Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 16
pro vyhledávání: '"V. A. DeCarlo"'
Publikováno v:
Environmental Health Perspectives
During their peak use period, PBBs represented under 1% of the total sales of fire retardant chemicals, and very probably would have escaped intensive study if they had not been mixed accidentally with animal feed preparations. Instead, international
Autor:
V. A. DeCarlo, T. H. Handley
Publikováno v:
Journal of Radioanalytical Chemistry. 11:265-271
An evaluation of the sensitivity of mercury and cadmium determinations in large volumes of water is presented. A 10-μg252Cf source immersed in the water sample served as a neutron source. The (n, γ) reaction on hydrogen and the inelastic scattering
Autor:
V. J. DeCarlo, L. J. Stief
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 49:100-105
The relative contributions of direct molecular elimination and radical disproportionation reactions to the formation of nonrandomized nitrogen in the photolysis of hydrazine and hydrazine–15N have been determined by examining the production of 30N2
Autor:
V. J. DeCarlo, L. J. Stief
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 50:1234-1240
Primary processes leading to atomic and molecular hydrogen formation in hydrogen peroxide photolysis at 1236 A, noting OH formation
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 43:2490-2496
Gas-phase photolysis of methane and water mixtures at 1450-1850 angstroms and at 1470-1236 angstroms
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 46:592-598
The photolysis of hydrazine vapor has been investigated at 1236 and 1470 A. At 1236 A, fluorescence is observed at 3360 A and is attributed to the NH(A3π→X3Σ−) transition. The emission has been studied as a function of pressure and photolysis t
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 42:3113-3121
Vacuum-UV photolysis of acetylene at krypton and xenon resonance lines for possible production of excited molecular carbon
Autor:
Paul G. Glugla, V. J. DeCarlo
Publikováno v:
Journal of The Electrochemical Society. 129:1745-1747
The electrolyte layer, usually referred to as the tile, consists of a non-conducting porous lithium aluminate matrix with a conducting lithium/potassium carbonate eutectic enclosed in its pores. Two well-characterized samples of tile were chosen for