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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT ROMOVACKOVA, H.H. - ROMWALTER, A.

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Scientific Abstracts [2]
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CIA-RDP86-00513R001445320012-9
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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........... AUTHOR ROMPEO R, Pk- 2577 TITLE Certain research on "cold" electronic emission of sulphurous. ... @cadmium monocrystals.-: (Nekotome issladovanniya "Kholodn6y" elektronnoy emissil. mo nokristallov sernistogg kadmiya.:Russian). PERIODICAL Radiotekhnika i Elektronika,, 1957Y Vol 21 Nr 21-pp 219 -221 U.S.S OR. Revi ewed 6/1957, Received 4/1957 ABSTRXT The lecture was delivered at the All-Union Conference for Semi-. conductors in November 1955,at:Leningrad. At first the simple, installation itself is described. Alre the occasion of the first experiments carried out it was observed'that.0 even in the cassof lacking illumination, severaLcrysta18 sh6we&an'eled- ;,tron.emission which, at a'voltage,between anode and'c@ihode of 'about 7 W, had a value of the.or.der,of magnitude lo- A, and at, p to 10 3A @,12,5 kV of u As long as the voltage does not exceed .8 _1o W, electron emission is@more or less stable; and an in- crease of current intensity-(by-an increase of voltage) irre-' versible modifications were produced on the crystal..Rising of the emission current by no:means took place exponentially,, but -4 rather $'in steps", and, eventually at current intensities of lo and'11-3 4L,.led to a rapid destruction of the crystal (within a- :bout some seconds)e Immediately before reaching its maximum the -mloring of fluorescence@changes over to red-orange typical __ _-4. @11 -Al@a vh@ZA II from auuufwm .-A 7, VOL 2 N436.2, coup. 21WS-2TIL) ts ZT0 out U 10-0 mmHg pr!cm=mvmd *44 clecum anialm rmu cds ccyuab aw 7 kv bctwc= wdwc aw QWIE40 Pruducm a cwmag of 10-1A, wA am It kv dtfig 10-1A. --WOO* I @- @:,I id,-. -46818-66 L ACC NRt m6o2o5o6 calculated for'all possible combi 'parameters are pres,ented..@' The line.profiles are na of values., of ithe. three parameters. An electronic.@ Ellio,tt.8036omput.er calculat:LM the 140 profiles, reduced.to unity,:@and their.maximum intensity value. The author analyzes-the shape ofthe profiles obtained and-stresses that most of the asymmetric profiles have different:humps., saddles,@@and waves.: In analyzing the prelim inary resqlts %s obtainedl theAuthor mentions some basic. problems. :` It.appears that active promine4ces or flares may indeed have a 6-km/sec relative filament velocity. If the prominences.: areassumed to have a filament structure,the Dopplerwidths d tt ermined. from the o 9erv@d profil6s dn fliebasi6 of thbir half-Widths mhy lye excessively large.'The mAximpm. intensities obtained from the calculated profiles havenot yet been.worked out. e TP increase of optical depth causes the difference betweenthe largest and the smallegt, maximum intensity values to decrease regardless of the number of filam.ents.Additi6nal.--, filaments would therefore only widen the line profile Iand would not affe-et t 6 inte 'ty ji n4i Therefore it appears .possible.1to, applythe present theory to.the inte,rpretation@of solar flarles., where spectral lines are known to belarge, In conclusion the author remarks that preliminary results obtained with the model*described:are encouraging. The authors hope toobtain suitable observational.material tolearn more about the matter in prominences-and flares.. In the discussion following the article, one of the, L_ h4084-66 ACC NRt SOURCE COM' CZ/2514/65/000/051/0120/0124 AT6020508 @2, 9 AUTHOR:', Rompolt, B. @ORG: Astronomical Institute of Wroclaw University TITLE: The connection between a funnel-type.'prominence and surges SOURCE: Ceskoslovenska akademie ved.' Astronomicky ustav. Publikace 'no. 51, rd Consultation on Solar Ph sics and Hvdromagj&LcsL Tatranska Lomnica, 13-16 October 1964, 120- an inserts fqUowing p. 124 A TOPIC TAGS: solar prominence, solar4ctivity, solar limb solar. magnetic field jo solar corona ABSTRACT: The author tries to determine the trajectories and directions of the movement of matter and the reproduction of the general nature'of the magnetic.field An a region of aIctive funnel-type prominences and surges situated in.the western ,solar limb and filmed on,22 November:.1945. 'Investigation was carried 'Out on 1h e @L 44084-66: ACC NR, AT6020508 basis of 200 selected fr am es out of the 628 obtained. Enlargements,on photographic paper facilitated the determination of the,trajectories of, individual promilnence'knots and streams. , The pattern of the, magnetic field in the'active region above the chrom'osphere was constructed as -a result. Fr6m,analysis of other films of promif, J.; nences, it was concluded that surges are the main suppliers.,of matterto'the corona withih an.active region. - The general characterof the magnetic field in thelcorona is.shown and explained in detail. ,, The general pattern ofl.the magnetic field in the funn el-type prominencIe 1s des.cribed as departing distinctly from pr econ.ceiv.ed notions. The m ost:chara'ct e'ris tic valu es of thevelocities-of matter in the region of active prominences are listed and explained, The mechanism carrying the surge matterl.b.ack to the chromosphere, along thesame route as the@ascehding trajectory is probably,the same as the one controlling the matter in the loop-,type prominences. .All the surges observed emerge from,.the solar surface regions.where two systems of magnetic lines of, force converge, as was found previously in the case of the regio 1 -of active prominences of 4 January.1945 [Rompolt, B.' : BAC 16, No-4, 2271, @19651. ,The author is especianj ihdebted to Profess6r. W..@Roberts for permission to *use his S/080/62/035/002/009/022" Blec k.rolytic preparation and D204/D302 Ag and Cu.in the original, alloy were removed together with the@Pb.. Measurements of the anode potential showed.this quantity to be ac-I determined by the extent of purification, increasing from 0.08 - 0.14 V to 0.36, -- @0.4 V as the Pb was removed..It..:Ls, there fore, believed thatthe process could be controlled.adtomatically by a:simple potentiometri.c..m.ethod. Transfer of.Bi to.'the,cathode:-: was also investigated, at 0.5 amp/cM2 on a 75Bi25Pb.alloy, f ind7. ing that the Bi. increased at first slowly and then.rapidly, up to.,:: 1% in the cathode Pb, when -92 - 98%.of * the anode,Pb was 'di'saolved,: deoreasing thereafter, to 0.,6,: - 0@.90%. The results are discussedo 'Using electrolyte (b) and commercial Bi containing 2.5%@Pb@ 0.'3@9_ Ag and 0.007% Cu., at 0.1.7 amp/c 2 and'at 550`C, at was found thatl- m A. 0 h-gher purif ic,at L Jons could be achieved The lead was reduced 0.00i%, Cu.to -0 and Ag,to 0.01%. The results were confirmed.on.,- re eating the process on a.larger scale with commercial.2ead,c-cn_._'I p taining 16.8% Bi and admixtures of Ag Cu and Sb. There are 5 'i gures and 13 references: 9 Soviet-bloc and 4 non-Soviet-bloc. The references to the English-language publications.read as f o'llows: G-. Cleary and D. Cubicciotti, J. Am Che 5 5 7 m. So.0 74 19552) t 32439-65 1WT (m) /WP (w) 11WA (d)/'ZPR/T/-9WP(t)/n? (b) P" UP(c) KW/JD A CC FvS TON NR- AT4045958 S/2563/64/000/23410062/0068 A1JTW-)R: Rnmu, V. G. 3s- T1"J--1 F.- TnvPqttg;ttinn nf the rnpper rorner nf the Cu-Al-Mn-Fr phase diacram SOT-TRCF- Leningrad. Politekhnichest!y !nstitut. Trudy*, no. 234, 1964. MetalInve,leni.vp (Metal iography), 62-68 TOPIC TAGS: quaternary phase diagram, copper, aluminum, magnesium. ironj crystallization range, martensite transformation, metallographic examination, microhardness ABSTRACT: Although the quaternary Cu-Al-Mn-Fe phase diagram serves as a basis for the development of new high-strength alloys Epd for a most thorough L 32439-65 ACCESSION NR: AT4045959 Armco-Iron (0. 7716 C; 0. 28% Mn; 0. 015% P). Fe was added as an AI-Fe alloyingi agent. The chemical composition of specimens varied as follows: At -4; 7; 9; 11 and 14'16; Mn - 2. 5; 5; 10 and 1516; Fe - 0. 5; 1, 2 -1 3 and 5%. In all specimens 4 "@ - --f, 1 1 ; @ @# 4- -- - = nn v@@- =nd @irnnn cis. rl qq Mn wnR ;a ddpd The intro- ance of the region of an at-aolld solution. A new ferruginoua component appear--a', ed after 516 Fe was added. An increase in the amount of Mn brought about the formation of a homogeneous structure which became martensitic as the Mn con- tent was lowered. The microhardness of thetg,,phase which depends on the alloy- ing component lies between 280 and 412 kG/mm Orig. art. has- 4 figures iind I table. Carce/3 t 32h39-65 ACCESSION NR: AT4045958 ASSOCIAMON: LeningrudBkiy politekhnicherkiy institut imeni M. I. Kalinin (,T,Pnlng-r-ad Polytechnic Tnstit,,rte) SUBMITTED: 00 ENCL: 00 SUB CODE: MM NR REF SOV: 000 OTHER: 000 (Copper-@aAuminum-nickel alloys-Testing) USSR/General Problems of Pathology - Comparative Oncology U-1 Abs Jour Ref Zhur - Biol., No. 181 1958., 84971 Author .'_BDMU117 Inst : KurdcMedical Institute Title : 'Pathologic Changes ific Heart in Malignant Tumor Disease Orig Pub Sb. tr, Kurskiy med. in-t., 1956, No. 11, 183-187 Abstract In 1.12 autopsies on patients.dying.from malignant tumors -it wa s shown that metastases to the heart (16.percent):.are most frequently seen in cancers of the lungs, :as the:re.sult of-emboli along the blood.-and lymph-.-vessels..@Metastases to the heart often provided by tumors which have a tendency to degeneration;-,non-specific changes.in th6,form. of brown atrophy.,,dystrophic processes., 'and lyaphlo- cyti6. infiltrations were-often seen,-,and-deat,h. of. patients with @ -tumors, not infrequently occurred due, C rd to cardiacrdecompensation or acute cardio-Vascular a insufficiency,, Ye.- F., ACC NR1 AP6020280 SOURCE CODE.- HU/0028/65/012/003/0289/0294 AUTHOR: Romvar -1, 28 BUdaPest);.Takitsy, GYLaa (Budapest); Farkas, El @2q b ek (Budapes0-' Bud am ORG: Stat6 institute of Ug@iene/directed by T. Bakacs/. a st Re ch Inst ute directed by kozegeszsegugyi intezet); LRomvaryj Veteri J. Meszaros/ MTA Budapest (Allatorvostani kutatointezet MrAJ TITLE: Serological evidence of the incidence of influenza equing A-1-virus(infection among horses in Hungary 1'2, ' no ___6 '3, 19 5 13OURCE: Academia scientiarum liu7ngii@@a'e. Acta micro iologica, v.o 289-294 TOPIC TAGS: animal o,anti o yo , al d so vi so se ru b d a.nim-. seas rumpldisease incidence virus disease ABSTRACT:-. Horses ..stocks were@screened for . hem in 12: agglutination-inh ibi i ng antibodies to the:subtypes equi e A-1 and A-2, n human A-2 and, swine A-lof the inf lumB a virU5.1 A total:,of 835 sera were tested., 487 of whic'h were taken from..race horses*-- x@- Antibodies were found only to the subt quine A-1 virus. The incide ce of the e ype e n 8 antibodies was high in horses over 3 years of age, in each of the stocks tested. Colts 2-3 years old were tested in 4 stocks. Of these an average of 49 per cent were found to have equine A-1 antibodies in two closely related stocks. In the. other two stocks, the 'colts were.practically seron-gativeb It is concluded that* equine A-1 virus has been highly disseminated in Hungary before 1961.and that it -,,persists -in certain horse stocksf_'@.Origs arto has, l.figure 2_.table.s.,:, [Ori 910 RG .fVA RY.,Jozsef..-Dr,-ca-nd. __ of-ve t.-sci TAKATSY, Gyula,_-Dr, FARKAS-1 Elek - ------ 5_r_,6_and`1-da_tes-Tf _@;d. sci.; Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Animal Health Research,Institute (director: MES-ZAROS, Janos, Dr, cand. o f, vet. sci.) (MU Madyar Tudomany9s Akademia,.Allategeszsegugyi,Kutat.o.Intezet),.ahd National. Public Health Institute (director.-,BAKATS, Tibor, Dr, dr. of med. sci.) (Or- szagos Kozogeszsegugyi Intezet). 11S erological Proof of the Occurrence of Influenza A-1 Equi,Virus Infection in Hungarian Horses." Budapest, Magyar Allatorvosok Lapia, Vol 21, No 2, FeV66,-pages 56_58o@@ Abstract: [Authors' English ified] Seru samples taken froa 12,.- summary mod m ,horse breeding stocks were tested1for the presence of antibodies against'.., equine influenza A-1 and-A-2 viruses by means of.-the hemagglutination in-.,.. hibition test. The sera@were tested also with human influenza A-2 an&with. the Shope virus. Of the total of 835 blood:samples, 487 were taken from race horses. Antibodies,were found only,to. equineinfluenza subtype:A-@l. In all stocks, thesera. of horses over .4 - years old had . ahigh antibody,titer. Sam- ples taken.from 2-3 year old,foals were,,tested in 4 stocks. In 2 stocks which were in contact,.nearly one-third, of.the samples contained antibodies while .nbarly,all,samples were negative@in,the other2 stocks. The,results indicate that infection was very common among horses.4 years ago and such infection also occurs sporadically today. 2 Eastern European :12,Western references. Sc: pepn kccessicn,'V 1. 11-:6Y. 191;6 as, Dim. KOVES, 4emer; ROMWALTER, Alfred; KRETAI, Jozsef, w#rnok; KAVPA@I, Gyula t*l.,k,0ww was detit. w "od th _5 @= t of th, J. D. Gul 64, @'A UT HORS: o, S.P. and Romu, Go Butomot D.G., Laz arenk TITLE.- Prodaction::Of,,copper With a low oxygen content (Poluchen- iye medi@s nizkim,soderzhaniyem kisloroda). PERIODICAL: il'Tsvetnyye Metally,t 195 7 P No 7t P@ 701.175 (USSR) ABSTRACT: The pra sent:art icle is -b as ed,' on.mat erial o,btai ned.bythe Central-Research Institute of,the Ministry of Shipbuilding Vyborzhets" works@ of *the USSR togeither with the ','Krasnyy , . o on.the:production,.of copper, with. an; oxygen -content O:L% ct-@ ad- Copper with such.low oxygen contentsAs.,not,zffe versel y annealing,in a re ucl phe e nd can:be y@ b d ing,@ atmos r a welded satisfactorily. :,It,was,found that contamination of- copper. with:: oxygen. during, the pouring, of ingots (th6.:.. I witli type rincipal contamination-stage) couldbe avoided - te ing . vlert ical t flat,,,, castm-iron ingot moulds Copp er.@.@by without water cooling. :.Comparative'.tests were,- made with this type o.fl,,mould. and: also ,water-cooled moulds with in- . : 1000 mm. ternal-dimensions:.123:@x 670 x 850 mm and..206 x, 735,,x In addition,to the investigation of the structures.and'. properties of..:the ingotst their rolling into,sheets a:nd@@ the.welding;of these latter.with various electrodes were studied for types M3C -and M3 copper. Welded joints in@ M30 .@copper were.@superior to those in M3., U\ C: AUTHOR; Lazarenko,,@, S.P. and Romu, V.G. 1@6-4_12/23 TITLE: Clad Metals. (0,Plakirovannykh Metallakh). PERIODICAL: IlTsve -us Metals) 1957, No.4 -twe Metally'@ (Non-ferro pp., 56 60 (U.S@S.R.)@ ABSTRA91T After a.brief waceount of@the uses of bimetallic sheets and strip the authors describeltwo methods-of producing clad: steel. One'method,is f or welding copper: billets.t o. steel billets followed,.by hot rolling; in the other 'earth moulds' with a steel core,,.are filled. with brass, this being also,: followed by:hot,-rolling.: The first, afterltesting 8y backwards and foiwards bending to,tracture and bending'to.,180 round a bar two sheet-thicknesses in'diameter,,'and'tensile,,testing were found to give@good results indicating good adhesion bet- ween the copper.and steel., Strips.produced,by the second meth-, od showed no sep'aration.between brass and steel when,tested by bending through:180 with the brass,both inwards and.outwards; no cracks we re nd pecial tests- showed that.a stress _,obse rved. a s of 10-20 kg/mm',was required to cause separation.. It@was shown that to avoid'the'clad layer creeping off during rolling small Caxd 1/2 reductions shouldbe used in the.first passes.,-Some recomm n- dations are given on selecting the method of clddding,for.diff- eient sizes of strip or sheet and thickness of. the cladding* , So..: East.Eur opean, Accession, Vol. No. @5@@ I'llax. @957 1 e 00000 so l I I A I A 1 0 9 of 11 a U 14 " Is ly Is a 21 b a 31 ji 3i v x III it a JS m It ]A v IN p a At a as 0, K I a L . Ilk P z m * 9 .3 At of r l 11M. k C' i Ir h c v X Roy. Hmost, Pakliv-Jamp . *0 0 l it ish. Not. Utiocint A41-01, Il t rust V Nit. %*Its not patimilly evapl. and 'llemilit. t ullai i t lu l I e of s m s c i r: iallav s I tlit! 41111141V 8 14j i lAwitWo. lavanic mr%inifml. Thew plieno1% alimmit Im.0i 00 06 z t o scid 14. 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Vvir. rwk. of .1104itet v 1 Ole In it.-Th, Met. 13, PS M(194 1); CAralt. 7tivir.- 1%2, U. 1 9 00 devrIcipment of low-temp. carbonization In Hungary I* dis- -00 0 ClUtint with .-pect to Its frvh. anti rentiontsk-al prfg)[vin.. -00 Pxpcfkncrv o1)1aInnI its it lbingarian plant including t,-n@ so 99 a ;1 :Nfluctat'll nlairtkal I-coblellas anti tile latillbAtUal of 00 far. ga- And xnv 111111,W air Film- lions Srhin.1W -00 got 200 GOO coo Of 0 .3 roe 00- Oft a coo coo ago I Noto 9 r ties ILL, sITALLURGICAL LITIO&TURE CLASUPICA110411 old", its to, 2.6flovo a Oka des Sasaki(W 11414,111h) U T . - ; AT 00 7 o r ' i;t '. k; A. . . to V ka q as L 1 0. 0We 00000 00 00 0 00 0 0 000 so 0 00 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 06 0 0 0 00 0 : 1 s o0oO0O L 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 00 0, 4p 0 a OOOO.OOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 0 0 @ 1 9 to It L: 11 u Is U III TV a 0 "@ a 31 a a 70 A it a a is a M So a X 0 V Zf a I K t 1. .4-1111-F 9 2 1-1. A T Z M A A 0 The rate of buyllium oxide In "do Aux treatmont of 00 b4imititse. A, Rainwalter. Pub. Dept. Atiouixg Met. .00 Vair re(A Eton. Si I .00 So" 6. M W1104101s ucw@qt 06 llunsolian 14111%ite lar% 41.1 [let), 'rho usual otw1a dion treatment its stutlysmit lush ones was coorried out with weighed suits. at JkFo. T be sq. votit of 00 j the Aux woo filtered end the miducisailed. 11recticully 0 till the BrQ was oblained, 3%6 BeO wus then tfeated with cumil. NsOll. then dad. &ixeim and filtered. @ tru, r, are 0 rr%idue then contained the ro-Ad &mt. Id 144`0- Thit, 00 ill expl. ptuved thst practicjsHy all abe be content of beu%itrx I =00 i 00 a I ftmains in the red slag of the "is flu% land the filleted l 'Co 0 t . S. de Finfi v *4n. of slummotri is frer M Be. 8 00 @ 00 0 00 Z 're z coo 1 1 Sze a A I A I L A 14TALLUROkAt L11961TURt CLASSIFICATION ==Z too., S Sit. '14., #j.IMl woo s.on.j W, all S.-.0 I&LIt Too tit $111410N.1 - 0 - a it It a tc n n IS m IT w u a on mw IS I ji-i 3 1 v e : 0 : o e * cla 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 : : : * 0 0 0 o 0 00 0 0 We 0 40 0 : : : 0 10 a 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0,94 10 a * * o 0 006 see 0 so 0 0 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - As a a a a a a m a a a a a a a 9 a 9 9 V 9 V v V - Is 91* je* t"C9,11 " it 10 9 9 0 9 * 0 0 W @ f 1) 14 it 14 U 11 it A 11 :1 it is A_j %wi r.'k J"11 0 if c A ConWwadon of Ow Winninc of Imn in Rawaft am LA - IMO IF,," I' I I ! in do Somn (Odoubww) DiArict. A It ater.: I'M .400 (Pu I plivitt i.1110 %if ths, lk-lutrtitiont it( Mining a,11.1 Nlelmr.'V'91111 On, I Iungarian PalatintOoswpli Unitri-Fily of Ti-chnival 111111 3 Fee F4.411)(111litt 8cleurt's, '19:18, vol. 10, Part L. ' lilt. 17 3 - 1 *4 1). The age author traves the history of fron-making fit tho thlenburg and 0 I Ilia at t)llllt Wing Burgenland (lintricti; of flungan- in Roman tinit's -t lin,"I Imirtly on the ilimm@-er@ of Flag it 1-14) 1`9 is IT Ing the =Go roo irtmint I lon ;if runt ninn ill 011@ If&%' AN A I lilt o?".1"itiptri'min. tho, that tho coat of pnitlucing. iron Wits Olen 1111til tittles aria 0 00 at lie prepient ligure. see 1:111114111 -v@L -'r-T I wIs A] 3 1 T :4 0 U., kv 093 W K a R K it :01 '1 is zv I, v sc a It a ww 4 1 0 4 0 'o 0 o 0 0 o : : 0 *' 0 0 0 00,00 TO 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 to 0 0 0 4111 00 000 0of q 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 * @ ivur a C 0 fp 6 if A UL L a N a P4 0 0 410 161 A .t. M Mile #.ft 'or -1 , 4 l . . , O.C. I elf I1.,Ais -0,911 4 4. - l m 0 0 0;; o 0 : o i * z00 @JLUX, REDUCUUM VIC- 59M, J., and RMW&IW -iiiVW NAvxrms. Roy. Hung. PKXIXHNTS WrTil 4RIt' 00 06= k Dept-Himixg Palati-joseph Vvit-. rth. Er".Sti.. Pa, 1 i i h i 1 l 0 0:1 an 14UX tc% art! Very r c -111 (IM).-I tt"MLr Mrs- 7, 42 in Ite and contain appreciable amounts of Si and TI; it is 0 0 0 00= -sses, as th"eft ee difficult to separate Fe by magnetic proct -;C, 00 Fe a ud Al are present in colloidal dist6bUt ion' Itsee'"S' 0 qp!& 110%ever. economically possible to apply a reduction with %"IA and carbon as ironsponge, and AIM can be produced e il b hi h F i f 00 00 e mor eas ront w c e can in twit heating operat on. y 'bed. _11, ted Experiments are (lescrt pirl! 00 0.1 0 00 i 00-1 r 00 W. %ITA&JJJ*4 0- SISS)WA, 00 00 ---- aiii@i z A r 0 a"R P 17 it or of of it V( %I K r of K a a U It It u It n A 0000000000 0000 AWW 000000060.969060 0 0 9 0 - - , : , 00 0 0 0 0 00 & 0 0.0 0 0 AMAIAX-O 009009* 09 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 so gal I 1 0 1 to 'W' 'A 11 -I W P a f F I Tag, .0 11.0 IF a a #I a Aj of JI I 01 ffL r IL! M , Is 0, 0 it - If @ A I A - I P ' f . fi 0 0 t 1 - . A.P i -. - - - O F Oj v The role of suffur III the "dtm at wilmom .p." go I ri A. ILgitwaltrf., Ray, Yang, crat xx 00 . ,; l l 1 t "rrr nct' wFate 1 it's III e to fi uAllic I Tkitt's s of ctil'11441 kirmi-Ijinfir. '111.1 4 I:Y till. of $ flingriv. .1 purl ' IitA44 flr-t VIA" IMMI) I"I "Irf. *rnrf%,e ts! Itit-W ript, ' - t l i b I 1 I I h to 40 air I tl t@. em ti .6114 le trin ll Lk llew " t ' I Out If's is evolved duting the cmLins littxvii [limit conilmis. as the S unites with intcrmt%IL&tc non,@141. hyttro. carlminstind alk l rAilk-414HIK-FAttil-1111111 th t th .00 0 1 ecuumo e 9 y emcking, The docrritw its the ridd of IIS if the crAcking 600 *0 Is RVVVIVMtC11 is CXPIAIIIMI AS IWUHJ titleIthe F.Set that A I 00 I VIAIN M&C111119 CAUIC-6 A 91P.41" 11*111, iol Of 1" 1.1 . j scitift-like. which rutiltilliv Willi tile frrr 8 In tntar st.iblr'@ * f i h l i i l I A d coo : rtmilm c iterature s nc mv cw o t e ip r O 00-4 I @ Al o Ile* wee AN: Asa I A @@TALLUI!GMC.t LITIRATUNI! CLASSIFICAT041 ----- ------ IS lie. - (lo 3to go i a.. *It U X AV 00 IS IV IS It v K a It9KU a It 14 An L I a pw a a 0 1 At At At a 11, 1 n AM 00 00 0 so 0.0 00 0 0 Go go* 0 0 0 0 1 go 010 0 0 a a 0 Z #L, jV v go A (14,040f 00 00 00 *00 go '00 00 S 4737. RFMVAL OF ASK 0ONSTrTu&M rx oDAL By mum OF cHEmAL wnom' 00 Ronwaltler,'A. (BoWassatt Rahassati Lapok (Budapest), 1949, vol. 00 4, (1); abstr. in Gluckauf, 10 Sept. 1949, vol. 85, 692). 00 oo Ghealcal extraction of ash from two Hungarian "a of coal is discussed. The ash content of Evaigarlan brown md mineral coals could be reduced to under 1% by this method. , 00 '041 fee t LUkUK At I tC L MIf IC A t Igh V;T It W T U S% AV .0 it 110 1 0 0 Is 0 goo 0 0 0 0 ;o a 0 a 0 0 0 go 0 9 Is, a 0 00 a 00 0 Is 0 0 0 0-0 9-0 -90.00 0 O..q 0 0 so 0 0 * 0 0 00 g 01 oo, gall I__L4 I &.Y I loilli 'A I L A litillisty M P 4 A 1 0 all W a Ill a X V X 10 a it a a Vj 0 @ . _ _ - - - ir) - a-- -R-AL-11-11- -, I 1 PIOCIIIIII 400 04CF11,1111 topill 0 J. 0 A contribution to the geochefulatr stitto -_1 A. I' W A 1 -00 . d"M d RM111AUIM ROY- 11lott, .0-10M).- 13 Atimutif Met Dept 0 0 06 . . . ithm a(differrut living 0 con-tun th I -00 00 e It, jj, rr I., coullmuc l jx-r fir in nuo vr@ m4l fit re or cu x t l th 0 i V; , . . . . va w e .. e sig., i .0 00 be 11 fullfril1 clition to the wt. (if water-free protein. nusy , icetwimij, In, wsohutes qutiticut. Nenost-d I r Q. Thr. -00 00 a vilur 4 0 fix a man writhing 70kit. 1% 1-111 while the value -00 hIr sinall lAids may be alitwe Mll. The prolitilile sucan Villur 1,.r Oil living befit 1. 2, 5. and 10 the ratios I)( the rn"w% of living beinp t:: nsee 00 o,ulninx 0 to the nmws of living nustefiaN lifit,r2ling U , S; %VjtrtI s V) I I I i M =00 . 'It r 2 ' , ant , , , ego See 'A =g, 0 allp, 0 !jog Ala. I I 9 _CLASSIFICATION -Jam stl.tft. , 1. 4.1 .111310.1 I is F 3 still! Ci. @0-111 - 00 U im ii, No is It 0 61 V 1, a a Is a R a it Ita It oft- 5 Ir go 2 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 goo 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 - - - SO 0 0 so 0 f 0 0 L 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 A 14 it of I W 1# -if U N ft IF A " a 41 41 41 a 00 k-A F. Coal#& POOCCINS A-4) FOOPINT.1 r e l s @ 00 ir t 2338* ROLE OF SULPHUR IN NWUCTION OF ORGANIC COMPOMS IN CRACKING .00 es .90 i PROCESS. Rowalter, Ao So (Roy. Hung. Palatine-Joseph Uhir. - *00 a ll' Tech.. Don. do-r. P S_x_.Upte Min. Met., 1942, 14, 40-711 Chem. 'Abstr., 1947,41, 1714). quant. expts were maTs' to liberate O ` or&.-bouDd H.ae H.3 using 6 parts by wt of 8 flowers, 3 parts 's, #- ; of crushed kioselluhr. and 4 parts of first-class soap powder. 2 a; I , - I : ..Twelve of these expts are deworib@@d and the results tabulated. These indicated that B28 is evolved duringthe cracking process, from 8 compds as the 8 unit*& with intermediate nonsatd hydrocarbons CID 0 V and alkyl radicals liberated during the course of the cracking. so ;I The decrease in the yield of H2S if the cracking is accelerated is explained as being due to the fact Uat accelerated cracking ago causes a greater formation of tar wW somicoks, which combine with tht from 8 in more stable compda. A review of the lee literature is inoluded. C.A. lee '0 jt :1; lee ss" 0 &I. I L A jTALLVR(;KAL L1It4ATtAVCkA%$1F1CAT1QX lee j 10 so It / sold" "it c4v 04C V11131 am 0" 111 U AV 00 ltj,', or 4, U It no V, I " An I I W (W a 01 2 1 ff@w 5 I I - "I a 0 9"s 0 So 0 0 se 0 0 0 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 000 0.0 0 ev 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 V: 0 0 0 0 04 0 0 0 e 0 0 0 IN 'S' '0 I Is r 0 ff 0 r, 0 1 is 11 1113MIS14, IIIII "Jell, a a 3. b Is Isa A) 11 Is U M a 41 43 40 a L T L-M-1011 ImU Oct $%1 t..C) ... If.11ti Of C"I proces sing In llang*7, 'I.Aulit" eth F-en op@.,ft llatatin n Joseph Univ /l of - . . u g. Pub. Vem. Atiminf Met. 10, 11t. :1. 382-92;wxi@j 6's c.-,-' a rite tin*-edure, now uwa iiwisstriaiiy its itutt4g-try b All Ate lit-at-irvittlIctti, jaiificg1jitill atul flytIn%etkatitus. Thr tithilbratuch Uf the coal iw bimmi"I tattil trehu" data 1 du%try Ate stiven. NuAly 00 AT to is it go us, I I a Od a I w ft q Ai a 3 Is J 0 0* a 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 1 0" 0 : : : 0 0 0 0 0 0 V: 0 4.0 0 0 0 :,: : a @a -00 CA 0 0 TO- a 0 0 0 I I a I; It It If Vs is 1. it is a I a ,I I I Is IN if Is It 14 IS 1. It a 1. 6 of it 0 j:S A a _Y V__@L_j__Z_AA 14 CC LV tj 0 d I Flux and reduction experiments with [too -rich bauxites 09 f J. 'kkki and 4, Routwelter. Roy. /lung. Palahn-Jo pk -00 I'mic. TWA. Pub. Dept, Aiming Met. 7, 42 Fxplx. were trinsfir wills a h6mossriin-tis coilloldal. dcril rest I lutiltariatil orr mill coulss. SRI, OAP. 00 -not 1.8. Frous 24.3 (- lo.99% Fe) and Alml.), 47.75%.; Amsou Iffohion was 25.38%. Ale .41144ts of this c4c was l1nolki-e-hil, The tnltwt6.ll -*9 00 r@ I'I'Mdowt Plublibly "into Ined bul h 1118glirl 4, 41141 A [It S 1116 0 41 within less n4kablael Patfis-Irs, Fgwa-miival w,,Aiotx sit, i-f 0 0 ::14-11 Inca PMIN INMAil. Ir by turailb of a ol,tvidl inhirlos On flux by whivh both Alj(h aud sL jl%jnSy mccalhe bion 0 00 Cult) be P"41tic."l, 0 (le M11MY 0 0 00 Z60 0 a Z41 0 00 70 to 10-01 1 Alo,%t A sIlALtLj*GKAL 1.1116416119 CLAISIPICAMb 0 LOS "4' 'jj e* vt IV U 14 Of it 14 a rat 0 It 1 10 11 4 0 0 0 0 A IF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A Is a 0 0 0 0 90,411 0 a 0 0 0 0 T@O 0 0 146 0 a a IF 41. 0 0 0 0.0 0000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11, eip Fs A 4 xit U It uIt 14 It 111 if JV It V M L -t f--L-A - r. V@ 4 cc. VD U-4A JL-1 00 1.. OD-k a% RelAtion"s; In the development of the atmosphere and We. A. Runswulirr (Roy. Itunic. llal;ltiite-jt@ph Uiiv.). 410 ROY'.' Ilia Wi7l"4141iiii-Asseph Ussm. reek. &-on. ]'"be. go -00 C.A., AW. 12, 33 i 30, W11471I.-A getichous. atutly tit lite C1111%.n. tit 0 its lite tl@! gitut. R. gives at paph allowing thocutwit. %ifOliti lite Air 114 3 littictin't eJ strol. t1me, This showi atuut 1, i,q 1 Vill. 14 () its thr Oir At the I)CSinnillit tif the LhiloVIV1.111 Iteri4xi, alit"It tile twKilkslillic tif tile, . Mllfialf) 111ili lit Ilw britilluinst (if Ole li'voili.in, 411.1 1 'A"', ishirr tile N-11111011., 14, V4111.1,41, Ill., 1,41. .1 CO, aild 1), Ill lite lite 1.1 site INI'MI'llpir And 111j. ItI.Iti.mi .4 I he'r gwt% to I lie A.-ittittkilAt it Its And lit tile ev'.1116,1114 tt. r. i-'A,j,t Ag 0 vie A 0 ,die,I 40 tie to 0 WERiTURI; c t, A 11 F IC A T 10 IL t Tik'L%J.GK OIL '7. 20 '777-7-777 --# I @- - -71-it r I, V-1 ;, 11 @i 1 0 0 1 If A)4 01 It It 11 10 It .1.1 01 uVI A F" 0 0 1 00 0 0 0 .00 00a0 0 O's0 0 : : :0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 a 0 0 0,0 to 0 a 0 0

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