LACTIC DEHYUROGENASE IN 1"HE Ljr,-; f;N E 15 R 11) !, G dii 1"IL 14NVESTIGATION OF THIS ENZYME k"ll 38 HEALTHY CHILOkEN 11:1,.Cil 3 Pt YEA.'-,~S ULD) FHE STANGAUS Of ME 1Y i' L A C'f I V I T Y I S 0 y,,.l L- S 1,,., r I I L AN D 011~!,,~L- WERE ELABUR'ATED, AND IN 62 PATIENfS V'ITH C.-;RCNIC PVCLC-,NEPFkIfIS TFE UIA6NOSTIC VALUE OF THE E.NZ'IME WAS sruloiEt). WITti. LXi~Cf-f~bATICN I& PYLLGNEP-HRITIS ALL 5 F.-~ACT IC,;,,S OF LACTIC D;zHYi)kUUE.',,ASL: CANI BE UET&,AINED. 114 SE.VL9.E MLATERAL Nil,4.RKED P~tr'--VALENUL.' OF CATHOL;E 1-k ACTION'S WAS OaSF-k'Vc'-D. THE SPECTkW,, l3f~ [slljlENzy~llEs ;WiL) ToTAL ACrIVITY APPR0i,,c-[jELl rHAT ~JF NOR.,M,-L%L Uk i NE. 1 ".1 Pil T I EN r 'S ~V, I T dCU LAR A FF ECT IGN UF *1 H E K 10% 1: Y's THE SPECTKIA-1 UF [SuF,',jlZYMES IS CHARACTERIZEU BY A Mils-.KED P.XCVALE-NCE OF 4-NUDE FRAcr icj~is FAf- I L I TY DEP CHI ~LD 1) 1 S. 10 S!-- 011-1 i,:E0 s r0M.A TOL. INS T kc-SCOW USSR . U; iLA ~3 1 F I LU 1/2 026 -w4CL A S S I F I ED PR9CESSIN5 DATE--llSFP70 TITLE--ANALYSIS OF THE GORSKY BRAGG WILLIAMS MODEL -IJ- .~.AU THOR--PASKALt YU.I., PUGAC"EVAVALOVSKAYA, L.f. I COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ~.~'.,SnURCF-UKR. FIZ. ZH. (RUSS. ED.) 1970# 15(l), 143-5 :..,:DATE PUSL ISHED ------- 70 :SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS TOPIC TAGS--ORDERED ALLOY, R[N'ARY ALLOYt THERMODYNAMIC ANALY5 IS, HEAT (;F FORMATION, -ENTROPY, FREE ENERGYI~IMATHEMATIC MODEL '--%,n ESTRICTIl"S C ONT R 0: LP 4 1 N G ..',,D0CUMFNT CLA S S--U,"IrL A SS I F I ED PROXY PFEl,,/F.RA,'AF--19P,9/1339 ST" P /()i C25 /70/015 lfl~ 1 /0 1 CIRC ACCFSSION NO--AP0107812 Ll 2 C; S I CC D A I :iCJ CJ14 I Y3 H.1 'aN I O'd V!D 3 ~11 'SNOIIOICJ3'dd 1300N Cj-~39~!VIN3 ATIveibL2 DHA :10 - 1y"14V Nv 4(113G Sl '3z-'eD:-jO d3(]*dC' 3Hi NO 3:)N3CN3d3G ~~b:i =10 :Icjlkl. 3-luiSSC.d it 4-0 A'e03HI DIWIVNAOrlv~13HI IS' t~(,, I jlilv 03SOO'Cjbd Sl 1-00i~ STHI -40 NGISN.~ilX~ IVWbO:j V Sl SKV 1111M ~)Ovd2 'CASWO ~Hj :10 -31-.7vaA n~Hl NIHIP., 4S~QUN s- 1. L,.?.i IHll~ 'WIGS (A*'!l3cj~!,'J 4'dViNIO V f4l AU hdG-dlf,,i~i CINV d"A V 13VIIISOV -0-dO ?19LGIUdV--CN NC-ISSD3)V :Ydl:)~ 0 1 s 11 - - 13 I-N! IS SX;,l d 0 3 1 :3 1 s SV-'l :~N n 9zo Z/2 USSR UDC 577.4 T FILATOV, 0. "Planning and Warehouse Accounting for Material Values on a Complucer" V sb. Teori,,,.i i rraaktika EvIsh. obrpboa-.i infom.,. (Theary and Prvctice of 11,i- collection of works), Rostov-na-Doau, 1971, pp 30-34 chine Data Processing (from RZh-Kiber-aetika, t1o 7, Jul 72. Abstract No 7V536) No abstract F~in F0-46rl' Tlh~bifie_ 1, _Englnoi ftnp USSR UDC: 621.438-71-001.5 MAITUSHIII, E. A., MJKHAL'TSEV, V. Ye. G. A.. SOSNOV, Yu. V. "An Experimental Turbine for a Gas Temperature or 12000C With Two-Loop Air-Liquid Cooling" Tr. Mosk. yyssh. tekhn. uch-shcha im. N-. E. Baumana Works of the Moscow Higher Technical AcadeW imeni N. E. Bauman), 1970, No 134, pp ~'33-140 (from RZh-Turbostroyeniye, No 8, Aug 70, Abstract No 8.49-72) Translation: On the basis of research at the Moscow Iligher Technical Acadew, the Leningrad "Ekonomayzer" Plant made an experimental semi- -industrial pilot model of a high-temperw6ure gas-turbine installation with air-liquid cooling of the working blades, in order to finish the cooling system, an experimental gas turbine was designed at the Mosicow Higher Technical Academy, the full-scale dim~_-nsions of the blading being ta7'.en from the dimencions of the first stagn of the cooled turbizie in 'the high-tempera- ture gas-turbine installation. A description is giwu of the stand wid debugging t"ta of the experira_~ntal high-terperature gas-turbine installation at 450U-9000 rpm. An analysis-of the themal state o4' the guide vanea showed that the air cooling system, in reducing the vane temperature by 150-2000C, provides satisfactory cooling at temperature of lip to 9600C. Six illustrations, one table, bibliography of three titles. L. P. D. 7 USSR UDC 621-365.82 PUGNIN, V. I., SELIDIMI111OV, I. M., SKIMOVICh, E. G., and T270ChEN, A. N. "A Study of the Effect of Xenon on the Size of the Fcpulation inversion of Oscillatory Levels of the C02 Molecule in a Discharge.in a Mixture Of C02 lie + Xe Tr. Ryazan. Radiotekhn, in-ta (Proceedings of the Ryazan' Radiotechnical Institute), No 37, 1972, pp 69-?7 RZh-Fizika, No G,, Sep 73, Abstract No 9D752 Translation: The effect of adding Xe on the emplification of a C02 gas dis- charge laser was studied. The degree of wplification was recorded as a func- tion of the quantity of Xe and the electrical characteristics of the discharge. It is suggested that the effect of Xe on the population inversion occura through the change of the electrical characteristics of the discharge: the temperatures and concentrations of electrons. Eight bibliographic citations. Yu. M. USSR UDC 669.295 WVKO, P. I., ARENSBDRGER, D. S., PUGIN, V. S., NEIMCHEIM0, V. F., and L'VOV, S. N., Institute of Problems of Material ci6fice, Academy of.Sciences Ukr SSR, Kherson State Pedagogical Institute imeni:!N. K..Krupskaya "Thermal and El ctrical Properties of Porous Titanium" le Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallurgiya, No 8, Aug 70, pp 35-38 Abstract: A study was made of the dependence of the coefficient of thermal conductivity, the thermal expansion, the thermoelectromative force, and the resistivity of titanium on 0-50Z porosity.in the Interval from room tempera- ture to 1200* C. Thermal conductivity and electrical conductivity decreased with an increase in porosity. It was not possible to apply formulas of ~generalized conductivity for the determination of the dependence of thermal conductivity and electrical conductivity on porosity. This is explained by the coarseness of grain size of the.initial powder,(1-0~1 mm). toM:6206193-01 AFx-MBUFCZH, D. S., ZA ID YF A. 4, X0 1-10 TS, G. G., and PATWdSHEVA, A_ G., All-Union Scientific Research and Design Insti-7tute for Manium, . Zaporozhe, Institute of Problems -Of Hatexial- Sci-ence, Aeaadem3r of Sciences Uk6S-.;L: "The Co=osJ-cn Behavior- of Titanium Carmets: ircNinex-al Acid SaIiitions" Paroshkcrmya Hletallu:rgiyaj No 4(100).,, Apr 71, pp 74-80 Abatzaett Pcr--ous cernet mata-rials having devploped surfaces arre subiect to corrosion bat-h well az internp-11y, which causes a deteriora- tion in the mhysical-chemic%I propertiec. : St,,idy w2,s made. of the corrosion resistance af titaniun cermets in hydrochloric ard salfux-ic acids solutions at temxerat-,es of 20-80 0C. The awtiples were prepared ft-mi titanium powder with a -Da--t:Lcle sizo nange of -0.25 + 0.1 TIM and -0.18 + 0 nn. The Uta_nium pmaers weemee pprepaxva by holdxogenation with sulazequent dagrass:Lng of the zmelt ard by- ele-egralytic refining of the waste titanip sponge. One set of0 S=VIP-S was - ssea uruier x nrensuni: of 1..+5;~T/cm- amA sitterect- at '1150 in T)ure argcm for twa hours. TI-_ ather samples, wera. sintered in vacu= at 11000C for am hou-n. . The sDecific- surfaces of the, 201,b ard 4C%,~ porous . samples were detenainecl and. found7ta be o.i7 ani- o.455 ;?/g;,- respectively.. Cor:rosion tests with sulfuxic acid (5-91S.',) were carri ed out by in- 0 cubating tkm samples at W-EO -1 for 4-5 hours and at. 20-300C 21~or 12-14 hou:rs. Velocity of coz sion was fourA to be independent of time. A curve of the relation of the velocitv of corrosion to- acid concentratior slimis tim raxina which cor-resr-and to 20 Lrd 72% sulfuri,- acid; a miniraura occurs at 50-6Qr, sul- fuxic acid- udiile with concentrations above 78%, the velocity decreases signi- ficantly. Tiltanitrm ce=,iets have little stability in sulfui~ic acid and the =a of nitz:-Ic acid as an inhibitor gave almost complete protection. TkLimium cermets -ware stable at 20'C to 3~ H01; aA, inrzeazad con- centrations,, the corrosion increa-sed- rapidly. Conpoxison, nf results with both hydrochlaric arxL sulfuric acids showed- ths;t the velocity of corrosion is Inhibited b7- the msence CrE the CrIon and- activated by the SO ~ within 4 a fixed tim--. At increased acidities, this is'reversed aj:d car, be explained by, t1m fact that the titanium sulfate which Is deposited an the surface as a corrosioa product is insoluble arzL prevents fnrther degene-ration, -3/6 USSR UDO 66.067.12 AREENSBURGER, D. S.,-P, GIN, V. S., and FEDORCHENKO, 1. M., Institute of Prob- lems of Material Science, Ac emy of Sciences, Ukrainian SSR "Technology of Production and Properties of Porous Titanium-Molybdenum Alloy Materials" Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallurgiya, No 12, Dec 70. pp, 39-42 Abstract: The alloy titanium-30% molybdenum has been found to be highly corrosion resistant in hydrochloric and sulfuric acLds at high temperatures. Therefore, this alloy was used in experiments on the production of porous perm-eable materials. The technology of manufacture and ptoperties of porous titanium materials of this alloy, designed to operate in hot acid solutions, were studied. A technology was developed for diffusion saturation of titanium powders with molybdenum, allcrwing the production of a corrosiom.-resistant coating on the surface of titanium particles. The porous permeable specimens manufactured of titanium powder which had been diffusion iitturatad with moly- *psistanceaad can be recommended for use in bdenum also have high corrosion t hot solutions of non-oxidative acids. 1/1 USSR UDC 532.135~621.762.4 KORNIYMO, P. A., and Institute of Problems of Material Science, Academy of Sciences, Ukrainian SSR "Study of the Structural and Mechgnical Properties of- Plastic Powder Mixtures, Report V Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallurgilya, No Feb 71, pp 57-62 Abstract: A study was made of the dependence of the structural and mechanical constants of plastic powder mixtores on the L quantity of plasticizer (starch), particle forta (spherical, aspherical), specific surface, and powder material.; Twenty per- cent starch paste was used in the study. It was deomonstrated that the powder parti'cles are bonded with the plasticizer by adsorption, while the bonding between the particles themselves is by van der Waals-London forces through an interlayer of plasti- cizer in sectors with disrupted structurej having free surface energy. The influence of the quantity of plastici:rer, epecific surface, particle form, and powder material on the structural and mechanical propertlea qf the plastic powder miN.-tures was 112 039 UINCLASS IF I ED PROCES.';ING i'ArE-20NOV70 T'ITLE-INVESTIGATI'ZiN UF T IFANIUM M6LYBDFtNUf-, P&M)FRED 11HAL ALLOYS -U- A LTHOR- 0 3--l E N S 8 LI RGE RD5 .11~4 V. FECKIRCHENI(Of I.M. ~,CCUNTRY OF l.NFG--USSR PORGSHKOVAYA METALLURGLYA,'NO 4, APR 70, P.P 32-38 PU8LISHE0---APR70 '':SUaJE-T AREAS--MATERIALS, MECH.p IND.t CIVIL. AND MAWNE ENGR 'OPIC TAGS--PCi%UER METALLURGY, TirA~iium ALLOY, MOLYBDENUM ALLOYF METAL MWER, P014DER METAL, SINTERED ALLOYP CORROSILIN RESISTANLE, ELECTRIC RESISTANCE C.C.NTRCL MIAR.KING--NO RESTRICTIONS OCCUMENT CLAS 5-UNCLASS If lEf) PROXY REEL/fRAME--3001/OLOO STEP NO--UR/ 022 6/ 7 0 /000~f CIO/*/ 0032/00 38 CIRC ACCESSICN NO-AFOA'25924 j _L_ Aljl 212 C39 UNCLASSIFIE D PROCESSING DATE-201,11OV70 CIRC ACCESSICN NO--AP0125924 ABSTkACTiExTaAcr--(U) G9-0- Aa s TRACT. TPE PHYSIGCll-JEMICAL AND PHYSKGMECHANICAL PRCPF-KTIF-5 CF POWDERED METAL ALLDYS BASED ON TITANIUM ANU MOLYBDENUM (CCiNTAINING UP TO 50 WT,. PERCENI' MCI ARE kEVIEWED, A140 PRUCUCYICJ'N~ TECHNOLCGY IS DISCUSSED. mbLYBDENUM PG WDE-k (TYPE MCl--') WITH A PAKTICLE SIZE OF 5-7 Md, AND TITAN!UM CALCIUM HYOR.IDE, WITH A PARTICLE SIZE OF 56 I-JUr WERE USED IN THE fNVESTIGATION6 SPECIMENS, 40 TIMES 5 TIMES 4 AND 60 TIMES 5 FlIKES 5 M' 'I AND POROSITY 30 PLUS OR MINUS 1.5PERCENT, CCNTAFNING UP TO 50 WT. PERCENT VOLY80,LNUM, WEkE SINTERED IN ARGCN AT 500-1400CIEGREESC. THE HOLDING TEME ~T THE SINTERING TEMPERATURE WAS 2 HRS AND THE SINTERED~ SPECIMENS WERE COOLED FRO14 0,4 TO 12 FRS, iiHICH CORRESP-jNDS TO A COOLING RATE OF 3,000 AND 100 DEG-HR4 DATA CN TFE SHRINKAGE, POROSITY, AND SPECIFIC ELECTRICAL RESISTA14CE OF* LOMPACTS, DEPENDIIN'G ON THE CGNVENT OF PO-LYBDENUM AND SiNtERING, TEMPERATURE, AkE PRESENTED. A DIAGRAM OF MUTUAL CESSOLUTION OF 11TANIUM AND PCLYBOENUM DURING SINTERING Or ALLOY 1133M0 AND CORROSION RESISTANCE CURVES OF TITANIUM MOLYBDENUM ALLOYS AS A FUNCTE&N (IF ALLUY C014POSITION ARE SFCW.N. THE CORRUSIGN RESISTANCE OF:ALLOYS WITH UP TO 5c) WT. PERCENT 140 IN 20PERCENT HCL AND 40PERCENT H SU82 50 SU84 SHOWS THAr POWDERED AETAL ALLOYS OF THE Cu;,-iP0SITION TI33H(.t SINTERED IN AkGO19 AT A TIEMPEkATURE.OF 1200OE3REESCt POSSE5S THE HIGHEST CURRUSION RESISTANCE. POWDERED METAL ALLOYS OF T141S COMPOSETILN ARE RECOICSIENDED FOR THE PRUCUCTION 6F POROUS PERMEA6LE MATERIALS FROM TITANIUM MOLYBDENUM POWDERS. FACILITY: INSTITUTE FOR-PROSLEMS OF MATERIAL SCIENCE, ACADEMY OF SCIENCES UKRAINIAN SSR. ------------- ulkL, Li D. S Pz'oble= or' --cute for scic-rzCas U.,~-a n, t:j z llinvez'-_J~ation Of TJ tan-;-, -0 ~Aetal Al Xev, Foroz_"-~--Ovaya ..:eta No 4, Apr 70, PP 32_-~3 -e an! all oys base_,~ o21 tj.-r U1, -den, and moly b ,,n (cont Prcdaction zec'_jjolor~,y i S aro r~.- Wit h apar'Ucle S.;, ZC 0, *ize ..,0,/ *, Ile in Q- ore u 3 ED' Cjr x I- 1 11, X -t! S-Pecl-ans, 7, :ni4 D MM and 0 C.,j "C ~";4ty 30 5p" cl~nntiUnLnjr 11,j ~~o ,,rj ,.i- Sintc -red in aro.-i at -re v I'. i1o hold_i,le,- Was It S ~,L c c0 r a sp s to '), od COI^- a rate C~ .J~000 and 100 porozi Data on b -tyl -,ncl --necifIc I, Z:. ical rozi~;tallC 6ent of r _o!y Of CO,--D!LCtL;, con- bden-u~!, Z;Lnteriinc- . , tempperature, are p- mutual r~;Seltlttlt--A -L"$, a 0.- ~i Snd '~-OlybderWM d11ri.'!L Sir.i 41 arrd corrosion zozi,_4_ - -".6 -'a CLU'ves O.V titanium-mol allo~y cor,-,D, ycdernzi 11 o rs - ositiO-1 are st Qwn- The co.-.rosi, or, rj:jz i ist,~.rCC- 0-' V2 UZ) T.0 S., et a!, P Poroshkovaya :,ictallurgiya, o 4., 'p ?0, -,DJ 50 irt. L 1 -9 0; HCI and 4C,v L,12SO'll, shc~-,--- that alloys of tLlc* Composition TIJ,33~-.~O, Sixil"Ored, 3.1 argon a*r, a twmerat*Uro c-, -Uha highest corros.-Lor. resistance. pol,~~de.red met-al alloya of tL,-~s c,:~;T;positlon o recomme.-ded for the uroduction of -porous parmeable mator-J"ils from Molybdenum pcrwde~-S. USSR UDC 621.762.53 YURCHENTY0, A. G., -QLGjH&._j1 and KOVAV GREMKO, M. S. Institute of Problems of Material Science, AcademV of Sciences, Ukrainian SSR "Hot Pressing of Materials With High Graphite Content" U Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallun)iya, No 2, Feb 71, pp 37-.;9 Abstract: The purpose of this work was to study the pi-ocess of hot pressing of metal-graphite compositions based on an iron-nixi--ej alloy with 30 vol.% graphite and to determine the optinial technologjcal modes for this process. Hot pressing of mixtures of powders of iron, nickel,and graphite was performed using a lever mechanical press in graphite molds at 1000 and 1100*C under pressures Of ID0, 150,and 200 kg/cm2. It was establi5hed that the optimal hot pressing mode is 1100*C, 150 kg/cm2. Use Of this MOde -.1110WS SpCiriAC115 With (IC115itieS of 93-94% to he aciiieved. Tt is demonstrated that the,rompacting of materials in hot pressiiig can be described by volxLmetric viscous flow. USSR uDc 621. ?85 SLyS,, I. G., FMORCIc-IjKo, 1. 1%, Y2m-MOVAt YE, Is',, and PUGIINA L. 1 . Institute of Problems of Haterial Sciencer UkrainianSSA"W -6t-;gi~iences "Investigation of the Process of Sulfurization of Cormet Stainless Steelst Report 11" Kievo Porosbkovaya Iletallurgiya, 110 Apr 73, PP 37-43 Abstracti A new nethod of sulfurization of *intend natexi,,.ls is proposed and investigated. It is sho~,m that for the process of sulfu-rization of stainless steels it is necess,-~Lj-y to oreate corldition,-, ithich urill Promote interaction of sulfur w-ith alloy components. The conditior-s ihich incraase reactivity of the --lloy components. The con'litionz ithich inc:cease reactivity of the zaloy aret vory long reaction surfacel high cojicentration of defects of the crystalline 3tructure, anrl heterogeneity of alloy nAcrovolurries accordin- to the chemical cojiwosition. The conbinaticii of sii-.te4~in,3 WIth sUlfuriza- alloita reduction of the temperature of sinterirg 0tly 250-3000C. It is shown that sintered (in the presence of sulfur at 950 0) stalnlezs porous steel is highly corrosion and wear-resistant during beaxing coiitact. USSR 621.7'2.0":620-17 (D M, L. P11GJJLL_L_, I- FEDORCHENaO, !.M. , KOFUK, M" , PAmpuL.OVA, I. A. and RLJDFJTKOI V. N., Institute of Prob =ems =oJk7A__Aa1 Seencej Icademy of Sciences Ukrainian SSR "Effect of Technological Factors on the Durability of Sulfid-ized Iron- Graphite" Kiev, Poroshkovaya metallurgiya, No 3, 1972, PP 99-105 Abstract: The strength properties of cermet mecterinls after siliterIng are governed not only by the comp)sition cif t-he mixture L-w,- by a. variety of technological factors as vell. . Varying the, alloyinr.; efficiency of, i-coll particles with caarbon. iri I I ~.4~most double the strenf:th of mulfidized iron-Gra-phite; raioing th,~ dis-perGity of the starting powdr--r.-.; fo-ar-fold may increane thc material'tj otrength V 30%; reduciril-, Lho porosity frrm 30 to 1% Vill increase tbe strength characteristic-.; o1' thr imal.(LI~itl foui, a L 0 4-ae to five times. Iddition of ,dnc sullfide to allay th,_, 1) rticl , c n. tj with zinc ir-ill raice tile intei-ral hardness by almost Xl,. I'- Ha!-- 'rt~cn ceimwlt m. j.-L,:! ril s establishie-d that the ne-chtlnism of stren(~Wieninf- al uri rig plastic is deteumined pri-marily by the rn~-a`.Prialls _`Mdti;~.' porosity. (5 illurt-rations, 2 tables, 11 b1blic,-~ra~phlc reJ_*`-_-(-_,iccz) 1/1 USSR UDC 620.183.48 IVIN, V. I., KOZLOV, Yu. I., laaw&-kami. YURCHENK0, A. G., SAVITSKIY, K. V. (Deceased), and FEDORCHENKO, I. M., Institute of Problems of Material Science, Academy of Sciences Ukrainian SSR "Study of the Sintering, Structure and Phase Composition of Nickel Alloy-Base Metal-Graphite Materials, Report 1. Study of the Sintering Process of Nickel-Base Materials and Both the Structure and Phase Composition of Nickel-Copper-Graphite Alloys" Kiev, Poroshkovaya metallurgiya, No 10, Oct 71, pp 26-31 Abstract: The stud- concerns the process of sintering as well as phase and structural changes occurring during sintering in Ni alloy-bwse metal-graphiCe inaterials. The experimental matevials comprised 80% N1, and 20% Fe or 20% Cu with 30 and 50% (by vol.) graphite. The addition of graphite to Ni-Cu and Ni-Fe alloys markedly reduces both the amount of shrinkage and its rates during sintering. Ulith 50% graphite the~compression gives way to volumetric grawth. Cu additions result in greater volumetric Sxrx4th than Fe additions. The major cause of volumetric growth is believed to be- the formation of inclusions isolated between particle surfaces, interaction with oxides to and desorption gases frcm the:graphite resulting in a breakdown form gases USSR ITIN, V. I., et al., Poroshkovaya metallurgiya, No 10, Oct 71, pp 26-31 of contacts. Graphite additions cause the separation of Cu and Ni particles and reduce the alloy's homogeneity. In Cu-Ni alloy-base metal-graphite materials, graphite becomes an inert addition and spreads over the structure in the form of a separate inclusion in the. metal matrix -- the solid solution of Cu in Ni. (5 illustrations, 5 bibliographic references) 2/2