SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT IVANOV, K.I. - IVANOV, K.I.

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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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7;7 1VIU10Y.-Krasam Ivanovich; KRYUCHKOV, Vladimir Aleksandrovich; POGODIN., L.Ye., red. (Reelized dreams; on the 20th anniversary of the libera- tion of Hungary] Voploshchenrore mechty; k 20-letiiu osvo- bozhdeniia Vengrii. Moskva, Znanie, 1965. 38 P. "Novoe v zhizni, nauke, tekhnike. VII Seriia: Mezhdunarodnaia, no.6) (MIRA 18:4) ITAROT, K.I..inzh.; jLMOSHIN, R.A.,insh.; SHIFRIN, D.Ta., luzh. Passenger ship for the Caspian Sea. Sudostroenle 26 no.9:1-5 S160. (MMA 13:10) (Inland water transportation--Passenger traffic) (Caspian Aa--Shlps) IVANOT, K.I.; KCRKULOV, N.Ta.; SOSNOV, V.D., redaktor; ABRAKOV, V.I., rMktor; ILIIKSrATA, G.K., takhaicheskiy redaktor. [Work practice in operating UKT-1 cutter-loaders In mines of the Voroshilovgradcoal Combine] Opyt ekspluatatsii koiabainov UKT-1 na sbakhtakh kombinata, Yoroshilovgradagoll. Moskva, Ugletekbisdat, 1954. 75 P. (MLEWL 8:1 ) (Coal-mining machinery) MIMKULOV, II.Ya.; ITANOV I.I.- FATOVSKIT, P.A., nauchnyy redaktor; KONTSIVAYA, IRTROCHKINA, N.V., takhnichaskly re- daktor. [use of machinwry in mining) MakWwwrovannala prokhodlm gurzykh vyrabotok. Hooky&, Vass. uchabno-pedagog. izd-vo Trudrewervladat, 1954. 86 p. (MLRA 7:9) . (Mining engineering) (Mining machinery) WANOV, K. I.. I--- Maintaining normal steam characteristics In a once-through boiler. Energatik 2 no.1:14-15 Ja 154. (MIRA 7:1) 1. Machallnik smany kotallnogo teekha. (Steam boilers) ~[ A, GRIGORITAN, Kh., inzhener; IVANOV, K., inzhener; SHPILIBARG, I., inzhener. Metallic supports with hinged tops. Kast.ugl.D no.10:21-23 0 154. (MLRA 7:12) (Mine timbering) I :,I . --7 11 IF I t j 1 1~ I . I ; i IVAMV, K.I.: hOUMLOV, N.Ta., inzhener; MASALISKIT, V.A., inzhener. The MOK-1 mechanized screw-Jack steel prop. Kekh.trud.rab. 9 no.2: 28-32 F '55- (MLRA 8: 4) (Coal mining machinery) (Mine timbering) IVAXOTI- lonstantin Ivanovich; KIMS3RDIN, Mikhail Hikhaylovich. SHPIL83M, - - ~-111,:`; ii ui ; ASTAKHOV, A.Y., redaktor; FROZORDVSSrAU, V.L., sichookiy rodaktor. t:k [The M-32 mechaaised screw-Jack mine prop for medium thick coal seameJ KekhAnisirovannais. ponadochnal& krept K-32 dlis, Pl"toy arednei moshchnesti. Mookva, Ugletakhizdat, 1956. 16 p. (MOA 9-.6) (Mine timbering) -ffAxO"o*&" at i4jva,#_OTs -t or; _%a4kjFA7BISOVIGRq I.L., otvetst'rennj7 redaL DIYAKOTA, G.B., redaktor Isdatel'stva; IFAIRZYBUTA, A.A., tskWebe- skiy redaktor CKPK machanize(I movable mine supports] Hekbanistrovannaia peradyishnals krept KPK. Moskva,, Ugletakhtsdat, 1956. 42 p. (MIRA 10-1.) (Kins timbering) DCROKHOV, Xikhail Illich; JUj0,*,XQ Xygaort 4; SOSNOV, T.D., otvetstvewW redaktor; . ., redaktor izdatelletva; ALADOVA, Ye.l., tekbnIcheskly redaktor [Mechanization and organization of drifting in coal mtneej Mekhanizateiia. i organizatetta provedenita podgatovitellnvkh v.vrabotoke Moskva, Ugletekhizdat, 1956. 215 p. (HIM 9:9) (Goal mining machinery) IVANOV, K., inzhener; PARAHDNOV, V., inzhener; SHILIBM, I., inzhener. Metal props for thin seaus. Mast-ugl- 5 no.7:23-24 Jl '56. (Mine timbering) (HMA 9:9) VASILIVE7, A.P., dotsi%nt, kandidat tekbnicheakikh nauki ~VAMV, K.L. ",- il kandidat tekhnicheakikh nauk-, LTGALOV, V.V.. lnzhen'e`r';""" `-" FMSOV, A.A., inzhener. Study of thermal piercing In mines. Gor. zhur. no-7:52-56 ii 156. (MLRA 9:9) (Boring) J74aiQV.. .4onstantin. Iv,anovich; SHPILBM, Ioeif Leybovich; ASTWOV, I.Y., otvetsivennyy r,e~iit:-orl; NADBINSKAYA-, A.A., tekhniciloskly redakior [Metal, hinged, cap set mine supports] Netalliche'ikle aharnirrWe verkhniaki zaboinoi krepi. Moskva. UgletekhIsdat, 1957. 60 p. OfIBA 10: 5) (Mine timbering) IGIIATIYEV. Aleksandr Dmitriyevich, kand.tekhn.nauk; Ivanovich, inzh.; PANOV. A.D., kand.tokha.nauk, red.; NIXONOV, G.P., 6t"ftU~irinyy red.; OKHRTJIE]fKO. V.A., red.izd-va; KOROVENKOVA, Z..'A.. tekha.red. [Hydraulic mining of thin and medium thick coal beds) Podzemnaia dobychs uglia gidravlioheakim sposobom na plastakh tonkikh i arednei moshchnosti. Pod obahchei red. A.D.Panovs. Moskva. Ugletekhizdat, 1957, 324 p. (MIRA 11:3) (I~ydrnulic mining) (ConI minon and mining) IVAN inzhener; KRASNIKOT, Yu.D.. inzhener; TISHCHEIKO, F.A,,inzhener. Invent new methods for mechanized coal mining. Mekh.trud.rab. 11 no-5:31-32 My 157. (MIRA 10:7) (Coal mining machinery) N994N.&I.. gornyy inzhener. Roof control in hydraulic mining of thin flAt Beama. Ugol' 32 no,-7:29-32 JI '57. I(MMA 10: 7) 1. Veesoyuznyy Ugollnvy institut. (Hydraulic mining) IV IVANOV, K. I., Cand Tech Sci (diss) "Stiidy of 49b methods of han" -Po4f-IM- without strengthening the stope space An thin flat seams of Aponbass." Mos, 1958. IL pp (Main Adminis- ulv_ AL "_ tration of Sci Res and _~ro-jeak Organizations idr-Gosplan USSR, All-Union Sci Res Coal Inst VUGI), 150 Copies (IM, 35-58, 1.08) -36- i- 7 AUTHOR: Ivanov; Engineer SOV/118-58-1-5/16 TITLE. On Coal Minin- in Stopes Without Supports (0 vyy6mke uglya 0 bez krepleniya ochistnogo zaboya) PERIODICAL.-, Mekhanizatsiya trudoydmkikh i tyazlittlykh rabot, 1958, Nr 1, pp 18-23 (USSR) ABSTRACT: Referring to coal mining practice in the USA, Great Britain, Poland and Western Germany, the author recommends the method of mining stopes, without using supports. In the USSR, coal mining of stopes without supports has been applied since 1938 at the first hydraulic mine at the Donbass, in the mines of the NJ kopol - -Margarv--s Trust, and in the Y-azbass mines of "Tyrganskiye uklony" and "Polysayovskaya-Severnflyall~ In most cases this led to big losses of coal in the depths of -the earth, due to the bad consistance of the roofing, and therefore the possibill'Zy of support-less mining depends mainly on the properties of the roofing. The Vsei3oyuzriyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy ugol'nyy Institut (All-Union Scien- tific Research Institute of Coal Mining) has analyzed the caving properties of various mine roofings to determine the best roofing conditions. One may draw the conclusion that Card 1/2 the application off such mining can be realized as well in -.i. -17, ~1[`-jjj`~71F j: '17. 1111-11f lip ~j q p 11 1 111 On Coal Mining in Stopes Without Supporte SOV/118-cia-1-5/101 hydraulic mines as in mines not equipped with hydraulic mechanization means and urder the most different geological conditions. The basic supposition of applying efficien"t-ly tile ,qrious riethods of coal mining of stopes without sup- ports, is a correct control of the roofing. There are 4 diagrams, 1 table, and 1 photograph. 1. Mining engineering 2. Underground structures Card 2/2 127-56-6-12/25 AUTHORS: Ivanov, K.I., Candidate of Technical Sciences and Mall- cff'onok, V.O., Engineer TITLE: A Calculation of the Acceleration of a Percussion Drill in Cable Tool Drilling _ (Opredeleniye uskoreniya burovogo snar,yada pri udarno-kanatnom burenii) PERIODICAL: Gornyy Zhurnal, 1958g Nr 6, pp 44-48 (USSR) ABSTRACT: The authors analyze various formulas devised for the cal- culatina the acceleration of a percussion drill in cable tool drilling f-Ref. 1, 29 32 and present their own formulas, devi6eu by analytic and graphic calculation. There are 3 graphs, and 3 Soviet references. AVAILABLE: Library of Congress Card 1/1 1. Drills-Perforymnee 2. Mathematical analysis PHASE I BOOK EXPLOITATION 845 Yakhontov, Aleksey Dmitriyevich, Ivanov, Konstantin Ivanovich, Zinyuk, Yuriy Nikolayevich, Oksilikvity, ikh proizvodstvo i primeneniye (Liquid Ox:Tgen Exlpo- sives, Their Manufacture and Use) Moscow, Metallurgizdat, 1958. 230 p. 2,200 copies printed. Ed.: Garkalenko, K.I.; Ed. of Publishing House: Partsevskiy, V.N.; Tech. Ed.: Islentlyeva, P.G. PURPOSE: This book is for engineers and technicians working in mining industry and planning organizations. It can be used as a practical handbook in the organization and performance of mining blasting op- erations. COVERAGE: This book covers the general topic of liquid oxygen explo- sives, also called oxyliquits, used in the USSR and abroad. The Card 1/5 Liquid Oxygen Explosives (Cont.) 845 physicochemical properties of oxyliquits are described, as well as the manufacture of cartridges with the use of various absorbents. Blasting operations, safety procedures, and liquid oxygen tech- niques are also included. Much attention is given to the oxy- "Liquits with peat as the absorbent which were used in the Norillsk open-pit operations from 1942 - 1956, where the authors were employed at that time. The authors participated in the study of new explosives and of their industrial application. The tech- nique of blasting with oxyliquits Is described in detail for the case of percussion-cable drilling. A comparative evaluation of oxyliquits as explosives for m 'ning operations is also included. There are 89 tables, 91 figures, and 56 references, 40 of which are Soviet, 14 English, and 2 French. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Ch. 1. General Information On Oxyliquits Introduction 5 Use of oxyliquits in the USSR and abroad 6 Card 2/ 5 Liquid Oxygen Explosives (Cont.) 845 Use of oxyliquits in the Soviet Union 6 Use of oxyliquits abroad 17 Ch. 2. Physicochemical and Explosive Properties of Oxirliquits .Oxyliquits as an explosive system 29 Reaction of explosion of oxyliquits 32 Structure of LOX explosives 33 Life of LOX explosives 36 Cubic density of LOX explosives 59 Detonation velocity 61 Briaance 65 Efficiency 72 Heat of detonation and the power of LOX explosives 73 Sensitivity of LOX explosives 76 Ch- 3. Absorbents for Liquid Oxygen Explosives, their Prep- arationY and Manufacture of Cartridges Specifications for absorbents 99 Card 3/5 Liquid Oxygen Explosives (Cont.) 845 carbonaceous absorbents 101 Cellulose absorbents 106 Mixed absorbents 117 Technology of powder and mixed absorbents 121 Technology of briquetted peat absorbents 123 Control of the production of peat absorbent cartridges 131 Ch. 4. Manufacture, Storage, and Transportation of Liquid oxygen Liquid oxygen and its properties 133 Preparation of liquid oxygen 135 Storage and transportation of liquid oxygen 148 Ch. 5. Blasting Procedure With the Use of Oxyliquits Blasting oxyliquits in bore holes 1611 Selection of the diameter of oxyliquit cartridges and the compression diameter 165 Calculation of the size of the charge and calculation of operations of loading the drill holes with oxyliquits 166 Method of chamber-charge blasting of oxyliquits at the "Norillskiy Kombinat" mines 199 Fragmentation of boulders with surface oxyliquit charges 2025 Card 4/5 FTP Liquid Oxygen Explosives (cont.) 845 Blasting boreholes with oxyliquits 203 Ch. 6. Economic Efficiency of Oxyliquit Application 209 Temporary Instructions for the Manufacture and Use of LOX Explosives for Industrial Applications 217 Bibliography AVAILABLE: Library of Congress Card 5/5 GO/nah 12-9-58 226 IVRNOV, r\-1- 14(5) PHASE I BOOK EXPLOITATION sov/2769 Baranov, Yevgeniy Gerasimovicb, Pavel Stepanovich Danchev, Konstantin Ivenovich Ivanov Vladimir Olimpiyevich Mallchonok, Aleksey Dmitriyevich Paj3hkov, and iiei~;ndr Nis-anovich Khanukayev Issledovaniye protsessov bureniya i vzryvaaiyEL s primeneriiyem kinos yemki (Photographic Study of Drilling and Blasting processes) bloscmr, Ugletekhizdat, 1959- 186 p.:2,000 copies printed. Ed.: K.V. Pavlov; Ed. of Pablishing House: T.I. Koroleva; Tech. Ed.: A. Sabitoi?, PURPOSE: The book is intended for scientists and engineers in the mining industry. It may also be uzed as a textbook in institutes of higher technical training. COVERAGE: The book contains the results of a photographic study of drilling and blasting processes. Analysis of the operation of perforators and percussive drilling rigs, and the study of explosion phenomena by filming helped to reveal Card'1/5 Photographic Study of Drilling (Cont.) sav/2769. the physical nature and tlxe regularities of high-speed processes and to indicate ways and means of increasing the efficiency of drilling and blasting work. Photographic work was done at the Central Film Laboratory of the MVO by B-V- Frantsisson and, B.G. Sukhov. The author thanks M.M. Dok-achayev. There are 56 references: 48 Soviet, 4 English, 3 German, and 1 French. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction Ch. I. Investigating the Operation of a Drilling Unit and the Ways 3 of Increasing Working Speed of Drilling 5 1. Wature and method'of investigating an operating outfit 5 2. Drilling regime in the study of perforator operatione a 3- Oscillatory motion of the perforator 10 4. Operation of the percussive mechanism 14 5- Operation of the rotato-iy mechanism 22 6. Transmission of m-e-chdal cW e'nerg3r to the crushing action 26 7- Weys of increasing the actmal drilling speed by meanq of piematic percussion. drills 37 8. Comparative evaluation of pneunatic drills of different design 44 Card 2/5 PAotographic Study:of Drilling (Cont.) SOV/2769 Ch. 11. Studying the Work Regime of a Drilling Column in a Boijehole During PercussioA Drillin 48 9. Metho6 ofstudying the drilling regime 49 10. YelocitjF resistancea of a colimm falling in a borehole 50 11. Velocity and acceleration of a bit falling in a borehole 60 12. The efficiency of percussion dri.,11ing 68 13. Maximal weight of a driUing column 70 14. Consunption of kinetic energy:by a drilling column in overcoming mud. resistance 75 Ch. III. Studying,the Physical-Nature of the Rock Yracturing by - Blasting' 78 15- Methods for dtudying the physical nature of the fracturing of'rocks by blasting 78. 16. Method `s'for studying parameters of an.elastic wave 80, 17. Certain data on wave propagation in a homogeneouselastic medium' 83: C ard 3/5 R "He I k tilt M1111MM"faul fail C Photographic Study of Drilling (Cont.) sovP769 18. the inves- Elastic co ustants and mechanical characteristics of : tigated rocks, and materials 84 19. qualitatiV6 charactepistics of the frakuring procelso in rocks by blasting 20. quMtitative regularities of the fracturing process in rocks 1 and materials of high acoustic r igiditY 110 21 ' The effect of phase shift of tvo vaves on the blasting efficiency 125 2-2. The effect of the shape of the charge, the properties of the explosive, the size of the chix9e; and the production methods on the mechanics Of fracturing tbe-~Igh acoustic rigidity rocks, and the ways of increasing the efficiency of the OlUtic VaVe energy. 129 23.. Suggestions for improving the quality of hard rock fracturing by blasting' 132 Ch. IT .. Studying the Process of Rock Fracturing in Instantaneous and Delayed-action Blasting 134 24. The scope and the methods of studying the,fracturing process ~ by blasting 134 25.. Conditions for carrying out the experimental work 138 Card 4/ 5 Photographic Study of Drilling (coat.) SOV/2769 26. AnalyiIng the results of the Investigated blasting processes 27. Classification of methods used in.rock blasting Ch. V. Study of Grquad Action in Surface Blasting 28. Methods for.carrying out experimental studies 29. Experimental study of ground motion during blastizg 30- The effect of the minimin resistance direction on the rate of ground uplifting 31-: Relation between ground uplift and the weight of the blasting charge and the efficiency index of the blast Supplement Bibliography kVAILABLE: Library of Congress Card 5/5 142 1% 160 161 163 ]:To 175 183 ,mm/gilp, 12-30-59 28(l) SOV/118-59-4-15/25 AUTHOR: Ivanov, X.I., Candidate of Teclmical Sciences TITLE: The Excavation of Coal Veins Without Using Face Supports PERIODICAL: Mekhanizatsiya i avtomatizats4-ya proizvodstva, 1959, Nr 4, pp 41-45 (USSR) I ABSTRACT: The author refers in detail to various methods and. machines used in the US, Great Britain, West Germany and France, for working coal faces without supports. Following a suggestion made by the Dnepropetrovskiy gornyy institut - DGI (Dnepropetrovsk Institute of Mining) and the Donetskiy nauchno.-issledovatellskiy ugollnyy institut - DonUGI (Donets Scientific Re- search Institute for Coal), successful tests have been carried out for the last few years with coal saws in steep-pitch coal working. The coal saw is a toothed cable, the reciprocating motion of which is accomplished by 2 winches, placed in the ventilating Card 1/2 entry. Despite lack of experience in using means of ~IUM ; 11 6OV/118-59-4-15/2.ql The Excavation of Coal Veins Without Using Face Supports excavation without face supports, the method has proved to be promising and economical, There are 3 photographs, 2 diagrams, and 1 sketch. Card 2/2 SIDOROV, I.P.;BABOKIN, I.A.;IVANOV. K.I.;K&LINIKOV, S.S.;POWNKTOV, Y.M. Results 01~ industrial tests of auger underground coal mining sYstem. Ugol' 34 n0-11:13-18 N 159 OURL 13:3) 1. Glavnyy inzhener shakhty 90.7 tresta Novovolyaokugoll (for Sidorov). 2. Institut gornogo dela AN SSSR (for all except Sidorov). Uvov-Volyn' %sin--Coal mines and mining) .(Boring-machinery--Testing) IVANOV, K.I., kand.tekbn.ns-ik ---------- Using UVK t7pe coal-sawing machines for thin stoopI7 pitching coal aeama. Ugoll 35 no.2.113-17 F 160. (MINs. 13:5) 1. IuBtitut gornogo, dela AN SSSR. (Coal mining macbinery) IVANOV, X.I., kand-tekha.nauk Creating the conditions needed for the efficient uae of narrow range coal mining machinery unite. Ugoll 35 no.7:59 Jl 16o. (KIn 13: (Coal mining machinery) H L? r M 4P, IVANOV. K.I.. kand. tekhn. nauk Mining steep coal seams with BGI-tMm rope save manufactured by the All-Union Scientific Research Institute of Mine SurveyinR. Nauch. soob. IM 11:56-65 161. (MIRA .16t4) (Coal mining machinery) ,11 :-, wl~ IMOV, K.I.; GOYEV, V.N.; USHKOV, N.N.; YARMAK, M.F. Study of rock breaking in percussion drilling, Vzryv,, de~o~no.46/3i 21-28 161. (MIRA 15:1) (Boring) VASILIYEV, A.P.; IVPIIOV, K.I.; DUSHUTIN, L.S.; NOVOSELISKIY, Yu.A. Study of rock breaking in thermal drilling. Vzryv. delo no.46/3: 79-97 '61. MILRA 15--1) (Boring) IVANOV, K.I.; MAVCHONOK, V~O- Effect of the height of the tool's fall and its weight on thp efficiency of cable drilling rigs. Vzryv. delo no.4613:98-10'- 161. (MIRA 15:1) (Boring machinery) BELOV, A.I.; IVANOV, K.I.; KLOC4XO, N.A., SIDOROV, S.F.; USHKOV, J~j4.; YARME-,-K-.F-. Ways of improving bits for BA-100 air percussion drillin Riga Vzryv. delo no.46/3:232-238 161. i5:1) (Boring macbinery) FU -jYa1QV,-jLJ,,-md.; LIPSHTEYN, R.A., red.; SIIAKHNOVICH, M.I., red.; 3,11NOVA, Ye.A.9 red,; LEVINA, Ye.S., ved. red.; YAKOVIE", M., tekhn. red. [Improving the quality of transfo=er oils]Uluchshenie ka- chestva transformatornykh masel; trudy nauchno-te',,d2nicheskogo soveshchaniia. Pod red. K.I.Ivanova, i dr. Moskva, Gostop- tekhizdat, 1962. 134 P. WRA 15-- 12) 1. Nauchno-tekhnicheskoye soveshchaniye po uluchsheniyu kache- stva transformatornykh masel iz vostochnykh sernistykh i dim- gikh neftei. 1961. (Petroleum--Refining) GLAZUNOV, V.N.; rIANOV,_ KJ . KLOCHKO, N.A.; KUDRYA, H.A.; USHKOV, N.N. -- ...I Foreign tools for drilling slim holes. Gor.zhur. no.~~-39-42 Ag 162. WERA 150) (Boring machinery) KMINP G. L.; BABENKOV, I. S.; IVANOVIK., . MEDVEDEV, 1. F. S, - , - ~ --- _ Ij Photoelastic method of modeling the stress state of a drill and a rock. Gor. zhur. no.10:30-35 0 162. (MIRA 15:10) (Boring machinery) (Rocks-Testing) (Photoelasticity) VASILIYEV, Petr Vasillyevich;,.IVANOVI Konstantin KARNYSHEV, Anatoliy-VmTrrryevigrl,---irgurm-muvr";- S.T., kand. tekhn. naux, retsenzent; KAZAKOV, B.Ye., inzh., otv. red.; OKHRIMENKO, V.A., red.izd-va; LOMILINA, L.N.~ tekhn. red. [ControLUng roofs in flat seams) Upravlenie krovlei na pOlOgikq plastakb. Moskva, Gosgortekbizdat, 1962. 249 p. (MIRA 16:8) 1. Vsesoyuznyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy marksheyderskiy institut (for Kuznetsov). (Mine timbering) (Coal mines and mining) SUDOPLATOV) Aleksey Favlovich; IVANOV. Konstantlu-IYAAQY1ch;- BABOIM41 I.A., otv. red-.-;W-HRLMMO, V.A.., red. izd-va; MITSKERJI L.I.t tekhn. red. (Now high-efficiency methods of coal mining] Novye vysoko- proizvoditellnye sposoby dobychi uglia. Moskvas Cv3s. nauchno-tekhn. izd-TO lit-ry PO gornomu delu 1962. 164 P. 4-Mu 15 -.2) (Coal mines and mining) LOKHANOV, B.N.; KOVALENKO, V.A.; EETANELI, K.P.; VESKOV, M.I.; DRANNIKOV, S.A.- IVANOV, K.I.; BEREZNYAK, M.N.; VASILIYEV, Ye.l.; TSETS Trial operation of cutter loaders in minl.ng with the room-and- pillar method. Ugol' 37 no.8s33-35 Ag 162. (MIRA 15:9) 1. Krasnogorskiy razrez (for Lokhanov, Kovalenko). 2. Institut gornogo dela im. A.A.Skochinskogo tfor Bitanali, Veskov, Drannikov, Ivanov). 3. Kemerovskiy gornyy institut (for Bereznyak, Vasillyev, TSetsullnikov). (Coal mining machinery-Testing) (Mining engineering) I ;IiiP viij r! IVANOV,_Konstanti -,v GLAZUNOV Voevolod Nikolqrevich; 5-- jp~ L =avAq4 I NOION, Mikhail Fedotovich (deceased]; BRONNIKOV., D#M,) doktor tekhn. nauk, retsenzent; VASILICHIKOV) N.V., kand. tekhn. nauk, otv. red.; KOSTONIYAN, A.Ya., red.izd-va; LOMILINA, L.N., tekhn. rod. [Modern methods of hard rock drilling] Sovremermye metody bureniia krepkikh porod. Moskva, Gosgortekhizdat) 1963. 191 P. (MIRA 16-12) (Rock drills) IVANOV, Konstantin Ivanov:Lnh! USHKOV, Nikolay Nikolayevich; YARMAK ff6 GOYEV, Vadim Nikitich; TARASOV, I L.Ya. otv. red.; PARTSEVSKIY, V.N., red.izd-va; SABITOV, A.,. tekhn. red. [Boring holes in underground mining of ores) Burenie shpurov i skvashin pri podzemnoi dobyche rud. Moskva, Gosgortekh- izdat, 1963. 130 P. (NIRA 16M (Boring) BEGAGOYEN, Izrall' Anatollyevich, kand. takhn.nauk; DYADYURA, Arini Grigorlye'vich; DOBROBORSKIY, S.I., kand. tekhn. nauk, retsenzent; IVANOV, K.I.,-kand. tekhn. nauk, otv. red.; FROIDVA, Ye.I., redJzd-va;-IL'INSKAYA, G.M., takhn.red. [Design and construction of modern rock drills and air ham- mers] Ustroisteo i raschet sovremennykh perforatorov i pnevmpudarrAkov. Moskva, Goagortekhizdat, 1963. 178 p. (Mift 16:8) (Boring machinery) IVANOV -1 K.I., Icand. tekhn. nauk; BETANELI, K.P., inzh. Using the seismic method under natural conditions to study the stress state of.coal pillars. Nauoh.' soob. IGD 20s29-43. 163. (KM& 16 t 10) (Coal-.Seismic properties) (strains ard stresses) IVAAIOV, K.I., kand.telchn.nauk; BETANIELI, K.F., inzh. Some results of full-scale testing of the bearing capacity and the stressed state of coal pillars. Ugoll 38 no-3:21-28 Mr 163- (MIRA 180) 1. Institut gornogo dela im. A.A.Skochinskogo. IVAI-TOV., K.I... kand. tekhn. nauk; BETMIELI, K.P., jnzh. Studying the deformationso bearing capacity, and stressed state of wide coal blocks. Ugol'39 no.6:20-25 16164 (FORk 17:7) 1. Institut gornogo dela imeni A.A. Skochinskogo. K.l. Sequence of autoxidative tranufonnations of riovpn2 ra:,!~,anes, Dokl . AN SSSR 160 no.1:115--118 Ja 165. (M-`Fil 18:2) 1. Toplotelchnichosk,.y Jnst!.tut In; . F.E. Dzerzhinskogo. Submitted July 3, 1964. ACC NR: AP7002570 (A, IV SOURCE"C'ODi. 1~ii*041*3/66/000/023/0062/0062 INVENTOR: Ivanov, K. I.; Zeger, K. Ye.; Chmovzh, V. Ye.; Polyakovalraya, V. I.; Kudryavova, M. ORG: none TITLE: Method of improving the antiwear and anticorrosion properties of heavy liquid fuels. Class 23, No. 189110 (announced by All-Union Heat Engineering Institute im. F. E. Dzerzhinskiy (Vsesoyuznyy teplotekhnicheskiy institut)) SOURCE: Izobreteniya, promyshlennyye obraztsy, toVarnyye znaki, no. 23, 1,966, 62 TOPIC TAGSz fuel additive, antivear additive, anticorrosion additive. ABSiRACT: An Author*Certificate has been issued for a method of improving the antiwear and anticorrosion properties of heavy liquid fuels [unspecified], involving the introduction of additives based on compounds, soluble in water or organic media, of the type VeX, + AlX2, where Me is Ca, -Mg, or Zn, and XX and X2 are an-lons- or functional groups, taken in qu:~ztities sucb- that.the XI/Me ratio he 0.05 to 0.95. SUB CODE: ll/ SUBM DATE: O5Apr65/ ATD PRESS: 5112 '_Cacd 1/j..__ UDC: 54.6,27126 :6 0.1917. - ... . . , , 11h I 'A C,;Q (f 1. 1 0 L _L g p1 r g I f V I A I t4 C . OxMubW(y of atimarall ads. H. G. TtactimIN Ali K. Af/fIrOnsh' x4a)"Isho It. 070 U10M.- -Haku OrA oil lfralill will) lDn^ff1rvxr. 00 iadiled in 3 jxm,6ovm JoHowed by a washbig with tAls wAtcf, rail Im will' I i, so itinentimio at 15 atm. by heating at 150' for 3 hm to a latmin. no. of IM 3. while a ttro , 6% of alrutn (tii% utkkr icktitkal ccoditims ykids in oil d M -Almiti. titi, a(MO the six;vr midatitm test. An addril. tivalfromt cA the till ith.',o% sk- "An. and wi4,~ 0 mg with tali water inovams the oxidigability "imitivfably. if Or ttr6%(vd 41d %till a, '4.46failm %III-All djummitlem fit Isoplothenic vxkts it *h,,ul.t Im W"-JWd "ith MW* ale 111d i o,.. .;A" Walry, A tn~tvwnt with 2Wi, (J the suit, (hy wl,) W Mi. wid -alm " (I"m tilt qviljiv~* a "Imill, fit]. 0( lia'dult'r onkuti'm '111raddit -ilt- id K. Na. U, Fe vid %Ili tip an and treated oil inetritm-,, m im-limb-IIIi, 11" 0 Alxivr oxidalum inctisixt 6 on-d in doz. the stabiliti, 4 od, A~ A 11milm kN..bt 46 00 09 90 :o* 1 - . .00 00 j 7. 0 00 so :.19 0 -t IAL ' 0 0 v0 0 ' I v A W a q 4 I W 0 0 0 0 0 0 ; %0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 4 0 0 0 4L 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 111 0 16 0 0 alp r 6 0 0 0.0 -0 ~ A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 O 00 0 0 0 * 4 * 0 0 * 4 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 got MAMAMP 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 0 0 0 :11: . i i i a 4 6 4. 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 *! 0 M! I I 1 0 " 11 u It SO to 16 It it 4 J4 is Is a a to a At It u bf 0 4 It it 0 a 41 0 U V ato A A a L ~&~ m P 0 4 j 11 . V" 1. " - fJ-PA 14 M 0 U I i 1 4 k . s . *.. s, -s- j..- 4 1, , -D )-P P69121 Oddatim oi petrolem olls undor the actios of Catalysts wbkh caaW be detmit"i -60 bY a1W tkdl Mtth*ft X - I - ]lVA v, Apm K N I'mim, J. Gea. Chem. (ti. 8 S. R.) 1. No. 9.1 as wSll as oils refined with lijiim W. at low -00 temps. or fichtly, twated with 11,SO. art mucl more easily oddised to ac;ds by 0 I.e. '0 five they am wa%hrit with tap water than after. lAstil water is without rMect. Sym. 0 thetic tap water prvpd. frum 4istd. watcr 6 &6o hwffvctivv. Thii unknown tgent 00 Ar con tw removed from water by treating with HIM)# and then wiih C*(Off)t. Fspt.s 0 were confin"I to light distiltates from l"khanul and Gmshulcrude 00 z oils. 00 Ot goo Oe 21 ego '!;:so 06 400 AS. WETALLUPOCAL LITERATURC Ct.ASVIFKATM- ke 0 111., 0-1! Ism., .6, u Is A $0 is 1; ; t, nir 0, if via nn n Viet umman 0 0:9 0 0 0 0 if 9 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c 0 0 a 0 it 0 0 0 60,60 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * go fe 0 0 is 0 019 00 a it a a 14 is b 0 a It a 0 bi 30 10 v a 0 IS sob f pro"" la saft-W pohmmum OU116 IL 1. 04114 lk ftm (J. Got. chem"Naw; im- at smay, hw"SM4 show Wash. Aim! I* a OWN taust Coo -'too oov I too OPP*dk VSK* Bpi* I MW a"-10 have 84 "4mty oqtd to;*& I too ' too "A"a%v ~J~ IOU111644 ~o OM 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 it, 0 0 a 0 0 -flop 9~ _~w e * o 0 4 , - V1 06 611111000 a 040*001* o s 00000000 0 0*0040 " T gal I I t S 1 1 4 t .4 A S.-C T.- ; 112 is if Is 11 11 It It 29 f ;I a a J14 It A it I AD Jt S, 11 it is Ad v W 0 L-JIL-AL F- Q R 1, T 11- F.LE-A-1-k AA W.CC W, Fit...E . 1 1,-4- .1 .1. _k &1 41 4) 44 d 1?0 XXPGdMSUbd krimsoatioss, *4 kaidue &V= tbe rksasy Car hvm Run" Sub (at tke 6peow IV Ww"O.Y. 1k* WiWM h t a -00 & a wadi" 4 t, j 0 N r G 64 1 -00 . . . . es 4WA444a (14*Wmd) 1, 2iia.14 00 (1934)-Tbe addav, of the pirkaary uw had d. ImI4. ~00 Breaken fissith point ISO'. Jim Tiviroulty 6.5, pow oat + 18' Maus I n 18 tai d d h h 3 Al -00 a 0 o. con ne fto , , an . scido P 2.46, bassio, OM I aispbaltimito M10. Cub"es Uld cu. .00 0 It Wds 3.10, taller a oath reWaj 2M.M), vA ocatrol ftddut 11400 43JO%, Hydeogeottlost *as Midacted at NO-W1 for =00 so 4-4 hn. MW We obtained from the noulty#ragesuittf! crude-tar bottoms we chavied&W by a higiii op. jr, and a consilderabbe oddisiability. taming ppts. Through hydraccivitim the YM& al lubricating4l haoJocus am Mfwd by about 30%, op. tr. is lows and stability 0 !;I toward oxidsition U --va . Hydrogituatioss in the iii 00 Ni a" or Ma oxide catalysts yktded am oil Cleo C all talood consider" Jews redom subotances =00 than that Obtained ill the of catalysts. Mo oiddit wU Roace Active thfou. Ni oldide, Puticulsoly at higktr t-ps. Oils obtalued on hydrogenating bottom coutc . nwaous voliftances Phisl9ft acide and bom wen o ww , q find had a hlow yW thisis Man pund ,"-b !. Pins- UmiDW MU Th b t e M. es temp. was a bou 3W and th b as 0 i E e est 4 hm A. A. H. !:Go i age If L A J91ALLOGIC AL UTERA11,111 CLAISIFICATWO _ woo t 0 w ODSO J, I a W 0 W 0 1 W Of 9 a 0 WK Ice Itlit Ruts it ~,Lft, illif 2 0 v d" 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 a 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N 1 0 41 : a 000 10 0, We 0 00 0 a 0 0 0 0 0-411-111111, a 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 1111 0 0 0 0 0 0 * .00 0 a 4 a 0 a a 0 a 0 0 0 a 0 4 0 a a a 0 6 f 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 & ~". -~V- 06 a 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 a a a 0 a 0 0 a 'QF 0 ; tvi 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 & a 0 9 111 0 14 is 14 1? to " bitti? 014n silt a of 13 11 Un so* siv MOV41 Q630d4o ,A ~11"--2 L 1--rk I p Q 61 ..0 I-D COPENS 00 .4 qNs 06 A The role of comlimeaw 90 to orploalone In otUpe 1-00 columns. and A.A. Lutl~io- -00 kit. J. . R . tr4ok-0 1034. No. 12. M.N. - I I'll Untleir u4nial tirtwking cotidifloaq dic lubricalitill oil -00 U-cd in the compressor is not Wie", and hence cannot be the rause of explodons. Products which accumulate In tile heat-e3mhange &PP. am nitrates, nitrites and vartoo% e4ij. M-4vilids. Hitplesions are probably due. to iflito CO-oltNts. end Cliff. This fact Indicat" the nml fw owtv Ik nsirlill purificAlion of the aff whlell Is coulpivssell. hl 1,4-Iti X00 0 jl~ zoo 0 a -04 : 0 roe 00 9 e, a floe tso via-, %I- sit'. wo wilt J, 141910 kV ONE "1 411 9 1 9 AD 437 IF b U s A- -0 is ; ED It ;14 KIT few Mean 1101RWA 0 0 ;0*0.4 6 0 0 0 00000 0 0 0 10 0 0 * 000 0 0 9 0 9 0 0 0 0 o1z" 000*00 goo *of* 0 a 000000 0 0 a 0 a 0 0 066 00 0 i I I & 1 0 1 1 V Ic It u M t$ It it W SO A A 2 1 L L A 9 0 0 3, a It W If M 0 to It it W 41 M u a 4m$ PA U . W... _%_A_A_*' A NO ~..- The idw sfte at combastim ot tud hydrocarisons. I wW V. K. Savinova. J. Applid Clam. go .1 , ; &.-- s. 0"14. German the oxidation by air of PhUe (1). methylcyttobuane (U) &W 00 a heptace (UL) In a specially constructed lab. afp. (dc- .00 00 scribed &ad Wustrated). with variom concus. at hydro- -404 cubou and at vackus temps. in the vapor phase. a variety 09 of products. smb as hydrocarbou, acids, aldehydes, _4141 00 1 ketcoesatitl aks.t were obtained. The hilit t icid off 00 wMatim prodocis beloce ignitiort kkuast: I. L "U, I. 11,111. Over a considerable temp. t sage the temp. cucff. 00 01 oxidation Is I for Ill end even less for H. 14% was =00 00 fumed in the initial stage of oxidation of H stul 1U. Among the condensation, products from 11 and 1U were Substances of the tr of art. peroxides. The final prod- 0* dc The nets of the tbecuis dceompn. depend on the temp. influence of the above phenomena on the detonating pcop- goo crtics of the fuch b ausirsed. Thirty refeivitm. A. A. DoebtlinSk LOO 4 ZOO, 440 300 NOS, too it 01511.1LA NITALLURGKAL LITINATM CLAISIFKATION tg 0 7- 411113 out QHT I.T1 u is IV 00 LSI; a W 0 a 0 1 W if 9 a 4 3 to 0 M a a It 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 a a g 0 6 0 0 'a a 0 a & # 6 a 0 e C a 0 0 4 0 isito efe*0606 ##cisisit 04 0 mesaie* 41 0 41 0 00 4 0 9 * it 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 : 10 W-0- 0 0 4 ~ 0 0 ! 1'* 0 o- 0 4 & 9 0 0 a 0 0 4) 0 4) 04 03, 1 j1 4 1 a I a V v it q il 14 11 is 11 it is 111) timll 9"Jo 4 P) )d filfillIAM41V it &1 44 t; r* -A S..L.-S-A-L C. it P 4 1 1 1 Y V O-A 1, 1. AA K 4L W U A A I A I, * a A - I 00 0 F: i I A) . ..... *0 This f114"CU40'Of 1114414AMMMM cataqwtv for ths syn- thirtla of smedmaw. K, L ( Y. and V. 1. (lusty. 1. C2t&- Chem. f4d. (NIUKOW) 12. 17801 so trot of MznO.I.5CrA is &~t U"' it is 'mott efficient at /3710% hut as Its use is continued, the optimum temp. rlw~j 4owly to 4(1)*. Very high rates of passing the g&3 tiver it 00 favor MrON formation. while km rates of passing the go%. -0 it 00 At or teriiti,4. above 400' begin to favor C116 rotmatiort. see ass e& 2 ;q As I '70 j -400 400 -so f: :' - , I ~1 1 V a L A W&W.PrOCAL UltRATWIt CLAIlifKAMN 1UN, I-Ol $11,111Ct-4 ti AV 10 &1;; to IY110'" 0 lit "Sao 36 t Or 0 0 It at a a of U n a a It M KID a I it 0 0 0 0 0 0 lamull-31. Mm lit III. so 04 :000i 0 0 0 e 0 0 0 0 909,0009 0000110*00*000004:1" ea. 8 1 0 is I) is " Ili is 11 W lip is a a 0 VADII ROJOID at 11 011649 44)0d'eo 11 1-C-9 -&-a I A L S_ _X_ P_ 11- 11 ~ ' " f - 9 _11. I AA 10 CC 1101, IL4.J.. I,1 It .... 4.~J' #_I_4 0o 4 A asome Petetwe twmd to tkat km dqp d *A of cyidithicum. K. t. baimov. I. G". so A :1 Ckent, (11, S. 4. R.) 4. 47W7(WJ7'--'CYCmqUft (1) by as 1114A. it"Atat (IV). 111 (13% Id Immd was oxidized in the vapor pham a Umthod previatidy 1.00 0417-1-6! pale Yellow liquid which a (C. A. 29. 672Y) described- S;ecW meatimm war .1 1 Citiod, at it taken to collect any ptrosidIts. fornwd and to miciatiw 3 mm. without dm'uMpti- III, A* 1.410, d'"MIS .00 to give in%A. 4ofid-. m)l- in HiP. Acue. Meo their dti;mpri, Nonvolatile liquid peadwU wisich um with 111( -00 not twfietl skms by the streans of hot jam wetit ressortle F10H, McsCOH. lIh0H anti Moll, diffiruhly -M. in immediately thfuuxh a I diasy I ta re- C110j. Phil andpeir-clittv; 9Avtk*h4I-mIAcfi'6ePeI"11 111: -00 RIM 8 La o a quar p cefir" coverril with black Pap" 'M cooled vztff=Uy, reactions with K1, 'D(h and VAh. Ul with NAUH savir .00 Air waz paswil at 39", cc. Imin . The ratict of sir/I In .asog. atomic 11, the quant ity of it hich Ira% itir.-igumed by Wi-I - 2 10410 Pon 4:' The ituip, in the middle of tbt rmlim WW% IWY treatt"ent of In with HCHo. 1110 1.) with ex."$, 313'. the k"ml ImP. at wilkh an the I was C01110eldy HCHO at town trzop, gave 03 9. V, In- 85h'- load- is zoo nxidist& The product forruedst 311)" and 370' was very "emol.wl. sitnilar to that formed at 316". After 10 hm 28.5 s. I Szo 0 or.V'WACOH (Cirldtatly lu4smd.) Nam 47.0. V (0-2 g.) save 6.5 C. iTude peroxide (13). d.lM. The eMumt hjr- ca~es contained Ot. 10.8%; Cot, 1.2%; CO, .5.6%, -Inentary amallyu's and doz. (if the tuol. wt. (in MIXOR) j C.11, 0.7%. 111, 0.11%. U detiouspomed on standing. jodicat, in to be C,11140,. Its decom pit. in the m4d with rapidly in alit" and in the light, contained W% 0 dd. MIW, giving 11 and Heox, aKa. for avok. of III IpATI)y active). gave 11 at tourist ivinp, with N N&OH aml Indicate, the presence of thd grutip R(X?Cllt()kl AM Its 00 could not bc JW& (2 aim. and itim. bailt tmp. IN') in Mflon with ikffo indicalo-4 the Ipmup -W11. The N, rrith,jut dcn)mpn. H *ws imimalialdy eshmmed no U frstjft from M o1 tl, (V( Ly 0 it aim it deces ipa witli 0 IIIIII. and rmon Imp. in quarisund -Vt 1"Tesu"" IWSmJ heat and with WIWI 1nd"1;m the pri-hrtict of tug C rills Ah.-t irvtlatil~ impuritiet. The distillate so obtAk"d com. nitchMed. The %ttucturt (lI00),ICllt00Clfs0lI is taict"I ll'tP. ficiml, and mme pemide and &kkhyde. Agg~rmed for 111. The bwtive 0 CoMfut 19 40purttilly Volattlitation vued after 1.5 hrs. The pariam If (1-3 2711R)of the tbtarvik-al, a mult 0b=vvd byathtriewicirs ?9)%QljhetrU(jV? WMA UkWC StAW.,~U(SiUftl More active with similar cotupidi. 1U, if finnitif with N&OH wa% A* 0 0. anti Karr (11.1wr It with S.4011 then U. Fractionatiom mill.2 of the Ilmolc%ical wt. tv .., a vioctas liquid t-.% o 4 thin i"Ittfitl If with dry liqo gave a PA. Modw't (M W&bly culuied than 10, *.A. in KtOli and AcUt, i ! ! too 40 A S. I L A of T4kjLjFrKAL LjjE*&jLft1 C&,ASjIPXAjtCW j t;#0 oo r -1.1- V- t.-IF .5-11-1.111-,iii i_ . ......... keg 0 M3 it in to it It to It (A K 19 ICU It (Ift It K140m I!rq 0060*000000000004409004,4040*ooooo(p*oo 0 o so 4 _~040 IS 0 0 0g o * 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 G~* 4 o 0 0 o o'o 0 0 0 0 0 4 a 0 a 0 a *0 I 00 90 00 of so 00 00 00 40 00 00 so go so &goo 0 D r~$ 466 0 o , -&a e all-7r-6 A. mccOH, I*Lwg. in Phil and Pttt. C11111. IS Md. wt. wo the dmcwd propegtics -Slem f- IV 'hc m1wismit vj()()CH,(O")(XX3Wl(. The lotmOod of III (MM I ill Pg*bsbl3f t0 bc VILP&60,f by & iftlew, W 14 Cjj.(OOH),. dw Wiss-Y Pvd-t, with 11CHO, aim jwTwd Irm I by =hWian. Ptiroxide, (OMIL6,311 i% t0 bC grgsrja as thechkf pm in tbt inlti-i~ Fiatte c4 addatim of I MW i ke a( pecuAitics urw formcd 0111A UT =t.ad% =1VIlds of M and IV. hi (rdw to clitain the YW& AOWU tht ASIM14WO SIM' Ilk %bT p"p, of M aW IV roust be cwW out qukkIY AW with' out intemiption at W, llull so 00 so 9 00 so of 00 so 00 go 00 lie of 00 of 00 of 04 00 00 00 0.0 0 0 0 Is 0 0 9 0 0 0 q 0 0 0 0 S 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 see *sees 000 900 990 go III too* -0 00-0-446,0666-foOG Soso$* 0!3! 1 2 3 4 1 1 9 a it 0 U m ts 16 17 a GOA Gag 00 Oct 00 's v 000 000 00 v *oil -6 4-9-0-06AFO- 4 a 6 a 4 1 0 4 04 IN SL6 0 paccotits j1ho plartalits t"U11 aude a IU.with dramduaderp.sm . K,1.1vz,=!fkv I.Shimtina. J, APOW C#ww- (U. S. & R-) 9, ILI 8(in ifeach W9) OW-00 samples (75 1.) vmc olidized at 148' im an At-Hoed amtoclave by bubbling air at the rate of 4 L/ .00 11erate of widation vm proportiorAl to Pcem". while the tate of ~90 tpabblfug the air tbmftb the oil had much btu *11mi on .00 the reacOm Velocity. lncrmw In premure fedwold the quantity of coilecW distillate. IfIghlyrOwdodoukhte4 .00 rapidly after a Short Indoctica P-ttiod, but the: lightly tv- no* fined cd rimalmd unchanged. Adda. ol catalyMs qfisbly reduMd F*j- Ma MM M9 VaOthirnates) favored #AM oxidation, of the Hotly refined oil pafticubLdy at qlmtcd COM.Pawailluesolthes. are emphaiwed. V. A. Katichenky as too %t00 41"NILWO wo* no* 0.0v U 1 11 11 Od 'a 'a "a 0* "a 'a 'a "a 0*00*4000000 0 sees 0 04 0 0 0 '011 Is ~l 0000 of 00 0 0 oo:: 0 6 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6000 0 0 a ~ a. F I I to 11 u is Id Is 16 It to to 0 It 'All 11 m a 14 v 4 0 it 0 a to 9, A A 9 A I L_A_ X J It Kic k I A 11 A- I;v ditto e. csqjq 4.000 Foooi3 O.-A. ir 41 The 1) 11, of 1111flormll 3. '1 W-41M A M Cill is A,11'....., &A.. 1237, t he., It. ;%44 '- If,. 00 00 -01 v qk At am, a I-m, I . ... ........ . ... of 00 4 A 00 twillm..0 lb. kb, ism). .4 111, w.-m. 111114111 00 'rl mmI4.. '111 041 WA %1t #I fill )-*"%I I, tfW no . thr killd of Itivillml plvll~oltluw (1110 00 11"1l" wall,finvort it $I. p, -- 4s') 4m".J "litv 11.111 it, tilt At it 00 11-I'MIV Lit - IV 411VI It hild 11"'ll IWAR11 it* '01 It, thAt 00 ~I-Wll by flit I'llbi-m-I .if Ille v1--tiv fill :111, ; Ill"W N't 1111111114 W, th"W oll.. A 00 al'. lljl~ lit Ili.. 0* if,. .41.1,1vilig 1,4111 fit.. 'it 1 1 00 la .. .... lmlml~ Irmillill's, ItA11411111111 ml, %,I., ISO vV - ful ZOO 00, Jf4.tl~d bit 1,1114ol Ill, I Aid I UIV .1.1* -S; U1, Folgict 0 0 1.6 mul #4 ~xl' - 3 '.. 1, . Is'; * 0 J .d -is r -Nr In- 1-Imi, -1 j :1 tv.. w"I I 1*0 A 1, 6, 1, % W~LLURFICAt L1112411M LtOWK4110M 9 U- 00 . .-. ; 01-1 '60 1~60 k, A (9 (1 It a Ig a it It 91 it %Iowa go 11965111431 0 0 0 0 Aq o o 0 a 0 40 0 0 0 0 0 4p 0 0 0 0 0 1 _7* o 0 o o 0 o 0 0 0 0 : * * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 qp a 0 C~ 0 0 j F HIM to i* W* 0 o 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 , P p a )A 4 It h m is U v -L V. Y , L AMA LQ U I 1 0 it m it o 4% ito, A [ * J 6 l , C i H dm 1. Tofthydraiiaphthyl hY- 4M ' S i l i K ;Yr - l lit'va m Av . 4 A1-4 c'cvoi is ) 8 S R J ce '00 00 -1 . s . ' Va. . , dMI-A nsim. of 29 A cf 0 (j Ij h m)(ti;M) Vi . . . . n t , ; 7A 1. of crrt. tetrittlditittaphthideric pemide, ru. %5*. (10" J 27 1027) 1 -040 06 0 a S. C ,(cf fock and ftmad C A 09 z -W"it-h- ~ryitti with calcined N"~00 wa4 -00 0 allowed to stand in the dark at room lemill for 120 lim h a** :0 e After Ike dism. of the Cjf. without beativeift "Ickv t trii1p. ts Auk wits treated at a trial id i . ve-r n a quar ue and 3 mm. ter 3 hn. with a current of dry N Ormigh the tv- > 1 d uid faintl ellow Ii b Th t 0 . , e. e , ralid aif tu y y q d t ago rain "uts cryst. ots wolinit with &oIld COr. Recryto 1 us ~ i h b X*o o v e pr . When tended y t etber It In. 40.3 inethott (C. A. 30,63441), it proved to be tdPahyJ,,,-saP4- i Per"O (C.H.OOCH,011); yield. dre NOA i h th aso " y y y lfx),Vo. It Is easily decompil. by divii. at 3 Into.. 2 -ww sloes sw detonate by a bknv and burns quietly with it zoo violytam. With dil.NeOl-linthecolditfibertitmatm, ago 4 z im,". in H10. 111.%ne !Zoo tto 0 I I L A -ALTALLUROKAL L17211AILdt CLassiphCATIC16 L too ' 1 S4106i .11 C"T do( Y . ...... 9 8 At 00 JS o' -00 41- : : 0 0 M 1-1 -LUJ, a A 00 Go 00 so 00 00 f L ~~k on, ~10~ 0~ i L* A- -ilr4f -IZo k "0o '06 zoo =4 MotlLby 4k :fi=kk*s i" ow 00 fob of fol Cos ftirl* 1= yo =t~ wAd val oad tam lool Acid OMM100 At ISO, coo 4xuud at;- L I 91ALILRWAL UTMIM CV&SIOXA140" IQ U CP D it go 0 a 0 a 0 #q. $IV" Ulb tau of 0. 400 too to* "Do Will -j' bilLil ':K LS, 4' i 9 0 AR I 1 1 0 If W V 0 0 0 fo 0 .11muRgulmligHt miliffil 0 0 0 0 0 V a i. lei It 4 34 111# W all pit J421-mv k1"40 111 '11 a !1 4:11 01, 'm ~mz. W At, R F _&'&_t. &L r a 11 1 __L_A a V Q - It_ Y. L L. A,A CC It At I 00 41 It? to '_ _ _. __ - ... I sum '"d tard*Um Ot A-AWOAGM md!~~Of stat- ozidation Got the deoompodUm Of aqFSl1c PW- at. &COWWn&WO and im- Tun 11 tb* &WUWUM of WbItOM Of almliddRUM OU mro3cides. K.,1. UA;;p-v, V. 9. SAVINOVA. (C6&pt. renli. accru 1ki AO j -L Tho L Tb' B 6S., 19W, 215L . kimt1c" -goo mh Y' 4 th*c deoomm ). or tat Y1 0 tbyl H ~ P40% ze 0 sea (1) W"A ydrmaph . Udff I a in solu n and t in con I MoL_% hat PbEt strImigly accrkrates the dacmp~ f! =00 in of (1) WA (III at 75-1 " have been inves i WL of (I 50 )~b Viphibits hat of (11). The mults do not The rate or d;;Wu p. of (11) is > that of (1) at the BMW agree with those of Yamuls (A., 1937. 1, 31fl: 11, 90 temp,, " thin rate varied with the solvent. Sub. ptances known to be negative c*WydA ofthe autoxid- H. Substances wbith inhibit the atitoxidation of aiMI r0- iuw M-Ce (OH)t, U uid h4rombom inhibit vay strongly the forin. ation in the liquid ph I'. C_~ NiL. c It -OH -F.H.-MIPh, _C'I str. Ym. Naphtheasum of Fill &Q Mn. which I I i 5I,_,sj'jr~uco no dedulte Offect on we catalym the Alluto"tion of Um) hydrocarbons, " 120 rato of =mp, Pomitive catal"tit of AutOlklittion c&talym the formation of (1). PhEt, inhibitio tho aocAcrate the demmP- of (1) b;t ko~e no P**W. formflon of (1) but octyl nitrite 'wortemtes it. A. J. 31. me* ll L AAITALLURCICAL LITIERATI141 CLA%%WKATtC* 7- wee to cVx Knots Kultit:14011 1 0 0 0 0 W* 0 0 01"0 41 0 0 6 4 al 00 0 0 0 0 0 0: 0 a ~40 0.11 1 4 it Ia 0 : a M it I) 1; 4 It4 It It I Ub b 9 Is P 6) It A 6 a L. r 6, X. I I L 4 V A so Ix Do KJO 4 0 4 ,so go 4 C.q., I I ..'$' 0s, FRWARATIUN UF LUBRICitTING OILS BY AlAYLATION OF HIMOCARBAS UF WAS OVER TAR. haggy, KI and Ekagova, TA (J. Appl. 04, so Chem. (U-i-6 R-) 1945, 18, 158-71; %M Abstr. 1945, 39, 00 5"3) Alkyletion of the aromatic hydrocarbons of coke oven tar by olefins of coke oven gas yie d a up to 38A of various :0060 grades of lubricating oil$, does In quality to petrolew 1 goo products and not requiring deparaffinization, Increase of percentage contevt of alefinic natter in the reaction mass increased the viscosity and improves the quality of the final oils,but coo e: simultaneously lovors.the yields. Alkylations we conducted with cooling at 12-17 with gradual addn. of AIG13 (not as 0 less than 1.5 hre.). )ago Lei zoo S.,SLA W&I,LUGICAL LITINIA11,1111 CL-11111FKATICII dw*" 1W 0 1 a a 11 1 9-M b U 4 4' Itatirpog led %xvi Ituft It of MW n 1 4 411,114A a 0 0 0 Will 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41 41 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 6 41 0 0 0 0 0 11944 : 06041 so 0 0 0 0 a 0e 0 0 0 0 41 94119 9 IS 49 0 0 0 9 0 a 0 0 0 411- 6-4 04 00 A so 00 so a i O's 0* 00 00 It Zi, 03 00 00 a 00 a ;;i 00 00 0 S 1 0 0-0 w6 0 0 We 0 0. -;... 0 0 00000000 00 04,004 I DwAhydra"phthabse pgrailde. K. 1. lvallov ~wf V. ce. glacial ROM was dild. to %b" ttW.Adfty %1b HO avinovs. Comfit. rood. aced. 31-4 andifill.K11 a ma ddrd After S days tho l1bgral4d indlim (194h); DOA1O Dtrahydtonsphihakne (decalin) (1) was subkctcd to the with N4,COs and disild. with s4fam. CJ7%td* of detow wkni of 0 upAkc the situlditan"lul atAkill Of ultraviolet (tU),wpd,ftwmtlwdbtitktoalidsaittrtt tibsot my, to yield &-cwIla peroxiife (M. After tvptaW fr%c- ad roar(p. from p0t.44hert mo84*(yii4nIA ) b- tionation. coin. I was treated ;1th 3-4 voLq. of concd. Uniiatim raised the m.p. to 54.7'. 11 ((1.4V '9 a ". silim gd. V; &q. NaOll. anti water. S.482a If.SO. and a 10C, it diltdov"CaCti. nd distil. over Nato gives tu"t- of c"- dist for I hr. and then 46td. with stirain to jve a C110. and Irdaii-1. I%,, I%--- OV 1.44M. t'1,10 0.973. 1 (2W S.) (m. 54.7*) stmilar In twoptirtift to t1to was oitWited by bubbling 0 through it At the I'Ate of 6 CC- 01 U wit "I. Uk (I .), rpd. by rivlociat 11 min under ultraviokt mdiation of a lig-vapor Ian ;ZOW" h of I'h ut In W1. ,her. im ilia or 4 hn, with I g. of Atief4i*Ag.olTtliceictoolun(itir i"s Cros in 8 oe. of HO to give, isitier wark5nil up the ado. Mtn the" femained a traft.;Went, PNIC Yellow liquid 000"ke CMLV Crysta.14 of thr Chmmic am (M ~; w" on coigins pptd. while cty-'s of w?!is lnw,- W, w. W.V. Treatment of IV With Zn go via rcerysid. from pett. ether'.0 give I- of long priunatic &,in tryftL~' 01 W, From (I" reactions given ahm and needles of the monoclinic system. Pefractivitinditesoli theoretical observations it Is cwtfudod tlwt tk me&vzed by the itummion method, were: N, 1.570, pWda U W 0, sivixtwe Ha and to vim in cftillars- 1 AW; angle of optical axes 2 V - 12 *; witle tion. of ezthwt;;l 20*. Iluct H m. 90.5', bi-i 103'. ds 1.16 ysis for "ve 0 givts results correspondingi solid). Anal: 10 those takil, for The formula CalfirOOll. It libumtes CLH Win., And, aftef iodine frot" Ill voins.. micirs titalic treatment with C11.0 in benzene vu)d cv%pn. of the benzene 11 (4 S.) In.:Zj FWWd Wd=tk A)JR-116A OTALL10'fKAL 1.11106110t CLASS1141CATION sajc~) L. C., Qdt 41 Is xv ml iiiii" 4 a fir a It Op At x a it V It a a It K 0 0 411 0 0 6 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OLO 0 a 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 _*_* 0 11A L t 4 r1W a Is a I V K 9, do a 2 11 V 0 0 0 0 0 411 * 6 6 0 0 0411 a (Die 0 0 46 0 Is 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 Is 0 41111 a We -0 1.00 1*0 "4141 of 406 cgs 0 see goo goo too too 0 ri'v"ov, 1. 1. Pik Y~T28 I ~ i: --- -.!M 1 . ! I I f, I : ~ ! i OOA 000 0g 002 0*4 004 0 (Al 1 OO.e 0013u 00 00-3 OOW 0 0000*0090000*000 00000*0900000000 I1 211119111,11514 A a j- " Cil"li AND 01100141,11 1-010 -- .--- I ~ 040410OW-4-4 Sol U11MIS MON A-A .. t-g-j--L.-L A-4- Development of studies In the field of liquid luds and *Us at the VTl durias twenty-five yam. K. 1. Ivallov. Invs). VT1 15, NO. It, 12-14(IMM.-A rtVTM'VWM' done and planned at the Vsmytunyl TeplutekhoichLikil Inst. (AII-Iluion Heat Technolov Inst.). N(. flosch a 41 a 0 a ASRO 11 - oil -00 "*0 -00 -00 ao* 00 -00 C: 04111 goo ZOO 00 =00 no* 1:840 u it -.11 M 01 to, 41 I'll It %I (Pt It no IK"A A01 Ionic N WIN"gose3s. 00041,00041100000400000:00 001009110600004604009,00 0 a 0 0 6 6 0 0 0 IN 0 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 411-0~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0_0 0_0 0 0 0 00 04 00 00 06 00 040. .9 001, 41411 4101 0 0 so HF, I ~ In N;P H fid] PAPI 9 1.41 i I kli-13 PF.11 I---, --, , , !-- .. .. - - - -- - ff I'll MR I - , 4 Wove -97MI-w- 0--tw w loot 00091; to 10 0 %%too* 0- 9L pstaxides of LNVMI dtadr. 1. PaMOXIdIttlad of 1509f **a. micas of the rroxides. K. V. K" vinova. and H. C- M hanava. hil rev , e smnin.Lry). -j'jt,A. 413tuxidAtiful 'If iso-fIrst); ;I SQ1fPefWdCSAM1Ornic,1; jJA,a%jjjajjajtjt.afj()W. ra"i W9- PeW" (th below 3W) arid. princiPffly, gi hik"-boWhg arg. peroxide. The OXHAtitril R-w% full at so Udne a atream of 0. O-Aapoff MMULLOGICAL UTERAMI CLASWKAIM sap U -0 !*~L fee 0 0 0 see 0 of*** 41 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 4*0 coo Ve 0 see goo goo moo ties tio jr a 3 An L S IS In gooe, $ $ 0 04 IF i M. 0040000- V*0*400?0~0:: 4 -10.0*9 '0 4, 1 1 v is it to is 4 -j a u 0 is A at 11 1111 u so m 0 it Is Is 0 a, 40 1 0" A m, so 0 peco" goisr"do of vanov dif- - C and P V. r. =' u 4776"Okc-Cumv. (U.S.S.It') 16, INA-111 (190) (in Russian); cf. C. A. 40. 71536.-The main I" - a" of ON Initial autoxidatim of (lso-prho (1). described in patt 1. is shown to be a diatomk lirdratlemide, d4* 1: 1.4390. Its stntetum is thift 9 ted by IAM, a Z ut*coolf so 00 IE mJ001f 96-3 ThmW decomptli. a( the materW in decalln at 100-W- tru Mussed mitil the restaltz at 6-13 gWrkally. the dation inhibitm, (pbenols, matinophe"), InWUt jbj' coo a werst found to be, S.S. C.I(b. (*Mtk" Of The P-hfo In tin Ithcr C*Mpkidr When 04' -M it 0.1, utd. hydrombotis (ba*d 1xi witell in 0,110 pmt"*, lit". lots- 0 0.2' 0 C. I FUS', r 19-A %*Of amt. of I*khl vMmme" rou" in the 01W. 0 W 0.2 MetCO 6.4. act. a" M (As HCOM), A". 004 3A1.i1lQ,P10ll),And'2"l8J1%, Th"POrosidlyls"" t" Of I by 0 At 60"' Im ultirovialtit radistiolm wu fwtlw McICO and ligh ia contact with IW- TbetIJUSlautoid- sl,,Akd. TbC mxtftW, th 18-20', b not Isolated in all too ft 6 found only its ..if mdy Rua amts. in =Ptla.7 runs It , a ,111 Q0 (0) of the umdure jif 0C madickut junt. of the 1"Ittial W" A. V"y MIL to h*w ft. establish its Phil. camsts., d I p 0.047. *V 1.= It Is shown that the section of ut t mdistion MCMF ft.. tmviotc cricraces the autumAkdattiva I dom not dKW %be Q( aw courm of the rradifts, If a to bt tht~ intawdiu4 ties in the fortnatiou of Uke bhl Wdit. 0. U.K. I L 4 RKTALLUMIKAL 1,11114411101111 CILASIO'KATICIS lisle SOW44 -j tialli - 00 0 U 0 0 03 "1; 41 0000000 ooooooooeoeosoo4boooo*0000004):O, '6000:04 '41 0,00600 06 4 0 11VOO's 0:11111 0. 446D 4t; 11110000,01:04111000000111100004606 * It 0 ;T HN lit t!~ TI.-TiaMmillm, M" rid ma! RMT-11- - . I v no-va cr tl~eroxide co!7,,-.Ourdc of ith -.L G. E~ikhayloVL- u-e 16, lic. 7 f i,-,n,,rf-,LCher;istrj,- IVANOV, K. I. "The Intermediate Products and Intermediate R6--etions of Auto--C,~Ldation of Hydro- carbons," Sub. 2A Jun 1 -l?, Inat of Vineral Fue1q, Acad Set USSR. Dissertations rjre,,jented for degrees in science rind engineoring In Moscow in 1947. 'L 19 nr. 01A SO: Sum.No.457, 18 APr 55 14 fl U 13 U 11 It 17 16 X A . ........... 00 A 00 A 00 00 04, nit 1111MM Nit 0 41 0 0 a 4 008 Cy OF TUVSF== AND TURBIRS OIU TO FOR LOCI-HOLIMMU '00 1" AMS IN THI DUTUL FMCD OF AGEING. Ivancro K. I., Jaeshch, it z 0 No V, &W Zhokhovaksyst ?. P. (Nottyance thoss, '1947, 250 KOO 0 Ui 2, 60-81 Chou* Abstr., 1947, 41, 6700). Turbimo wyA fr-aasoo 004 forsmor oils of various origia"which have boon refined as 00,3 usual with H280 vCh or without finishing with clays do =t: 06V 0* not form I -Wt. organic &aide In the initial porid of agoing* 110100"Pp PWly refined *ill will fam such &aides frequently ov to spite of suba*qu*nt finishing with clay& Slight over-rotinIng h" rA adverse offoct an j stability. the compamenta responsible, for the formation of 4 the-lower (too, water-solo) acids are (1) resimlike ocopounds :1 sad the produato rodultLag from the action of B2304 on the 4. oil, mad (2) straight-chain hydrocarbons (doemim and aotem). :21 %U addition of paraffin wax to supor-rofixod tuAine 41 I L A ORTA&LUROKAL L"FRATOR CLASUPKATION V34. b"L." 111000 "49 0-7 Got bU &1 60 Ls V N J2 T n CIP x X a a a it #8 KO i i 0- 000*00*00000004000** 0 0060000000*0*040000066 T.--'W-&'Q-1k*0oo4104~o ~ 0000006000 j 00*00 00000*006*0000 -00 '00 .00 -00 ZOO us* 9 VO 0 rot CO 0 goo, zoo "DO ZOO 4 to =0* 100 I W1. 1 AIR 0 41 0 0 a 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 o 0 00 .0 so oil sud to a pgrfummry~-grads oil caused the formation of 00 so so lower acids an ageing. M"riment4l data oro tabulated. 00 010, Careful control by both the oil manutaoturtr and tho 00 0 * power-plant operator is suggested. ow 00 Ov At so 00 go so 00 190 00 00 00 00 :0 00 0 0 00 00 90 00 00 0 044 I Wit F."Fill i11:11 TIE m-, - ~- 0 0 A111 C. it jo f If 11 41 14 A Zi a .4 1* 11 a it 40 dt 41 At 4% C K, I"tic I ale A :0 00 00 V., i-00 00 40, was Oe j"Xitilml to liquPt Phase uad- the actim 131 "Itravi'litt -00 light. Which gmt1y actowstva the rfactirm, The asida. 'k 00 A kM b" an jodWtkxa Period Which MO 104 $11411fiftitl tit a. petuxides or ultraviolet Ikbl. Irredialim. bo"rivir. Also tomb to 1;QZV. the peroxide and kwb to blatf-bod- fe: j : " zoo ~Al I ins Oxidatim Ucts. Met Icyclottexam (150-10 C.)i 00 11' and 10-10% =y altidizedhlyidtocarbon, or 0.3-0.61, - tw1hyllcytisUmm prstilkle, In a qu"U loos-Wittel dasks 0 wm treated with an 0 suftm (a tul./twil) Witil 114-hillist *0 irradiation at W 200-2W hm.; dix4n. in raw* juve the Pemide. C1111401, as a vilictius llqukl, W-1 W. 1141, Ivivvitil, mV 1.4642, sol. in org. sclvmts, in". in wilct-r. it i~ 00 quite stable, is not coca ttly reduced byall. N&#S(h, and see reacts slowly with NsOl tIlmillis., fliving a Na well. It I-cars to be a hydroperroxide witts -0011 structure, 16911 ahly at the tertiary C atom. Raluction by hAling Will) Ztt-eq. AcOll I*vv I-methVicyriativitanol, tit. W. G. M, Ko"Almill At, ILA ftf-I&Lkt(1;M1k t CO.. Ai F U AV .3 IS' it a it on t s t, WX 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 141 fa 0 T-06 JSP O W is 1, It n p C U 11 a , P A 4 f. r, L-A AA 14 9: CO. U jk - 1 -11 . -11-~ 0 A , -16 0 pff294 40, V 1 ON M.Tv .1ho . "4* Or Willi, mit-Oh"s fet"ji I-o-AsOlf its PV, vh. out 1111111bIrl) nlill 11 (A 1111 , uAII IM) ~.Ilkl Ill--- itilth 11111AWkh't itfA1ILJj44ilj 11 CitikE -.Ik tic W, W, After c.xilinst ill -2W the Ouvits; MIK-rnkir - 0 IAVVT W2. tile IttAlill 14911. 4:114101. it rit-Apo., the ' " 1 3 L ,rd "ith S tv' ittv Its 2 .5 1. twelmir mtratrilly is" , * NAIICO%. Own with !411 ~ 1.1toll (WI16-h 11-flunTA Ille "-~t is W tile wilimmi0r). mid the mithial %160., finittly :: im ~u too. to give the purv Ph-noNrixidt, AfrjCIf( Cff.).- j C(001I)MI, t)o.m 413.5'. it!' O.SM53, HU 1.43M. Sly" 00 qual. lestA for artlyr 11, b""m 11111rily on IVIIIIon. md Is 0 ptite itable ia vlotied vep-ek in the dark. It It Put coat. =0 00 r(. 1y Ty'luml by S1116tv Sullist. *list tfmt (lot tract flutifl. ; -so tit.Ii%%-tv with aq it I- -W. h% the uml.d ogo. A. vVill'. lusillux nil It N"." 14,80. boill. I firi. gmvt Ntr,CO. ~o 0 which courititird the truviture. Tlw aq. MeM r%l. 00 z 141KIVV) WA,% cot". im tilt No and the MMUC. dild. n ith j twimiie and altiv,at , blown with dry N at I mm, mut wit 0 - , Wow 'it* to IVISIorr the MAVVilt; the mittile uA" -ill,- .0 o 00 .14111i,illy psirr jimmidst. Ill)(:- OX)MM". C.A.W", ~vry vim-imis 11111361. . 1, . 00 fil is high vArl)"In. .1 1 U111, NJ: 1.4N 41. "I I".11ifix ILA - 5" ) 1 NI l I C 'o 46 -mri l- t gave O and 1 lin. mith 2 j, FrSl , An. ly N VA116-11- lit'id (t,hiractrflivil ill the am4le, tit. 102"). The *0 listiCh IC%`1 ItilibIr jhA111 tile M'"All 11"116. Mid th-comp, 'Atilt vitillt m1 Cl. M, Rmuls.1"Ill 111! 403 1 t it* it I m 14 0 0 9 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 'a 0 64 0 0 0 6 6 0 0 1 : 0000 0610 0 0 0 0 00 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cs 0 0 e 0 *0 0 0 6 0 0 0 ft 0 0 111 9 0 N!H1 1i I M. II T 11 WAF W-ww- *00 90606006906 100000 16000*00000 O'~ : lor-:11M, 1. L' u 0 .1 0 All 'A 41:9 a I, ja 16 m it Is ~j L4 t~ 1. t/ Is X A S It .1 T "2 -oe 09 Pemide of host 9 Savin Will ~: . y T"r. ; mo 0 00 4. N. A. N. 3u. vol", St 1111111 ttrAtv-1 with () t1 mol. AICI. gra,itially.,ver 4.L, bra. at 2.6-3 V and thris kept 4 hen. at =1% gave ec-BsiPh, 3.5', d.1 0.84113. siV 1.48SIS. 116 MJO 1.) treated With () (5 CT./Mill.) sit 85' with ulttsl-i =40 V) hm gave on evulm, of njimt of tht'.. .00 bydrucairbou sit g%usja and livalinent ol tile cadell residue with 7.3 a. s:Vd 35'"j, Naol I. the Sis jwlj of the perv*,dr, 0 wbicb after "tion was treated with c-terss sold His- JUSO, in Water and exid. with benzetir; dism. sit the rX., gave file pure Pk"vxIje. th.- 4K-O*.,I!l 1.44:11, ml~ 1.520N. 00 The tumpd. is a bydroperuxisle, R ()Of I; it i, mot stAble 60 0 cis long sturwo and kirnis miumis 111111%tAlIC" at riwirsi 1010 truip. 11rating with 2.S~,'- FrSo.son. iniddysim.,A01h. 700 L%Amril as the wtiticartmtossir, rs. WhAV. The lk-rusiWe 0 xive. the abow-umitimwil Na will. ~"l 6411'. hym-- mtipie White crystals. 1449 J E %LA Rip 11 AW L % a FW 0 11 It ;'n ;11q 11 At Pc it 11 It 11 is 0 g 0 0 0 0 0~: 00900 is 0 0 0 e 0 0 00 0 11007,01 4000, * 0 0 0 6 a 0 1 1$ ch Direction of the P n I the straight alkane chila. The Pero xld=Oim t0he autotildstion of nor- MAI heptitne. K. I Iv I)IDY V K. Slyintmi, 111111 V. 11. ZhAkhuvNUym. Aka. VIuk S.S.S.R. 72. ,ma 4)(19M).-Thr milure of the intcrffmlia~ lp,roxidr formed in the autoxi-lition of C,ll,. in the litIlli-I PILI-V -as ascertAnct] by iv~ extn. with aq. AWL fit liquid illmle the -autoxidatilm is turpri-itigly %low. in conlrw c?k the rcklivtly e;%%y 061mlon (if clit" in the gas ph;Lsk. (.15 vomparctl mrith cyt-lArptane aml I1h.%fei; oxHatiorl eat,ilyst!i such 3s mg. Nin %all% or CrO, or ullt.tviolvt light, have h:Lrdly ativ am+-Yatitig elfect. The concit. of the peroxide micht, 0.54).W ", ill M),) hri. ..,A not mert..tw %furthrr up to 41KI hri. (hi hnilml thv it(l. alk. est., I reroxitle g" over mAnly (74c~j into 2. heptanone, with about 'K)% ir-4nS over into 2-be tanol, fishes the prroxide as ArnCIj((hIJj,%ll, T, i.e.. X,111-14121;0 previous imumptions, the Ot mol. attacks not the Ist, but the 2iod C atont of the Cilf,j eh tin. The con4ts- *1 1 am 4s, .18'. ds' 0.9072, nj~* 1.431)-~. Cipecific disptnion) - 1(my - moVd-1101 - -M-11. The comixf. gives the iodine and thiocy-anate reactions for nctive 0 antj the hydroperoxide gfoup tcuction with l!A%~())4Pb. It is stabic in storage anti burns with a vx)ty flaine, Its decompn~ proluO. I - ArnCO1NIc irm itlentilicil fly the scomqurim zone, m. 121 '. N. Th See 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 t a ji, Is 10 4 it 42 &1 48 At he it u 1 3 x Ir x it Is i It P N 030 41 00 6,C3 I 535.434 If* emdk-W of ne abstiristwis of light as davm" VOLM & wartAkut 4 [be dUwdtn of 0 PArIkh"'I UAPC"'d 10 W-Ifty- K. 1. IVAMIY ALA Smak. SSSR. 74 (Na.' 5) 9211 j14U)) j. -00 :I: Akvo,Jijijt to ibis artick V. V. Shukikii AO A. V. " 04111 I"OfililOv 11FIA thWICILWly promj jtV l;udilk-cliall 00 lvvt%&vJ) di'llk9sh") L4 light 2))J 1110 high absoillcm Too -4 SUbjXjkW prW- CJPA;1lY Of PAnk;k no 0 0 0 `11 "P~Iffswllt% 11-fic iktw bN111 d.'4fiicJ out by (ho 00 a i pwwnt authur in u(Lkr It, glusirate this coiliwction. 00 "'-ind 1,411fill Jild CIAY W1. It's datj Oww that the T coo d,'FviKk-iv,v can be c%prc%wd by ibil equAtioll K so 1*0 lum-wilits a U"31xv willixMil of coo L)l OVA "Mer AQJ d l1w MIMI of 4ktic"wL 44 66 411aim'd its Initunwil. in tho rcd tuft of file PO:. - IfUln. %ith PAFtk-fC% Of 1-5#4 dil- (AppluxinlAtCly -00 49190 c4uAl it) 2A). I:uFJIj9r ilwircilm.4 Of diArlclcg IMI to a 00 0'~' Ifinji,jillidIll in IV VJIUO Of %,LjjWlU,1Un J i zoo ' ij*il Jbil all-wilm"I of highl k j1fk1(,N11d:Wt) I&'.ki %itiLl JJJ~Vj,,Cly in il, pr%jjWltj4Aj. C, r- 1"31 A, to A- with PACIKIV did.mwls %W Nlu Mid d. too, A 1 0 L A NFIALLURMAL U7111141tAt CLAMOICATtOIN t*Q It #3101 aft C~lr 4%, u is it 0 it is 1, w K 4 it a it it it it cc 0 rp 0 9 0 0 0 00 0 0 * 00 0 0000000 00 009 : 0 0 .1 it of a n ZO in I In. 9 04 0 0 40 0 0 00 0' 0 4 0 00 0004.0041 0 000 m zz !VANOV K.T., V.K. SAVIjj,--VA, V.P. Mll'-ITC, ~KAYA 'Nay USSR/Chtmistry- Peroxides "The Percxide (f Butylbenzene," All-Union Heat Engineer-i ri---f Iris,:. im r'. DzerzhillsIdy Zhur Obshch Khim, Vol 22, No-5, pp M-784 In nhotc-cxidaticnof n-butylbenzene ~;4th cxygen at 800, a hydropercxide w,;'-th an OCR at the cai:bcn atcm of the side-chain -,,rcup is fc-rmw]. The peroxide was isolated and its prcperties were detd 263 T 28 K.I. IVANOV, T.A. B11,1107A USSR/Chemistry - Percsiced may 5'2 I'Methcds cf Obtaining Dialkyl Peroxides. TetraLylethyl percxidu and PhG-rvliscprcrjyl etber Peroxide", All-Union Heal. enoineering InsL. im F. Dzerzhinskiy Zhur Obshch RIAm, Vcl 22, Nu~, PP 'A-789 Developed a method for the synthvsis of deslkyl percxides by the reacticn betweQn alkali salts (:f hydirpercy-ides and i1alogen alkyls in a methancl soln. The above percxides, nct previously descirbed, were synthes_~zed ard their porperties investigated, Their c~.nstitution was cstablished 263 T 29 Gbf-l-nicul AbGt- do. Z lAlsorun Ilo- 5 , 4 i - J. (ift. Ghem vot. 48 -a U.S.S.R. 22, &j3-A(jg52ffn'g~,rmL atjOn).--&e 10, 1954 Orparilc Chemistry V AN 0. Chezical Abst. Vol. 48 No. 5 Mar. 10, 1951, OrganiC Chemistry - on of dIAW To-Riy-~,pplFtb74 e~"'e PIEPIE-11 ~1, 'e"roilde end hen lyj othIlporotide, g Y i , `.jZ4jj= and , '411. C on. U.S.. 847_50( 1952.. nq . rans a on).--&e C.A. 47. 32a5f- T., it- A A'. I TF 1 ti 'A W. v N~-J. 'I L4 ~,On Ea crii~ arLI ldcla! buFam- orfdzitfoaW'Z Sr.3t-t-14, A"lu A I USSIV Chemistry - Physical chemistry Card 1/1 Pub. 22 - 35/62 Authors v Ivanovj K. I., and Vilyanskaya, Ye ~D Title r Effect of inhibitors-on the autoo'xidation of petfoleufif';N~djrocarbcihs Dok. a sssR 102/3, 551 - 554, May 21, 1955 Abstraot t The effect of numerous substances, known from th6ir oc'iddtion inlAbiting tietrdleum characteristics, on the oxidizability of highly rpurift.-d (white) oill (vaseline) was investigated. Results showed that s.11 inhibitors - phenyl- beta-naphthyla-mi-ne, p-hydroxydiphenylamine, diethyl-p-phenylenediamine and 4,41-diaminodiphen-yldisulfide - when introduced prior to the start. of the oxidation reaction had a more or less uniformly active oxidation.-Imbibiting effect. The inhibiting effectus weree ent:'-rely different for each inbibitor when introduced during the oxidiziiig stages of the oil. Thirteen refeirences: 4 USSR, 1 French, 4 USA, 2 English and 2 Japaneoe (19212-1954). Table graphs Institution The-F. E. Dzerzbinskiy-Heev Engineering So. Techn. Inst. Presented by, Academician N. N. Semenov, Dece~nber.6'. 1951t. I i :IP:; Iff(I 'If'! &s ~l i"W" li!F~~ -Ta; zPt ll~,,! ; 9-RI - . - i; : - I !, lil i -~ :! ~ :., ! ~~! ~ [I I I : - : 1 .1 1,- -- U ~f' '~'!Jjjf 111, Is AUTHOR: Ivanov, K.I. and Vilyanskaya. 65-4-3/12 TITLE; On some special features of action of inhibitors on the kinetics of auto-oxidation of hydrocarbons. (0b osobennost yakh devstviya samedliteley na kinetiku avtookisleniya ugi levodorov.) FTERIODICAL: "Knimiya i Tekhnolopiya Topliva i Masel"(Chemistry and Technology of Fuels and Lubricants)1957,N-o-Il,i,)p.11-21(U.S.S.R) ABSTRACT: The previous observations of the authors (1) on the exist- ence of two groups of inhibitors of auto-oxidation of hydro- carbons in petroleum oils was confirmed. Inhibitors of the 1st group retard oxidation of a white oil (highly refined) only when added before the beginning of an oxidation e-roeriment. Substances belonging to the 2nd group can inhibit -an oxidation process already in progress, even when the process is well de- veloped. The above properties are also valid for an ordinary transformer oil. A new large group of anti-oxidants was found occupying an intermediate position between Groups I and II. Card 1/2 Inhibitors of this Group III, similarly to inhibitors of the first two groups, are able to retard oxidation of oil when added before the st-art of the process, but unlike inhibitors of Group II can inhibit an already proceeding reaction onl.7 in itB auto-catalytic stage. It was shown that the above