SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT VESELOVA, YE. S. - VEVERIS, M. M.

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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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USSR uDc 6j2.13 PAJZAZ) L. A., VESELOVA,,IT-~-S., 1,'ESHCERSKIY, n. L. an.-I EITAYUTIN, V. M., Laboratox-Y of (flicu'latory, Control and Biophysics, 1~stitute of Norral and Pathological Physiology, Academy of Y~edical Scienc&s' USSR] Moscow "Blood Flow Through Forearm, Muscles i n* 'Mn After Static Exercises of Increasing Load" Leningrad, Fiziologicheskiy Zhurnal SSSR imeni 1, M. Sechenov, Vol 59, INTo 2 1973, pp 307-314 Abstract: Pletbysmograp'hic investigations revealed that ~.uxina. performance of work on a wrist ergoneter, changes in the blood flown thron,,gh the forearm rviscles proceed in two stages. With work load increasing up to 201r~ of the ma-i-nLn, Pos- sible voluntary effort, the peak blood. fl -ow duringithe contraction increases considerably, the reactilre hyperemia following relaxation.is of brief duration, and thuB the total addit:lonal blood flow. during recover-'r Is very small. Wit 'n work. load increasing up to 5M; of the riaximmum possible, the peak blood flor increases at a considerably reduced rate, the reactive hype-remia becomes pro- tracted, and the additional blood flow'during recovery reaches high proportions of the total. Thus, the work, load of 20%.of the maxiimm -possible appears to mark the critical point below wh.ich blood 'flow is adequate~ and above which blood ~"7 USSR UDC 621-357-7' VESELOVSKAYA~ I. YE.) and SHERSTWK,, ~N. I. "Internal Stresses of a Platinum Coating on, Titanium" Moscow, Zashchita Vietallov, Vol 6, NO 3, MaY-Jua 70, PP 3C,2-305 Abstract: A study was riade of internal stresses occurring during elecUrodeposition of platinum on a titanium surface, The optimal conditiotis for obtainiag, coat ngs i with minimum internal stresses were found. The platinwa plating was carried out v at 70 + 10C. The anode made of platinum-plated titanium, was placed parallel to the cathode with a spacing of 6-7 cm- In order to avoid the bounda7_7 effect, the anode ourface was one-fourth the size of the cathode surface.~ The electrolyte co=ositions were (in g/liter): Pt (in-the form of ffgtci6-6~~o) lo; 11'_d;")2 280; lrkklo 1-2- RR40H 50 (electroly-L,- 1) or 1-1-5 (electrolyte II). It was found that the Aterna'l stresses of the coatings exhibitlittle dejxwdence on the platinum. concentrations within a broad ranV of 8-0-4-5 917- . bnly during deposition from new electrolyte I during the initial period and from old.electrolyte I -with a platinum concentration lees than:7Lg/7- were coatings with increased internal stresses obtained. In comparison with electrolyte 1,:ooatings from electrolyte II wer more matte. The internal stresses in electrolyteill vem, very small: O.c kg/ mm in the new electrolyte and 0.1-1.0 J~g/mMP:la ihe old electrolyte. In the 1/2 - 95 USSR 1. YE., and 5HERS7-YUK, N. I., Zashchita Metallov, Vol 6, 110 3, KaY- Jun 70, pp 302-305 experiments the.deviation y was at the limit of accuracy of the measurements, and no dependence of the internal stresses on the thickness of the coatinty, war, detected. A reverser did not improve the externalform and yield with respect to current in electrolyte 11. The experiment demonstrated that a platinum coating on titan-lum from electrolyse II has an advantage over the coating from electrolyte I from the point of view of danger of cracking as the result ofinternal stresses. However, an experiment in long.-term operation of a platinum-plated titanium anode.showed that coating fro-m electrolyte I with a current-reverser_Lio characterized by less vear and a longer servIce life in comparison with a coating.of,equal tILickness from electrolyte II. 2/2 UNC., AS001to PROCESSINq DATE-11SEP70 L V9, f;`-T tslr-!LE-"C0,RRO S ION -RESISTANCE OF ATITANIUM, BASE UNDER ,A' PLATINUM COAT'ING IN .-ANDLYT6 P14, -U- ~,i--AELMOWTO UTHOR-~~KHOOEKEVICH, S.D., VESELOVSKAYA, '1:.YE., YAKIMENK0,t, LoM., GUSKOVA, id:_ bk_ E'll-_ E L EK T R O-K H I M I Y A1970, 6(l), 135-81: 'PbA~TE PtjBL ISHED ------- TO S,UBj ECT AREAS-MATERIALS CORROSION, PLATINUMICOATINGi ELECTROLYTIC OXIDATION, -TEST SOLUTION ACI0tTY.?:.ANODE ~~POLARLZATION -CORROSION C044TPOL 14ARKING--NO RESTRICT113NS ::,DOCUMENT CLAS'S--UNCLASSIFIED DROXY PEEL/FRAMF-19,87/0757. STEP NC--UR/0364./70/006/001/0135/0133 ACCESSION NO--AP0104206 -212- 19 UNCL A S S I FI ED PROCESSINS2 DAYE-11SEP70 --APf ACCESSION NO i104206 ~ABSTRACT/EXTRACT~-(,W GP-0- ABSTRACTs THE ELECTRO CHEM. AND CORROSION BEHAVIOR OF A TI %ASE COVERED FAY ~PT ~W4S STUDIED,AT PH 0-14 ANT) -80DEGREES. TOW KINDS OF Tr ELECTRODES WERE: USED, ONF OF wHICH wAS EMEPY CLEANFUt VEGREASEO, TREATED FOR 20 MIN':IN H SU92 SO SU84 AT 90DEGREES, RINSED IN WATERv DRIED ON FILTER PAPER,,AND KEPT IN THE AIR FOR 24 HR BEFOR E USE. - T441S ELECTRODE' WAS CALLED AIR DXIMIZED.- THE OTHER ELECTRODES WERE NOT REMOVED-FROM THE :SOLN. FOLLOWING ANODIC PDLARIZATION AND THESE WERE-REFERRED.T0 AS ANODIC ALLY OXIDIZED. A STUDY OF THE SrATIONARY'POTENTIAL SHOWEDTHAT AN iNCREASE-ANTHE PH-uF- THE ANOLYTE' LOWERED THE PASSIViTY OF TI WHICH WAS;AT'ITS 9TR6NGEtT AT PH 13-14. THE s TATIONARY POTENTIAL OF PT COATED Tl,,ANODES AT:PH 0-13 WERE VERY HUCjj ALI KE -AND 14DEPENDENT OF THE ~ TH.ICKNESS OF. THE PT COATING. THE EFFECT OF THE:TI BASE:'ORlTH PT COATED ELECTRODE:APPEARED 014LY AT PH 14 AND THIN PT COATINGS, Ool-1.0 MU. IN A STUDY OF-ANODIC POLAkIZATION IF TI AND PT IN ALK, AND-CARBONATE SOLNS'~PARTICIPATFD IN THE COATED TIIJHF~.Tl ANODIC PROCESS*ITHR9,UGH PORES IN-THEE PT COATING;. 0' THE SAME C.D. TqE CURRENT DRAIN THROUGH THE TI OFiPT COATED ANQDES~,WAS;APPRECTABLY KIGHTER AT P" 113 THAN AT PH 9.5 OR- .14*~ UNLIKE AT PH 9. 5 - AND .14 1 THE POLARI:ZATION--CURVES AT PH 13 AND,11.6:MTI AO.'PT COATED TI WERE 'ALOGOUSi BUT"THE CURRENT,DRAIN THROUGH TI R05E- THF XPTL. RESULTS At E LEAD TO: T14E CONCLUSION THAT OXIDN* OF TI. IS THP MAIN REASON FOR THE :DESTRUCTIOR. OF~~THE PT COATING- IN: AL K., AND.CARBONATE SDLNS. -=IM" LASS MIED 7 77777777-7---- MC 616.988-25-036.12-092.4 VESEWVSKAYA, 0. V.l Institute of Virology,.imen i D. 1. Ivaalovskiy, USSR ~Ical Sedencest Yos^_ow "Chronic Infection of Diploid-Human Embryo Cells With'Japanese Encephalitis Virus" Yoscowp Voprosy Virusologlip No 3t May/Jun 71# pp 35.3.-*-358 Abstracts The object of this study was'to investigate the interaction of Japanese encephalitis virus with human diploid cellsp since. diploid cells appear to be most suitable for obtaining,propbylactic prepainations. Three of the diploid cells lines were fron lung tissue and four from and mus-cule tissue. Two ctages could be distihguishcd In the dyr.4.mic study of infected culturess proliferation and degeneration. 'Proliferation woz cl=acterized by the maintenance of vita), collular functions. Chrorlically infacted cells exhibited normal growth after 2-3 days and the formation of a uniform mono- layer was. observed In both contrcl and inf ectad cultures .- The calls released snall quantities of virus into the medium. Infectioua virus iras produced by only a fraction of the coll population. The 1virm was "laten-V with respact to the host cells# but its presence was established by.inoculmtion of mice or by interference- with Western equine encephaaomyelitis yirus (WHE) in chick i A USSR MEWVSKAYA, 0- V.- VOPMSY Virusologiij, NO 31 11ay/Jun 71p PP 353-358 embry-o fibroblast cells. latent infection of diploid tells with Japanese encephalitis virus was characterized by interferon production and complete resistance to the cytotoxic effects of WM virus. The:second stage (degenera- tion.) in the dynamics cell cultures was chaxacterl2ed by progressive cy-bopathic changes in chronically Infected cells, The degeneration staga occurred in three of the seven strains studied. In this stage, spmlad of the infection to Lost cells was noted and resulted either in destruc-~Ion of the culture or in repDpulation and development of a resi,,qtant strain. Thetransition from one stage to the other (proliferation to:degeneration) was always accompanied- by- axk increase in the product-ion. of Infectious virus. It was concluded that the appearance of the cytopathic effect~muat..bo due to,n, mutation of the virus In the culture during the passage proca-384~ 2/2 22 - USSR um 621.3-049-75 TURMEN, G. M. GIRITSKOITA, V. V.) SURMOV, A. S. OSTROZIMISICH, A. V. , VESELOVSKAYA, V. A. "A M-thod of 141etalli zing MIultilayered Printed-Circuit Boards" Moscow, Otkrytiya, imbreteniya, pr6*shlermyye obraztzy, tova--nyye znakff, No 5! Feb 71, Author's Certificate No 293311, Divisi6n; 11, filed 4 Aug 69, published 15 Jan 71, p 182 Translation: T"his Autbor's Certificate int.-roduces a trethod of metallizing printed-circuit boards consisting of several layers. The procedure is based on seauential 6acm.1ca). and galva-aic coppcr-coating of holes. As a distinguish- ing feature of the patent, re-liable interlayer connections. a-re provided by galvanic build-up of copper on the end f aces of the contact, plat. for m., in the. holes of the Diner layers before el4etrrocheraical inetallizing of the holes. 'Priority dates f rom 13 JUIY :196T., 105 USSR UDC 669.168:621.746 SHARANOV, M. A., SILUKOV, G. A., KCROTLE V, -A. A., KRYLO.V,I A7, and VESEL-OVSKIY A. Ya..(All-Union Scientific Research Institute of Heat 10-gineer M urgy FVNIIbIT/; Ser6v Plant of Fe oalloys) Ing r r ."Study of the Granulation Process of Silicochrome" Moscow, Stal' , No 4, Apr 72, pp 321-323~ Abstract: Described is a joint study by the All-Union Scientific Research Institute of Heat Engineering in Metallurgy and the Serov Plant of Ferro- alloys involving plant-scale experiments on silicochro"~e granulation. The objective of the study was to determine the causes of explosions (during the process) and to develop preventive safety measures. The potential causes of explosions are theorized to include the-clogging of nozzles and obstructing the metal stream, disintegration of the:refraction control nesh constraining the feed of.the liquid alloy to the granulation tank, fracture of the lining of the overflow trough snout, excessive,distance betWeen the trough snout and the nozzles, etc. The rolationship:between the granulometric compo- sition of the vranulated material and the water supply parameters has been established. Reeo=endations are made to exclude the.1imitatlon an water teq)erature in the granulation tank to 40% from the standard technical 1/2 - -CESSING DATE--23rjCT7O f/ 2 050 UNCLASSIFIED- P R10 ITLE--STRUCTURE OF THE ELECTRIC FIELD IN A SHOCK WAVE PROPAGATING IN A EAKLY IONIZED.GAS -U- AUTHOR-~ VESELO VSKIYj I.S. dO'UNTRY OF INFO--USSR S-OURCE--ZHURNAL TEKHNICHESKOI FIZIKI, VOL 40y FEB. 1970t P. 387-389 6-A T EPUBLISHED--, ----- 70 U.BJECT.AREAS--PHYSICS ~S*.PPIC TAGS--ELECTRIC FIELOr SHOCK WAVE PROPAGATTONY DEBYE LENGTH, ELECTRON ~ DENSITYt IONIZED GAS 'r_ONTROL.MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS OOCUMENT CLASS--Ut4CLASSIFIED _P~ROXY_ REEL/FRAME-1979/1541 ~STEP NO--UR/0057/7j,)/040/003/0337/0389 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0047869 U..NCLASIS lF [F--[)- ~7212 050 UNCLASSI'FIED' PRIOCESSING DATE--230CT70 C--I R CACCFSSION NO-AP0047869 :ABSTRACTIEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTkACT. ANALYTICAL 114VESTIGATION OF THE STRUCTURE OF THF ELECTRIC FIELD WHICH FORMS AT THE FRONT OF A SHOCK WAVE PROPAGATING 114 A WEAKLY IONIZED GAS IN T14E PRESENCE OFTHE- RAMSAIJER ~EFFECT. I TIS SHOWN THAT THE ELECTRIC FtELD IS CREATED DUE To r-HARGE SEPARATION BY A MOVING 01SCONTINUITYt AND THAT THE:FIELD STRENGTH TENDS ''~EXVONENTIALLY` TO ZERO ON EITHER.S[DE OF THE DISCONTINUITY. THE DEBYE ,-~:,...RAMUS, I-S SHO~IN rO G.E THE CHARACT:Ekisric THREE DI.MENSIONAL MEASURE FOR -VARIATfONS OF THE ELECTRIC FIELD AND ELECTRON OENSITY IN THE REGION lN FRONT OF THE SHOCK WA-VE FRONT. 71~ -USSR uDc 632 9514 T StUMOSVPT, L. S., MURISHKIMA, S. -T. , and I-It P KO, Tla. F. All-Union Scientific Researel-I JrstitjjIZIe :of the RyC;iene. iin:l Toxicolo!..-y of Pesticides, Pol3-.-_rs and Plastics:and UI-ar-inian kgricultu'r-al "Aftereffect of Limtron and ItsJE, R sidues, in Soil and PI-n.tit s I~bscoTr 'limi- 110i rLYS' e o -70, -5-56 JC ~m v Sel's" .1 Pa02Y, W 1 110 3, Abstract: The authors in 1966-11~57 studiad i,-mder field, V.,,e frectivenpoa Of linurc;n on Corn plantina'n an"j, ita oil" j- tj Sfation of the n A-riellLtii.-al AcatdeT., 79%~;', I-a T,-~,c lizmroll L liea du or.preem4rgence ha -I, in doses of 2,4~ and: 8 kt;/hri. ILNII? linum, re~~idues in the soil were dete-mLired by t-v:o methorisj v417 ~i white a- mustard as the indicatol- x)lant and la,~,er It S found 'Uhat linuron in. a dose of 3 -4. kg/ha nflvcr panetnitc-I d-mir-'r than 10 c-r from the soil. surface du--in1g, the corn ver.,etation jx.,riod,; '41it'a 5-7 of anplication. 'Tne the initial Tmrit-ity fourd in this layer kour months afti- 1/2 SAP10511AT, L.S.,etal. 12~=*,,,ra v Sell skotl~ nozyayst-re Val-9 NO 3. Mar 70 -5b pp 55 greater ---rt of the berbicide (76-8-81-3 p c re e n t t-hc t-,;o months folloirinr, applicazion. No lin-uron. vas found in ti,~~- kernel of ripe.co--i-i 6ro,.;n wit' n a-i-ni-ication a-, -;,~!;~/ha of mass,of Corn in t*--c fiowa-x,iv,~, rlla-e contuine, ftcunt o,,iantitv o:~ -a arA insi~;rdt the hafbicide ni; per.kt, of plants vrif-i ~-,:oisturc content). A 3-4 k.,,,/ha dose of applied to CO.= harl -no adv~2r5c- effect on the ~yield of oatf;, vetch-oat rrdxture, mic.--ax- t v e. -x;:. viute-r u2bla n2- ;i 1.1;;j 012 OA,.~E* -27NOV70 TITLE-AFTEREFFECT OF LINUROIN AND ITS-RESIDUES 114 SUIL AND PLANTS -U- AUTHOR-00-SAMOSVAT, L.S., AVOYUSHKINA,. S.t., VESELOVSKIYr f.V.t MANK09 ylj:~ p ..... -,COUNTRY OF fNFO--USSR S EL. K I 1 .9 Z . 19701 8(31t 215i46,~ ATE PUSL ESHED-------- 70 ~,:~.SUBJECT AREAS-NEROiNAUTICSw BIOLOGICAL AND* MEDICAL SC I ENC E S -.TOPIC TAGS-CHEMICAL 0ECOMPOSITIOUr SOIL CHEM I STR Y IiERBICIOE, SOIL STRUCTURE M A R, D) KI.NG-NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS-UNCLASSIFIEG R E LE LF R A M E - - 3 0 0 40 18 4 STEP ND--UR~/0391,-/7~)/008./003/021510216 :C,lRr A CC E S 1 CIN "M-AP0130943 UNCLASS(FIE0 PROCESS-ING OATE--27NOV70 N ASSI:Fl 0 u CL C-IRIC AccEssim ND--AP0130943 .:A-8%STRACT/EXT,RACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. BUOASSAY BY SINAPIS ALBA 'AND CHROMATOG. ANAL. OF RESIDUAL LINURON r- R. LIM FIELD EXPTS. INDICATED THAT THIS HERaIGIDE APPLIED AT PRESOWING CULTIVATION PENETRATED TO IQ CM OF 'STRONG.LOW HUMUS, L04MY CHEkNOZE~t:S01L. :THE HERBICIDE WAS OSTLY OEGRADED AFTER 2 MONTHS, NO RESIDUES W ER E: FOUND: If% THE: SEEDS. CROPS -GROWN ON THE TREATED AREAS IN THE.FOLLqWING :YEARS $HERE NOT AFFECTED. FACIU.ITY:- VSES. NAUCH.-ISSLED* JNSTo GIG. TOKS'IKOL~* PESTITSj POLIM.- PL.AST.. MASS,. KIEV, USSR.~ UN C 1. A S S I F I ED USSR TJDC 632.4.01/.09 RUBIN, B. A., MARKAROVA., Ye. N., and VESELOMI ~V. A., Mosccni State 'Univ6rsity "Effect of Different Strains of th.e Fungus'Fusarlum oxysporum vasinfectum on the Ultraweak Luminescence of Cotton Roots", Moscm~, Sel'sko'khozyaystvennaya Biologiya, No 5, 19713 -pp 719-723 Abstract: The avirulent strain (No 61) ofa monosporous culture of Fusarium ozyspurum visinfectum possess~!s more notieea5le ultrawiak lulldneSCenCe than do virulent strains (Nos 15 and 54) of the same funSus. The intansity of luminescence of an aqueous extract. from -the mycelium of, No 61 is five. tlmv.~; greater than that of zyceliu-m from either of the pathopnic strains. How- ever, the normal ultraweak luminescence of cotton roots is stimulated only by. treaLing them with aqueous extracts from the pathopnic strains. The degree of stimulation of luminescence generally varies with the concentra- tion of the extract. This effect of the~virulent strains is regarded as a manifestation of the influence of the path.ogens on the host plant's metabo- --30OCT70 112 023 pRoCESS:fNG DATE UKLASSIFIED Q, EOUS OLUT ON. ,-,.T-ITLE--ELECTROCHEMICAL OXIDATION OF: CARBON MONOXIDE: IN A U, S I OXIOATION:0F. CARBON MONOXIDE IN: ACID, :.SULiJTlON$_ ON ~A PLATINUM 1-~.4UTHOR-,103)-MILLEP, N.B., TYURIKUVAv 0. G.0 vVESELO.VSKIYv V.I. .'_.COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR -,_.S.PURCE--'ELEKTROKH I M I Y A19709 614)t 468-72~' ATE PUBL ISHED----70 UaJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY ?'TOPIC TAGS--AQUEOUS SOLUTION, CHEMICAL REACTIOfi RATE, PLATINUM ELECTRODE# 7'4-'~~ CARB ON MONOX I DE, EL ECTR CC HEM I STRY vOXIDATIONt:CHEAICAL:BONDING :.Z0NTR0L MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ~----DOCUMENT CLASS--.UNCLASSIFIED '_!PROXY REEL/FRAME--1998/1159 STEP NO--UR/0'364/70/GO6/004/0468/0472 C-IRC ACCESSIGN NO--AP0121718 UiNr-L4S$ I FIEG 023 UNCLA9SIFIEd PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0121718 .~-ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE OX10N. OF CO.UN A PT ELECTRODE WAS STUDIED BY ANODIC POLARIZATION IN10.1 N H SUi3Z SO SUB4 AT 25DEGREES. AT AND AROUND THE EQUIL. POTENTIAL (0.05 V), THE: CO 0XION. IS SLOW AND PROCEEDS AT THE EXPENSE OF THE CATALY,T.1,C:CONVERS[Oli OF: VIATER,, THE 'q0:IS.CONTTGENT UPON THE ELECTROCHEM, OXION. PROPER BEGINS AT. 0035~ V Ai ~FORMATION OF 0 AND ITS ADSORPTION ON THE:ELEc'rRODE SURFACE. IN THIS REGION THE REACTION RATE IS GOVERNED BYI E,D:IFFUSlON OF CO. A FURTHER H .~.ANCREASE IN THE POTENTIAL ABGVE 1.1 V~ LEADS TO A PRONOUNCED DECREASE IN THE REACTION kATE, DUE TO THE, FORMATIQN~CF-AN.'Oi.108 BOND BETWEEN THE 0 -ELECTRODE SURFACE. :,AND THE FACKITY: NAUCK. ISSLED. FIl. KHIM. INST* IM. -KARPOVA, MOSCOW, USSR.. S S I F I E 0 - - ------- - _--_V/3 0 lo UNCL A t F It PROCESSKNG 0AT(-:--2V4QV7() 0 ~T_ CE~SSES WtA ~Z i NC. OXIDE EL'_ECTkJr0E -U- ITLE--PHOTOELECTROCHE.~Al CAL PRor .,AUTHOR-(OZ)-SHUBt D*M. i I Y.? Vo Lo ~:_:COUNTRY OF-INFO--USSR ~SOURCE-ELEKTROKHIMIYA 1970, 6(l), 97-100 PUBLISHED ------- 70 Sim EC r AREAS--CHEMISTRY TOPIC TAGS,--ELECTROLYTE OXIOATION, BENZEN.Elp Z INC OXI,0E, ELECTRODE, PHENOL, PYROCAT ECHOL PHOTO EFFEC' HYDROQUINONE, T C ONTROL '14APKING--NO RESTRICTIONS -DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED :PROXY REEL/FRAME--3006/1429 STEP NO--IJR/0364/7~0/006/001/0097/0100 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0135LO2 A S- I F I r- 0- 2/3 010 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--27NOV7C ~CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0135102 .ABSTRACT/F-XTRACT--tU) GP-0- ABSTRACTf THG PHOTOELECTROCHEM. OXIDN, OF C ISUB6 H SUB6 IN OIL. ALK. SOLN. ON A ZNU ELECTRODE' WAS STUDIED BY PREVIO USLY DESCRIBED !4ETHOO (1969). THE! ELECTRODES WERE POLYCRYST. ZNO WITH 40DN. OF 0.5 ATOM PERCENT GA AND A REVEPSHILE H REFERENCE ELECT.RoDE IN N KOH WAS USED. ELECTROLYTE WAS ~O.SN K SU[12~,SO SUB/t SAT00 WITH C SU86 H SU56 WITH ADDED KOH TO MAINTAIN A CONSTOiPH OF 11.0. THE MAJOR PR17MARY OXIDN. PRODUCT WAS PHOH, THEYIELD OF WHICH DEPENDED ON THE ELECTRODE POTENTIAL 130PERCENT AT 1.6 V). AQDhJL-: HIGHEER PHENOLS SUCH AS PYROCATECHOL AND HYDROQUINIGNE WERE ALSO FORMED f~ESIDES H SUB2 1) SUB2 OCCURRING IN THE SOLN. OUR-ING MAO% TF.THE POLARIZATIOiN OF THE ELECTRODES WAS PROLONGED, AN' AMORPHOUS DARK BROWPl FILM WAS FORIHED O~4 THE ANODE, PROBABLY OUEE TO THE FURTHER OXION.. PRODUCtS or- c. suq6 ~i 'SU36 AND PHOH, THE PHOH IN THE SOLN. WAS OETO. BY GAS CHROMATOG. USING A FLAME LONIZATION DETECTOR AND A 1 M TIMES 3 MM~ STEEL COLUMN PACKED WITH GRAPHtrfZE0 GARf30JN 11LACK AT 1700EGREES AND WIT14AN CARRIER GAS AT 1.5- L. PER Hk.~ TH'--- HIGHER Pl*1401.5 WERE UETD. sp,E-cm6pH6'romi'-vilCALLY; H SIJ32 0 SUB2 WAS DETO. BY I GDOME TRI CALLY AND THE ZN IONS ~091APLFXOME TRI CALLY. N, OF C SU86 H SU-B6 TO PHO.'ri IS DESCRIBED 1BY (SHOWN 04 THE 0X101 MICROFICHE) T14E 0 ISPROPOkT IONA T ION OF]hADICAL C. SU136 H SUB6 OH 14AS ALSO PROBABLY* 2C SU1136 H SU046 OH YI'ELDS PHOH PLUS H SU92 0 PLUS C SUB61 H THE NICREASE OF H SUB2 0 SUB2 DURING TH' llkRADN. WAS EXPLAINED BY THE REACTION: HO SU32 PLUS H SUB2 O,FORMS AND IS FORMED FROM H SIJB2 0 .SU32 PLUS OH.. THE PRIMARY ANODIC R EACT I ON, ON THE ZNO EL ECTRODE IN ALKALI SOLN.. WAS THE OISCNARGE.~Or- OH ION -TO CH RAbiCAI-;, UNCLASSIFIE -:1-:- q ; , zi, -_ 7 -1-1- - I ~ , ; - z - - I : . :I :. ~j - - 1 : i - R , I i : ;f I - i I I I I : i 11 : i, I R , i - ! : I - I I 1 7 1 , . - 2/2 013 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE---30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0121706 ABSTRAC-TIEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- A8STRACT4 THE SYNTHESIS OF HCLO SUB4 WAS STUDIED BY DETG. THE EFFECTS OF-TEMP.v'ANODIC POTENTIALi CONCNS. OF CL PRI.M.E :NEGATIVE AND CLO SUB4 PRI14E NEGATIVE ONTHE ELECTROCHEM. PpOCESSES OCCURR-ING IN HCLO SUB4. IN THE FORMATION OF HCLO SU84 WHICH BEGINS AT Z.4 V AND REACHES A MAX. VALUE AT, 2.8~-2.9 V LOWERING THE TEMP. TO MINUS ZODEGREES SIGNIFICANTLY ACCELERAfES THE PROCESSI..CONCN. CHANGES OF CL PRIME NEGATIVE FROM 0.5 TO 1.8 N AND OF.CLO SU34 PRIME NCGATIVE FROM 3 TO 814 HAVE NO EFFECT EXCEPT THAT-ON~OXIDNs AT-THE HIGHEST CONCN. OF H%.L AND HCLO SUB41 THE CURRENT EFFICIENCY DECREASES. FACILITY: FIL.-KtilMo INST. IM. KARPOVA.ip -MOSCOWt: USSR. UNCLASSIFIED 112 010- UNCLASSIFIED .:PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 e-TITLE--PRINCIPLES OF ANODIC PkOCESSES, WPERCHLORIC. ACID ANO IN A MIXTURE ~~OF, PERCHLORIC ANO HYDR-2CHLORIC~ACIOS. ON. A PLt-TINUM ELECTRODE -U- AUTHOR-03)-SHIMONIS, I.V., RAKOVi, A.A.s--VESELOVSKJY-t V.I. 4TRY OF INFO--USSR ,--S0U9CE-_ELEKTROKHIMIYA 19701 6(2)t 163'8 TE PUBL I SHE D------ 70 AREAS --CHE14 IS TRY OPTC_ TAG.S--PERCHLORIC ACID, HYDROCHLORIC ~ACI Ot OXIDATIQNv CHEMICAL REACTIOW K INET ICS PLATINUM ELECTRODEi- UNTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTION s .'-.DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO ~r~ -PROXY REEL/FRAME--199e/li48 STEP NO--UR/031)4/70/00,'i/002/0163/0168 tRC ACC EESSION NO--AP0121707 UNCL4-SS-IFIED Now t17 1411[I0-,;;A ;1i L-11', IMF ----~.2/2 ONCLASSIFFE0 PROCESSING DATE--30OCT470 ~-CIRC ACCESSION ND--AP0121707 ::ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE KINETIC PROCESSES OCCURRING IN THE OXIDN. OF CL IONS WERE STUDIED-BY RECORDING POTEN60STATIC POLARIZATION CURVES IN SOLNS-OF 0.5-1t.5 N HCLO SUB4 ANO IN 4 N HCLO SUB4 PLUS (10 NEGATIVE PRIME3 MINUSI). 14 HCL AT 20-340E.GREES wiT.4 Pr ELECTRODES. A DISTINCT RELATION WAS FOUND BET14EEN THE-POSITION AND BOUNDARIES OF THE POTENTIALS OF SEP. PARTS OF THE:POLAR17-ATION CURVES, RECORDED BOTH IN THE PURE ACID AND THE ACID MIXT. IT.IS ?ROPOSE0 THAT EACH PART OF THE CURVE CORPLESPONDS TO A UNIQUE STATE OF THE ELECTRODE SURFACE. EXPTS. SH014ED THAT,THE SEP.,PA.RTS OF THE POLARIZATIaN CURVE CORRESPOND TO DEFINITE COMPNS. OF,ANODE PRODUCTS AND CHANGE IN YHE OF THE OXIDN, OF. CL IONS FACIL I TY:: FIZ.-KHIM. INST. KARPOVA., MOSCOW, USSRO UNC L AS 5 1 F r E 0 USSR UDC 6204184.61539.562- 0' 11:1~ELYA S~~Y, Y~~,S ~,G 'IMIIA, L. P11 I ZAKWOV, V. I., JUIULO, YU. P., nian Correspondence PolytechzAc Institute "Impact Ductility of a Composite Ylate:~iaW' Moscow, Metallovedenlye I Terziches~aya Obrabotka Eatallov, No 7, 1973, pp 36-37 Abstraott The impact ductility, of an A141 NI composite )ras investigated on .3 .1sPecimens of the Al-Ni eutectic alloy 7 in vacuum deponding on the cross grown section of Al Ni f It-or. The Impact ductility was fotuid to I)a independent of 3 the testing tem-porature and to~depend on. the crystalliration rate. Accoiding to fractographic data, in impact bending of specimens of an AI-Al Hi composite with great interf iber distances# the crack propagates more slowly than on speci- with small Interfiber distances* This,rGr-ults in increased fracture of an Al-A Ifi composite obtaired at low crystallization rates. Tho AI-Al N1 material ~3 3 possesses a low notch sensitivity; on the maerorelief of fractures of notchless specimens, local zones of briitle.failure are absent. One -figure, ten biblio- graphic refoxences. 9 USSR VESELYANSKIY, 1-U. S. -GOIRUSHKEM, L. P., ZUMAROV V. 1. KURILOJI 17J. 2F., and Correspondence To echnic" Insti-`t-,~t,, lyt Method of StudyinS the Microrelief of 'FXactures in a. o s i t e n A' -A13Ni Coii Moscow, Zavodskaya LaID ratoriya VOI 39, 'No 6, JLm 73~ ~P)? 720-721 Abstract: The fractmres of mmples of an Al-Al. N mposite vnterial produccd 'I co, by directed crystal I ization o ff a i iAl-Ni eiitecQ alloy' -urere studied. 'Mva samples, 5-6 mm in dim,-,eter and 60-70 mr-11 long, were 6~--ovn in vacuw-i by t~-ie Chok-hralls1kiy T:rethod at crystallization rates of 30-500 Ifne s--mDles had a unidirectlonal fibrous struct-1.1-re cons i stin- of an allavdnur-i rein-,~orc:ad with Al-Ni -Pibers with a diameter of 1 to 0.2 microns. ~ Yicrosec-Lions of frac- tures rlz~vealed tiny r(YIs of the reinforcim, prmase, free. fro.-m the matrix This pruved that cracks am, pro-pagated not only across Ure fiberr;, breakir., g but alono the fiberri into the fiber-matrix irmlerfv'Ce. ftj~jure, I ldbliotr~raphi- -cal reference. IJSSR UW 669-29:539.376 FROKOSMMI, D. A., VASIL"M&IIA, 'ff,. V., aj1d,UETIYAKN, V. I., Poscow IIJIEher Technical School "Effect of Zirconixv.-i Concentration on Creep of Niobilm-Zirconiuni J'aloys" Sverdlovsk, Fizika Metallov i Metallovedeniye, V01 35, 110 5, 1973, PIP 1045- 1051 -Abstract: The creep of ITb-7,r alloys containing, 1, 5j 1.0, and, 20 percent L ~t U Zr was studied on 15-n-in rods at 1040-1200 00. SaximleG were -orenarcd fl~o:_; an caled at 1LODOC for 5 hours. The alloy containin-l-~j Zr sho,,red the Inggot ann 9 hi&hest -resistance 11-o creep. 'j-his is attrit-tited to the nature of the phy-,ico- chemical interaction of Nb and Zr and to the ability of :~irconiuri in t_11:;s concentrantion to saturate by almost 10%; the lattice defects (grain bou-n-dariles, subgrairs, arid individual dislocatioas). An increase in the zirconiwi! (,.on,- cent-ration above 1~ lowered the heat resiStant Pro-Per-ties of alloys because the melting termarature of Zr i1s.lover compared with ITb and it-,s hi-her dif- fusion nz-bility. 46 U 6 3;; UD C 6,21. ?911.,94?.J5 -015.6zo S., Cand ate of T e cn ML )k nica~ Sciences, 4L~`,,OVA, ~i. "W!echnical Sciences and PYATAKO, L.. N Engineer (U~~a nlar, Correspondence ?Olytec;-~nical Inotituto) "State o Kasi%in- Surfaces of the Ai-!r-3 Alurinum Allo Alter Plasma Cutting" Y, '0 7, Xoscow, 3varochnoye Proizvedstvo, 1% Jul ?0, Pp 7-9 Abs-%.racL: A study of the thin flashing surface structure of alurdnLL-, allc.,-s subjected to plasma are cutting makes it possible to dezcrnina the ci-,yst,-__'iza- tion PatLern of matal cut edges from which. data may be o otainod for tilh-j co,,trol of cutting process conditions. Thii is particularly important when iLems, 00- tainod by 1).Lasn~ cutting are weldcKi to:yeth(-,r Without subvt3quent edge trisr;,iisw. cutting was condlucted manually and by using a platnatron. ~ho exp-wrimental procedure i5 described. Electron fractograins of the flashing i:;urI:,IcV inderorelief after minual and muchanical plasma qutting~. -ire presentod~ nd analyzed in relzation to the degroe of their defectiveness and i4fluence on surXaco auality. 1.'he re- show t~,at: 1) structures of flash out edges artsr mechanical cuttinq are La more "' vorable than those after manual cutt;j_ng;, 2) macji~~nl(~al autting On.5oures a a inner cut surface 'than manual cutting; -3),a statis:tical- ova itution of micro- relief varieties is necossary for a more objective- and reliable, determination of flashing edge quality. figures, 10 references. MI INS USSR UDC 539.376+532.135 VESHCHEV, A. A., SHANIN, N. P. StExtrusion-Rheological Properties.of Commercial Asbestos 'Materials" Sb. nauch. tr. Yaroslav. tekhnol.~in-t (Collection of Scientific Works of 'ka, Yaroslav Technological Institute), 1972,~Vol. 31, pp. 27-32 (from RZh-1-lekhani NO 3, Mar 73, Abstract No 3V550) Translation: The rheological curves for asbestos materials with various con- tents of rubber are presented that were obtained with the aid of a plunger extruder at a temperature of 70'.. Consecutive decreases in the length of the mouthpiece of the extruder were used to determine loses~w- the input to Oie ebannel as a function of the diameter of the channel. of the mouthl)iece, the diameter of the plunger, the properties of the asbestos material, and the rate of extrusion. These losses amount to a considerable portion of the total pressure in the head of the extruder. A curve of the flow was obtained for each diameter of the motithpiece which is explained by the p~ug-like motion of the asbestos material with slippage at the walls. , It is noti-d tha- the effect of slippage is a function both of the transverse dimensions,and of the cleanness of the working of the channel surface., The.dependence of the shear stress on 1/2 - , - -- 1- USSR USSR UDC 539.376+532.135 VESHCHEV, A. A., SHANIN, N. P. "Effect of Formula Composition on the.Extrusion-Rheological Properties of Asbestos Materials" 5b. nauch. tr. Yaroslav. tekhnol, in-t (Collection of Scientific Works of Yaroslav Technological institute), LM, Vol. 31, pp~33-3T(from. RZh-Mekbanika, No 3, Mat 73, Abstract No 3V551) Translation: The rheological properties of commercial asbestos materials based on butadiene rubber (content in composition 15% by weight) and asbestos (45%) and also several model mixtures differing in the rubb~-r and asbestos content in the composition were investigated by~the-method of capillary viscosimetry. The experimental setup consisted.of a plunger extruder and the mouthpiece in the head consisted of a cylindrical capillary and provisiom was made for shortening the mouthpiece. The volumetric flow.Q aiid,the pressure P ahlead of the Input to the capillary were measured. The magnitude of input p-.'essure losses P depends in on the ratio of the rubber and asbestos constant and the power index Indicating the nature of the effect of the composition on.F in is also determined by the 1/2 USSR VESHCHEV, A. A., SHANIN, N. P., Sb. nauch. tr. Yaroslav. tekhnol. in-t, 1972, Vol. 31, pp 33-37 composition and additionally by processing~conditions. The dependence of tan- gential stress on the shift rate is noti,sitgle valued since it does not effect -the diameter of the channel. It is assumed that averiged values of the stresses under the.selected shift rates can be used; 'the maximum deviations did not exceed �27%. This effect is associated'with the slippage at the wall and can be taken into account in calculating P by the introduction of a correction factor. A. Ya. Malkin. 7/2 112~ 024 UNCLASSIFIED 'PROCESSING DATE--090CI70 T ITLE-CHEMI LUMINESCENCE IN HY0;tUCAR8(jN_ UX IDA T I ON 4N SOLUTION. S D~-EM I SS LON STePS -U- .QUANTITATIVE TUDY UF THE EXCITATIO 4N ~,'AUTHUR_((J2)-fjl-LYAKOVv V.A., VESLLEV, R~F... V" OF INFO* USSR ~'.SQUKCE PHOTOCHEM. PHO-901310L. 1970,.11(3), 179-92L ~QATE_ PUBLISHED---70 Uf3.ACT :AREAS' CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS I C. TAGS--CHEMILUMINESCENCE, HYDROCARBQN OXIDATION, CARBUNYL COMPOUND, CYCWHEXAI~ONE, EXCITED S;TATE, VIBRATJON C lu"N T R 0 LN.ARKING-NO RE5TRICTIONS MENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED VUCUl .1 -PRUXY STEP NO--UK/0000/701011~/003/0179/0192 C_ !JRC ACCESSION N UNCLASSIFIED 212 024 UNCL ASS I F I ED, PROCESSING DATE-090CT70 C11KC ACCESSIUN NO-AP01128103 GP-0- ABSTPACT. THE CHEMILUININE-Sf~*ENCE iD8SO. IN THE VIS18LE PEGIO94 GURIING THE CJXIUN..O~ HYDROCAABO-NS 114, LIQ. PlAASE RlisuLTS PBON FROM P01OXY RADICAL DISPROPORTIONATION, THE EMITTER BEFUG A A, YL CuMpfj.'IN THE TRrPLET STATE, A NO. OF *E.XAAPLES OF 'ENERGY TRANSFER FROM -AR BON ,r WL LOMPDS. (SUCH AS AGETGf'HENOtqE AND CYCLOHEXANONF) TO ~ -HYDROCARBONS WERE EXAPIU. ExC I rAT ION. YlELDS WERE CALCO.. FROM THE PA rE kEACTIfJiN RAIES. CUPIPPETING coNsrS., EMISSION YIELDSi INTENSITIES, AND P1,110CESSES DEPENDENr o,,,i rRANISFORmATION UF CHEM. ENERGY J[jo Vja,-~ATInNS IBRAIJUNAL EXCITATION ARE ELEMONIC EXCITATION OF THE CAR13ONYL GOMPD., V -OF THE~CARSONYL COMPD. IN THE GROUND STATE~ AND REVERSE DECOMPN..OF AN COMPLEX INTU PEROXY: RADICALS ~FACILITY: INST_ PLISHCHINO ON OKAF USSR* UNCLASSIFIED 2/2 Gi5 UNCLASSIFIED PkOCESSING DATE--18SEP70 CJRC ACCESSIOIN 1410--AP0108943 ABSTqACT/EXTRt.CT--(Ul GP-0- AssrRACT. IT WAS PREVEOUSLY SHOWN IN OUR LABORATOizy rHAT SOME REPTILES (ERIX TATARTCUS AND.ESTLJOO HORSFIE1.01) -". a SUSCEPTIBLE TO FOWL SARCOMA VIRUSt -RUPPIN STRAIN. IN Wt:r% THE SCHMILT THIS STUDY, PATHOGENICITY OF FOWL SARCOMA VIRUS FC)R REPTILES INATRIX NATRIX, NATRIX TEISSELLATA, AGAMA SANGLJINOLENT.Av AGAMA ERYTHROGASTRA, VARANUS GRIS.EUS# EUMECES SCUTATUS7 EREMIAS PERSICAT EREMIAS VELOX, GYMNODACHTYLUS FEDTSCHENKOVI) AND AXOLOTLES WAS INVESTIGATED. THE VIRUS WAS SHOWN TO-BE ONCGGENIC.NOT ONLY FOR TORTOISES AND SNAKES BUT ALSO FOR LIZAP-OS.. INOCULATION WITH THE VIRUS OF YOUNG BOAS RESULTED IN '~.'.-.~:DEVELOP.MENT OF CYSTS IN THE SUBMAXILLARY AREA. SARCOMA PRODUCED BY THIS -T Vlq.US,-. IN. AN ADULT BOA APPEARED. ~TO. CONTt'IN -INCOMPLtTcl FORM OF THE -JOKOGE-NIC VI-RUS,. UNCLASSIFIED USSR STUPAY, D. "Xew pulse Diodes" Radio, No 6, June 1972, PP 57-58 Abotrac, . The diodes XD50~7 and D219S are described, The RV-O~V in a diffusion A silicon pulse diode intended for use In electronic compirters as a switchin.c- unitt for pulse device with a short duration of pulses (tons: of nance0conds). It can. oleo be used for detection, rectification;, damping, volte-ne stabilization, and k, _50,71~ diodes, the EDIVV has other pur-poees. As contrast-A with the KD50~A and YD better characteristic a with respect to capacitance and ~revorije curront. Tine basic electricul parameters of the hD5015A.0 KD'~;0'1-9, and KD5~0-,17 are discussed, curvee of the diatribution of the uctual.-values of the RD/6.11 por~!Ta-,Itera Ure preeented, and tho construction of ~ the KD503V is dei3cribod. The D219S in a silicon alloy-type pulse diode which can:be used as a switching unit for pulse devices with a short duration of pulses (microseconds rard freetione of micro- seconds] -- e.g., in logical circuits of electrical coqput!5ra. Curves of the actual values of the diode's parameters are presented. 6 fig. r- 117 2/2 038 UNCL ASS I F I ED: PROCESSING DATE---27NOV70 ~-CIRC ACCESSION NO-ANO135256 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. CONTRARY TO CUST04ir THE IISOYUZ 9'-' WAS LAUNCHED LATE IN THE EVENING. WHY WAS SUCH AN aUNUSUAL TIME CHOSEN? -TPE FACT IS THAT THE FLIGHT PROGRAM OF PISI).YUZ 911 Us FILLED WITH COMPL,ICATED SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL EXPERIMENTS, THE SCHEDULE CALLS FOR A SERIES OF GEOLOGICAL GEOGRAPHICAL: JNVESTIGAT10NS.~ :IT IS NECESSARY THAT, THE AREAS SUBJECT TO INVESTIGATIOIN-S~ BE-ILLUMINATEG BY DAYLIGHT OR ING. T ERETOREt TkE LAUNCH TIME WAS AT LEAST THE LIGHT OF EARLY EVEN H 4 . COMPUTED "FROM THE END," SO TO SPC"AKI A.ND:THE AlqSWE;k WAS ZZOO HOURS. -THE-INTERESTS OF TELEVISION VtEWERS SUFFERED SOMEWHAT, BUT THE SPACECRAFT IS AFTER ALL A SCIENTfFIC. RES~EARCH LABORATORV. (INCLAS.') f F USSR UDC 539.374 VBSTVUT), "Effect of Adsorption on Hardness and the Mobility oE Dislocations Close to the Surface of Nonmetals" V sb. Mikroplastichnost' (Ificroplasticity Collection of Works), Moscow, "Metaflurgiya", 1972, pp, 301-315 (fromIA-Mekhanika, No 3, Mar 73, Abstract 'No 3V523) Translation: The change in microhardness caused by adsorption is described and of adsorption of water, complex ions and organic molecules on the behavior of dislocations in the near-surface layer in metals and in ionic and covalent solids is discussed. It is shown that the hardness and mobilitv of dislocations as a function of the~specific solid-surrounding, medium system can be decreased or increased. An explanation of these effects,is given. 52 ref. Author's abstract. USSR :UDC 621.375.82 VETKTNL, V. A., KHR01-MCH, A. M. "Longitudinal Mode Competition in a Ring Laser with an Isotropic Resonator" V sb. Kvant. elektronika (Quantum Electronics--collection of works), No 3, Moscow, Soviet Radio, 1972, pp 59-63 (from RZh-Fizika,Afo 12, Dec 72, Abstract No 12D900) Translation: A theoretical study was made of a ring laser in a longitudinal magnetic field when the anisotropy of.the: resonator is purely circular. A study was also made of the four-wave mode of generation. Two cases are possible here; the fiist, in which two pairs of counter, identically polarized circular waves are generated, and a second case, in which two orthogonal pairs of waves are.gencrated., The nonlinear~fnteraction of the travelin- walia and the stability of both modes were investigated. Con- sideration of the steucture of the operating lavels lvub, to~ the fact that in the investigated model the nature of the interaction of ttie counter vaveg -f ers qualitative'Ly'f rom: that obtained by means of the of different modes d-;,- scalar Lamb model for analogous, linearly palgrized waves. The interaction of the traveling waves turns out to be such that independently of the struc- ture of the operating levels the condition of~stability of the four-wave 1/2 USSR VETKIN, V. A., KUROMYKH, A. M., V sb. Kvaht,6elektronika (Quantum Electronics- collection of works), No 3, Moscow,~ Soviet~Radio, 1972, pp 59-68 mode is violated only for an intermode spacing of the sIpme order as the magnitude of the uniform width of the operating transition-line. Here, depending on the type of transition, the f our--~wave mode' converts to single mode or the generation conditions of one w*ave in each -mode. The bibliography h s 10 entries. a 2/2 - 25 -.043 UNCLASSI FIED PROCESSING DATE--IISEP70 J-_lTLE--I_NFRAR ED EQUIPMENT OF METEOR SYSTEM SATELLITEls -u- .:AUTHOR-VETLOV, I.P., YEREMINt V.Pe, LISTR A. V.~j RO(~IONOVv V.T. -TRY OF INFO--USSR I GIDROLOGIYA, 1970, ~NR 4., PP 80-91 7-:,DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 -~~..SUBJECT~ AREAS--SPACE TECHNOLOGY, NAVIGATION '-TOPIC TAGS--:-IR SENSOR, ATMOSPHERIC CLOUD, SPACECRAFT, CARRIED FQ)UIPMIENT, ~~METEOROLOGIC SATELLITE/(U)METEOR METEOROLOGIC SATELLITE MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ..-.7.P.ROXY REEL/FRAME---L987/1041 STEP NO--UR/0050/70/000/004/0030/0091 CIRC ACCFSSION NO--AP0104439 IA PROCESSING )ATE-11SEP70 UNCLASSI FIED C I.R C. ACCESSION NO--AP0104439 _~ABSTRACWEXTRACT-W) GP-0- 4BSTRACT. INFRARED EQUIPMENT OF METEOR :,SYSTE.4 SATELLITEI DESTINED FOR TRACING THE CLOUD DfSTRIBUT172N OVER THC HIGH AND DAY SIDES OF THE EARTH IS BEING PESCRIBED. PRINICIOLES 0~: OPERATION OF THE EQUIPMENT, AN OPTIZAL SCHEME OF THE OP~.BDARD RECEIVING A BLOCK SCHEME-OF THE GROUND PHOTO RECORDING -DEVICE, THE BASIC -,:PARAMETERS AND CHARACTERISTICS OFJHESE DEVICES AREE CONSIDEk.ED. THE OF INTERPRETATION OF THE INFORMATION OBTAINED ARE DISCUSSED. ----------- 422ULlAul '~-wa "; ,l". 6-iial 6a USSR VETLUTSKIY, V. N.P GONION, N. V W, "Calculation of the Boundary Layer on a Triangular Wing 44ished by a Super- sonic Air Stream at an Angle of Attack" Teplo. i Massoperenos. T. 1. fHeat and Mass Transfer, Vol I Collection of Works], Minsk, 19712, pp 165-174, (Translate&from Referativnyy Zhurnal, MelJianika, No 10, 1972, Abstract No.10 ~B721,i by A. V. Bashkin) Translation: A theoretical study is presented of the development of a three-dimensional laminar boundary layer on asharp cone, washed by a supersonic strcam~ of gas at in allgle of! attack. Due to thc con;cal naturc -n 5 of the external flow, integration of the ll,rancltl equatio :; i reduced to the two-dimensional problem, whiOt is solv(id numeri.cally by ilia viothod of finite differences using an. implicit system:based on~a 6-point model, M an example, a cone is studied with elljpticity factor. 6, = 3 and peak angle X =.75', washed by a flow of an,ideal gas:'at- Mach number 1 7 and angle of attack a 30o. USSR oc 541.5,547.ilt iS RAMMY, 0. A.j KHAUTOVt F. G., VERSCHCHAGIII* A. N., VETIXHSKIKH, 1. M. Arbuzov Institute of Organic and Fhyolcal Chemistry 1,zeni A. f M-MR Acaddrq of Sciences "Conformational Analysis of Some Compounds Containing the P(0)CH2G1 Group" I-1,08cow, Izvestiya AkademU Nauk SSR Seriya Dimicheskaya, No ill 1972p pp 2446-24.50 Abstracti A study was ru-de of six.compounds containing.the PCH 2C1 groups- the dichloroanhydride of chloromethylphosphonic acid (1)# diriethyl (chloromethyl) phosphine ox1de (11), the nethyl(::hloromettiyl)pbosphonic acid chlQride (III)# diphenji(chloromethyl)phosphine oxlAe~(IV)~- phenyl(chloromethyl)phosphonic acid chlorldo (v). and phenyl-methyl(ohloroinothyl)phosphi.~le oxide (VI) iYP 60) CH C1 - P. R2 C, (I) Pl R1 CH (it); Rl 61, R~ CH: (III); 3 3 R R J~ C H (IV); R1 C H R, Cl M; C 6 5 6 P e5- 2 C1, 1/2 R 3 (VI) 36 - - IM, USSR RAYEVSXIY, 0. A., et al., Izvestiya Akademil Nauk SSR Seriya Kbimicheskaya, 197 No 11 2f pp 2446-2450 On rotation around the P-1C bond three positions-of the C-Cl bond are possible corresponding to the peak potential energies 0 0, 0 C Cl P R R 2 P 2 2 R 4- Rl trans gosh-l gosh-2 The infrared spectral data# the dipole moments and the Kerr constant were used to investigate the spatial structure of the compounds containing the P(O)Cff2cl group. Equilibrium of the goshand trans-conformers the position of which dsperA3 on the nature of the subetitutions on the -phosphorus atom is character- istic of all the investigated compounds in solution. The factors causing the energy- stability of the conformers uere evaluated qu'=ti-tativaly. In the absence of bulky substitutiozis. the electrostatic Int6ractiona; play- the defining role. The frequency of.the valence-escillations of the phosphoryl group depends on the spatial orientation of:tbe Irregulax group. 2/2 T T -M-r M~-T-'5 5:1~1'1-14 V NIt U! ';XYLA III I r I; I* FV:l ;;F'z IN."R :1 11 Hfill, ~1'11AI l.7 USSR IKAFAROV, V. V., VETOKHIN, V. N., BOYARINOV, A. I. "Programming and Computer Methods in Chemistry and Chemical Technology" Pro rammirovaniye i VychislitelInyye Metody v Khimii i Khimicheskoy Tekh- 9 1972, 487 pages nonologii (English Version Above), Moscow, Nauka Press, (Traiislated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Kibernetika, No 6, 1973, Abstract No 6V709K). Translation: This book studies problems of the application of computer equipment for the solution of problems in'themistry and chemical technology. The principles of programming and elements of computer ;nathematics are presented in readable form, as -well, as certain general problems of the preparation of chemical and technological. problems for, computer solution. J Ace. Ur, Abstracting *'S"' ice; /'Rdf . Cod PeO52447' CHEMICAL ABM. 5/10 -It ira 104477p I calcul 9 f6r multi-, t system VINp. Boyamo fa ~ I ~; rov. ~v A. -~;Axn -Techno AjisL hn. se 0. V.A. - Veto tn~-Vft (titsic* tA rTU I'M. S 7WER-Or Mendeleeva. MVT 100~ It Qj 63-72 (Russ)., A pr6 'lot. computing ~the. vapor- ck- - bw liq. iquil. in md1ticornpoiients./stenIA is Sari 0.1 Tho ist pot " " i '' " ete ~A of the of the algorithm is aimed at.,cj~tab rs. Wiison.e quations, Eipreisions a -'f th - ac:tiv(ty coeft. ~e~ given. or it. Of an arbitrary component of'o. multic6niOonent system and for. detg. the, parameters A from'ex -p . ipa'xy. U bi 6qui).4atii bfill pairs of components participa~tjfig Jn, the vapor ~ phase of th4~ ~multi- component system. klir. is obtaitied by ~~the m6thod 6f dch b ' Ti a of the s44ir SUMSSive approxus. an ecked yi t e sup es cc deviations of the equil. sys6ems~ from the data ob&.ined ek ti. f or p The un several control poiri,ts... f, ctilohilAeoiildence-of. e vapor of the 'iti On.the i=' ipro~i4, either purecompon" P trug PKI) ao + aj1+,a-,O + a~f +`.,-...,'or'9y the h4toint equation. The trend of c~led',,ILrili~6l~6~pii~~itersi~eb4~ked by use of a minimizing functi6n. Them sksfetns ~ studied ls~ere MelCO-CHOrEtOlf; . EtOH-meihy1c')id;kntane (1),. and hexane-I-EtOH-ben2en~.~ Complete ALGOL progt-A:rns are giver for calcg. the parameters Aand~OW.66rnpns. of tKn-. vapor phase of a binary, system at.con'' r, 1. hd of the v ap6l~ phase of a multicomponent niixt. gt~~a~Jiveu C~ xptl. an(! calcd. data are tabulated. M. Wixky If Y, REEUFRAME~ USSR UDC 535-343-31 SrYRIKOVICH, H. A., Acavlemician, YUMEVICH, G. V.1 VMLROV, AL. A., and VIGASIN, A. A., High-Tenperature, Institute, Academy of Scien6es USSR, Ylosco-4 "Iblecular Composition of High-Density Water VaporandSome of Its Thermo- dynamic Properties" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 210, No 2, 1973PI PP 321-323 Abstracts Measurements previously performed by the autbors on the fraction in of monomeric molecules 4 superheated vapor..showed 'hat the degree of disso ciation sharply changes as the vapor density increases and therefore it has to be considered in an analysis of the vapor properties. The present article continues the study of tho formation-of associates in high-density water va-por and analyzes the effect of such c6mplerang on the:enthaalpy and en-tropy of- water vapor. For this purpose a, series of. neasurements were taken of the fraction of monomeric nolecules in va-por at ptessures fi,om, 2? to 180 ata and a temperature of 3600 C. The size ofthe;associate was found, and a comparl- son was made of tabular water-vapor en-thalpy and entropy data with calculated data for a mixture of ideal monomeric and dimeric gases., The re3ults 1/2 2/2 USSR UDC 539.385 LOZITSKIY, L. P., VE1110 "Certain Problems in Studying the Longevity of High-Tem1perature Alloys Under the Interaction of Mechanical and Thermal:Fatigue Processes", Sb. nauch. tr. Kiyev. in-t irizh. grazhd. aviatsii (Collection of Scientific Works of the Kiev Institute of Civil AviationiEngineers), 1971, No. 1, pp 9.1-97 (from RZh-Mekhanika, No 12, Dec..71,, Abstract Ito 12V1529) Translation: A technique is presented forstudying the longevity of: structural heat i -esistant sheet materials under theTsimultaneous occurrence of mechanical and thermal fatigue processes. The construction of the test stand on which the samDle is subliected to cyclic bending deformations is described in detail. The sample is heated by the transmission of electric cuvrent then cooled by an air blast. it is shown that this complex loading reirime can be reduced to a certain simple equivalent regime consisting of a regis-C-1 of loading with a constant normalized static stress with an additional vibraticn load at constant '16--emperature. The order of calculating the; values ot thi! static stress an,! temperature is presented, assuming *the pripciple of !in--ar suirnation of zhe 1/2 272 010, UNCLASS 'FlEd PRb6tESSING DATE--04DEC70 CIRC ACCESSION NO-AN012-2958 ,:~~.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, ACCORDING TOITHE ARTICLEr A "GOSLAV SHIPYARDr THE "ULYANIKIII) BUILT iFOR:. THE SOVIET UNLON A MERCHANT Yt, Sr- SHIOS APE NAMEO FOR SOVIET WRITEKS, tHESE SHIPS ARE, FLEET WHO THE IIARKADIY- GARDAR", THE 110MITRIY ~GULTYANI,JHE "NIA7.Yi KH K ET TH ~-'"ALEKSAINDR GRIN". THE LAST SHIP,CONSTRUClED:lNl TH[$ SERAES WAS THE -.449,000 TON CARGO CAPACiTY "IVAN KOTLYAREVSKlyllo TtiF CLINSTRUCTION OF :`-THE "KONSTANTIN PAUSTOVSKLY" AND THEJtGAM7AT TSAOAS,-kfl IS TO BE COMPLETED ~JN THE FALL ANO ENXF SORING, RESPEcTIVELY. UiNCLASSIFIED Acc.i Hip. '0 Ov 0 &401040 Ref .Code: Ku,we.tsov.-- -A. A.; Alifanov,-O. Yetroy." V I.: Zolotoy, At- A Titov.. M. I. PrbUibility'Ghara&.eristics of Strength of A-L-craft.Katerials and Dimensions of an Assortment (Veroyatnostyro7e kharakteristUtprochnosti aviatsi6nnykh m;Ite- rialov i-rawterov sortamenta) YIa=al.MoscoW# Mashinostr6yaniye,-1970j' 565 Pp (5L.-2007) TABLE OF CONTEM: ~-Preface 3 -:I" Chapter, 1;. Probability Characteristics of the',Strength~of Materials 9 II Probability CharF-cteristies of Pimensions'ot. an AssortAent h17 Bibliography .*,,The manual contains tables .of. inathematidaj'~ expectaticiis, m9an square 'deviations of-th6 tensile strength tind, yield points relative. oagation and probability characteristics of sheet thickness,~ 6tose-;Sectiorp.. areas of shapes anit thickness of tubes . frcm nonferrous "alloys ---Ar4.steelai The book was written for designers aad ralculat6rs mlployed,~by the aircraft industry and other machine-constmetingeb-i low -7- 77 USSR UDC 632.41633-1(4?+57) A. F. 11ORSHCHA7SKly F A. A a t 1QiMKWf1%.KOV 14K 'CHUMIM, V. A., All-Union Institute of Plant Protection, Lenin&md, Irkutsk Agricultui-al Institut-eq All-Union Scientific Bbaeaxch Institute of .Corns Dnepropetrovsk, Altai Hountain Agricultural Expuinental Station "Root Hot of Grain In the USSW Leningrad, Mkologiya I Fitopatolo0yat Vol 5 Vo 2, 1971, pp 148-155 Abstracti This is a comprehensive lite=tvxe revien of Soviet wo=k in the field of grain root rot, During the 2=t ton yearsi kzouledge about root rot In, wheat and other coreaIs 1= gradually Increased., Yoz-0 U= 55 Iforks on this subject were publinhod or oubmittod for publication Jz the LJZSR. Root xot occurs, in zonea of Insufficient or mstable humldlty, Ir. tho lilcutsk region 12,2-42.Y%,# and in sozo casas as Anuch da 61-3-67i ~r% , a ' the opring wheat is awuaUy infected with root rott whereas In the Samtov v#ont the loszes are 0.5-4.(Y15 and, in exixoms cases, 17.0-10*0;j". Lousea Jn other areas of the Soviet Union axe ei-=-oxatedf together with the approlwUte reerences. Helminthosporium satiyum arA Fusarium avenacemwere isoleved In Eastern, 27 USSR wc-632.9)8 (477-73) of Nikolayevskay Oblast Plant Protec4on !�Lation and VOWDIN, N., ChieL Station Agronomist uBiolaboratory Operating Experience". Moscow, Zemledeliye, No 6, 1970w pp 52-53 Translztion: For the first time in 1969, kolkhozes of our oblast treated 21,500 hectares of seeded and fallow land with Trichogramma against the turnip moth and.other plant-chewing cutworms. Of course, this figure is still very inconsequentUl, but in the next two or three years the farms ~f the oblast plan to treat hundreds of thousands of hectares with entomophages. It is hardly necessary to prove the necessity of extensively using this method of fighting agricultural Dests, and Curt1wr developing and improving it, In the southern, stappe rayons where~many species of chwing outworMse cornborers, and Eurygastsr are widespraidt: a ichemicAl at4a.k ow them is not promis. always effective. The use of entonophagen thero is very ing. 1/7 USSR Zemledel-iye, No 6, 1970, PO 52~-53 VOLODIN, N. qt_ a. Taking this into consideration, in November 1968 the axeoutive committee of the Nikolayevskaya Oblast Soviet of Workers' Deputies,adopted a resolution establishing 16 interkolkhoz and six intersovkhoz biolaboratories, one for each admJnistrative rayon, during 1969-1970. Fourtoer. interkalkhoz biolaboratories are a3xeady in operation. Expertise in organizing them was botrowed from Kiravogradskaya Oblast, whero such laboratories existed alrea in~the prewar per. dy Biolaboratories are co--t accounting organizations. They are directad by a rayon Soviet which is selected by a meeting of authbrized. kolkhozes. As a rule, the chairman of the Soviet is the chief agronomist. 6f the:rayon agricultural production administration, or the head~of the biolab. 'The intorkolkhoz biolaboratory'services the kolkho zes of:the rayon. State farms, may also enter into it. The fixed capital of the bic!Abor4tory~in the first vtaga is f rom "ops paid by the kolkhozea, collected at an averago rate of 30 lrxpecka,per hectarie of tillablo land. 777',z 71 7: USSR VOLODIti, IN., Qt-,a4 Zomledellyet lio 6 F1970, pp 52a-53 At the beginning of 1969, the Kirovogradskaya ObList biclaboratory pro- duced base material for Sitotroga, which was transmitted,'for further reproduc- tion. Parallel with producing Sitotroga, the'lab proceeded with reproduction of Trichogramma. In 1969, tho biolaboratories gathered 17.1 kilograms of eggs of the grain math Sitotroga,.of which 1.8 kilograms was~v 'sod for further con- tamination of graing and 1),2 kilograms for reproduation of Trichogramma. The remaining biomaterial was sold to other laboratories. Dixrirg the entire tach- nological. process the laboratories raised 525.4~million units; of Trichogramma, of which 368 million were used for treating plantod,fia34s,and:l37-5 million for contaminating Sitotroga. Fields were treated on 9.5 farms in rilne rayons. TTichogramma antomophages were released on bare fallow land for use a~gainst the turnip wths and also against stalk corn borers, cabbage cutwormaand.moths, at:an average rate of 17,01DO (from 10,000 to 25,000) individuals per hectare.: ;The number depended on the.arap which was being seeded and tbe degree of contami"tion of the field. In the course of the sux:mer. 19,400 hectares of fields designated for winter crop seeding (including 18,200 hectares.of bare fallow and 1,200 hectaros 3/7 USSR VOLODE, N.,, Qt Al. Zemledeliye, No 6, 1970, w 54-53 of stubble, 1,600 hectares of corn, 40Q bect-ares of sugar boots, and about 200 hectares of vegetable crops and fruit plantings were tr6ated.7 Of this. 19,800 hectares were treated against the tur4p mothur 1,6Mhactareo against stalk corn borers, and 100 hectares against the~cabbage cutworm andimoth. In working with Trichograoma, the conditions recomend4d in the directions of the Ukrainian Scientific Research Institute for Plant,Protection were fol- lowed. Preliminary data allow us to draw the conclusian that a considerable num- -2" of the pests ber of posts have perished due to Trichogramma., . For exa4le, 4 ;b perished at the Rodyan'ska Ukraina. Kolkhozo,16selinovskiy Rayon, in stubble treated with Trichogra=a, 38.5~ on fallow land at the Di;uzhh-%:.Kolkhoz, and 58.,TA at the Pobeda Kolkhoz. At the Zavet.1Vicha Kolkhoz, Kai=kovskiy Rayon, on bare fallow land treated with Trichogramma, 69.2% of turnip:wths perished, while none of the posts perished on fallow,1azx1:not-treatW, with Trichogramma. The corresponding figures were .65.4A and .3.:6% for the Ko]Actoz imeni Petrovskiyp and 71.2% and 1.9~ at the Kolkhoz Imani: Lenin.;; USSR VOLODIN N., a~.a Zemledeliyo. Ho,6.,1970,-pP 52-53 The effectiveness of Trichogramma. in kolkhozes of Vradiyelrskiy, Domanev- skiy, Voznesenskiy, and Pervomayskiy rayons was also calcidated, where approxi- mately the same results were achieved, '-rom three to 13 men were occupied in:releasing Trichogra-ma at the farms. The average output norm was 30 hectares perk day. Trichogramna was sold to kolk- hozes at 50 kopecks per 10,000 units. Treatingone hectare of bare fallow land cost an average of 57 kopecks, while for- corn it.was one ruble 3Z kopeks (re- leasing Z5.000 units per hectare), Tkds is considerably aboaper than chemical treatment. Corn was treated in June and August., " bare 611ow land from the aImpleted by second week in August. All work in applying Tr1qhograw= vis c August 25. The operating experience of the biolabs in 1969 demonstrated that, oven with insufficient equipment and apparatus, they are still alble t6 raise and apply Trichogramma and Tolenomus. We are now taking measures to Increase the productivo capaioities of the biolabs. On order from the rayons. the Nikolayevskayn Oblast Kolkhoz Desigr4ng Institute developed plans for construction of biolaboratorioa. Four of them, 517 USSR VOLODIN, N., Zemledeliye, No 6o 1970i'PP'52-53 Vradiyevskaya, Novoodesskaya, Voznesenskaya, and FervomaXplcaya, will be built, during the current year. Next season, the laboratories will be,abla to treat~.about 100,000 hectares of plantings against chewing cutworms, cornborers, and coadling;moths, and a considerable area of plantings of grain.crops against chinch bugs. The expenses now being Incurred by biolaboratories for obtaining equipment and staff are high for the tire being However, they will,be paid back rapidly. Calculations show that in just three ;ears each.biolaboratory w'111 be able to have an annual Licome that covers expenses for raising andtApplying entomophages, and.part of.their capital can be allotted tolreplenishing,fixed assets and ex- panding production capacities. Every year the cost oX.treatiftentiwill go down. However, despite the broad scope which the etologloa'l mettiod of plant protection is beginning to receive in produotign, theta is atill not sufficilont attention to it on the part of apeoUlized institutes., Dur#g one year of opera- tion, our biolaboratories did notreceive a Single request,: i.advic'ev or recommen- dation from any Ukrainian institute. 617 USSR "21 zomledeliye, No 6. 1970 ~pp voIDDIN, N.,,.g At the present timo we have an approximato'methott for,breeding Tricho gramru,-and an imperfect, complicated method for brooding Telonormus. This is, of course, very little. It is stated in the press that biolaboratories in, our country are working on the cultivation and application of othor,entomophagaes. The All Union Scientific Research Institute of Phytopathology worked out recommendations for breeding and application of the predatory Phytoseyulius nLite for the struggle with spider mites in the protected soA.1 for.oucumbers, at.W the.Samarkand State University has a way of using Phytomyza in,the,lcampaign,a,gainat Egyptian broom rape. But these methods have been:poorly publicized. it seems to us that it has become necessary to organize aative seminars or courses for training biolab warkers, and;also to publish an information bul- letin where laboratoriea could share operating ]mow-how and rea,eivo advice on brooding and applying entomophages. 7/7 USSR U:)C 62-1.3" .3 :zz~0,361~- 2 Lh "Freduenc and D-4stance Dependence of Transn~!.,sion 'L r, fj u-n tile Caze Ot' by Iono-, tering" pheric 3 cat i T1 r. Sib. fiz.-tekhn. in-ta nri '-'Orisk.0m. un-te "Works of th~,:: F.3b-,-,r.iz--i Institute Associated With o:rsk Uni-mrsity) 1970, vyp- pp 14~, -156 fror.,-, RZh- -Radiotekhnika, o 3.0, Oct 70, Abstract ~io IOA159) -ted and used as a bait.is fer a Translation: Exrer-,Mental data am c~ spectral function -which de3cribes the nonhomogene.o-us propei-,ies :ai' thc lowc-v lotio- Spherf-I -(the D region). The spectral functiorli, is used. to e*ta1blis*, relationshins between the parameters- of the nonhomogeneo-us ionosphere atid a function Which charac- terizes transmission losses d -k Ue ur-,-ng propagation, as a function of thie wor ing .'rQa ncy and' radio wavelengthi, Calculatio.-I. by the. resultant formulas gives satis factorj agre-ement with e~meriment. Resum.6, jumme WORM. IHE MECHANICS AND, PHYSICS Cr DESTRUCTION (All-Union Conference in foq~scow) [Article by Candidate. of Technical Sciences N. V. ZD1'kunov; Mos- cow, Vostnik A sSSR, No bar 1.970, pp nii~ , _ , The regular Fifth'All-Union Conference on Strength and. Plasticity,, bLd-ln-Moscow on 22-25 'June, was devoted to the. mechanics and physics'of destxuction.~, Participating in itwere over 700 scientific workers from 36 cities of the Soviet Union and, also specialists from Hungary, ,Fast Germany,, Poland and Czechoslovakia. Twen'ty-four- scienti-11c reports were presented. V. N. voshilov presented a report bn,the machanics- of brittle de- struction which aroused great interest by the breadth of formv- W lation of fundamental questions of strength. V. V. jolotin ex- aminedr..thematical models of tlie process of destruction of stu,chastically heterogeneous solids. Destruction was treated by hin as a random Markovilan process with a discrete set of states and continuous time. The process of spread of a macro- scopic fissure was modelled. I The reporter presented data on testn of o number of different conditions of lo;WInq, with vari- ous prescribed Initial damages. V. V. Moskvltin analyzed qualital~ive featuras of a criterion of Tong-term strength ~of,the type of, llyushin'5 n,911- linear criterion, which Is a qene;~.allratlon of 50.11y' a condition of long-term ntrength. V. P. Tamuzh.proposed a, ~,arlant o~/con- struction of a theory of lonq-:~Eern , strex 'xoth based-on'the concept of, 4cculmulation of damagen. Tho'.report, of 'T. 1. Gollde;~~Iat and V. A. jopnov wan devoted to a general theory of,~_riterla 'of I I /~Istrenq~h of isotropic and anisotropic materialz,- Side by side with the main conditions which thoso:crlterla must: satisfy (con- vexity of the limiting, surSace, ri-ality of the, limiting, state, etc), various geometric interprei..a t ions of them:wcria exaviined',r 190 .--t t971 In the report of Yu. N. F~atotnov the process of c*,evp was de- scribed vp to the MomcnCo~ destruction. The process lt_-elf was treated as viscous flow accompanied by structural changes. The -reporter propo--cd !_-tabl_1sh3.nc kinetic equZiticns, of the develop,,4,~nt of damaqability throuah miacroexperiment. Recently, scientists have been gii.ng more and more atten- tion to the problem of brittle and quaribr-,ttl(.. dest:uctllon. G_ P. chorapanov presented a rcnort on the 11inear n),2chanilcz o_~ do- stiu-ttion. 11~ dealt with c,~rt~,in ouestions con-u)cted with the growth of fissures (the adsorption *mechinism, tho electrochemical Mech=i.,~m, ch&,micc-nechanical ef~.ctts, etc). R. L. Salo,~njk showed that the values characterizing tne crac)-rcri7tr_."'v;~e oi, a naterial, when the time effects are subst~~,nt'-I, do not remain constant. Ho described A rno~-! ror which tr%~, timc, cf~ecl,,~ d~:rllr.G dc~ormijtlon, thta phenomenon of prc-destrvction, etc, t;"-en Into account. S. T. M. loyko told aL-lut ab- Servations of the dentruct'4:~n 01, He cbarac- torized distinctIve of --ne de~itruction at those materi-alz undar cazlditlcin~;, or. hig h'tempeatu-es, cyclical. loads, etc, A number of reports dealt: with variou_.-a'spec~s of fatigue d3struction during cyclical loadin,;. S. V. ~jrrenspn regisrdled the cyclical loading of metal as the deiormation a.* a hatero- gencous polycrystal line conclomarate which ;is delscrib-og_J~y-a-- model in the 'arm of a asyst~m of metraberS provieed,Ul:il~ elastic, Kogo ;v:;'developed, that plastic and viscous propertiez. V. P. ye problem on statistical models oi both a7n~n-kinetic and a kinetic character. AtIc,"%pt5 to link those two,approachea, in his opinion, contribute to the con."irvatilon- a! more corlplete models of fatigue ~which co mbine the advantager of models of one type of the other. R. r" Shneyderavich analyzed the posslbl 111ty of in- terme~riata type of destruction during ellastn-plastic cyclicdl deformation, when the intcnslty of the qua:~Istatic process, ~;on- nected with the accumulation of u4lateral p-lastic,defoe"mation) al;d of the fatique process, conncicted with tho accumul6tion of damAgei,, is of the sara) order of maqnitude. The report of G. S. Pisareriko was devoted to dirtinctive features of the work of maCerials in the prenence of thormal cy- cling and thermal fatiaue. As the basic criterion of th-irmal fttigue of pll~stlcally strengthening: material undor cyclical t3hermal lo4id~; which cause 61ternatLng plastic d(!formalt-lons, the reporter proposed adopting the value of the- sur-n~iry zbsorb,!d cnevcy experided on the p.-,3cc..,,r, of deforrnottional ening. T,;e r,2qularllties of changes of the Proplrtie!~ of mator~lal:; when tQaperatures are loweced to 40K were traced by P. F. Y h -Os lev. In that cise the tendency to brittle de5t",ctioo was ana .14 lyzed on the basis of the linear mechanics of dpstrucLlon. A group of reports shed light on varicus aspects of the - 191 - therr",olluctuational the;ry of destruction. In the report of S. 14. Zpu,-kov and P. ::. B-~ekhtin, the destruction ot solids waf, treated as a kinetic F-cess of thcralorluctuational -rupturc o, the atomic bonds. As a result: of e:~perincntal stuly of the dc- pendence of strength during stretcl-,irwi on time an~o tc.--.- porr-ture, the prenence of a sj:-,qjt-. 1,1me and tomperat'.1re Was F's- tablirhf-d, and it has bLkn verified nvt cnly for metall.1c '_-_-1 ,A,--also for normc-tallic materials. The report of S. N'. Zhvrkov, V~ S. Yukacnko an-1 A.-L.- Slutsker rold about investigat'l'o"n"; Cf the .04~~17_1--micromechanics of destruction of polymers from, luhermofluctuat iona~ ruptures of sepa;3tC MaCrO.7,01OCules before the appoarance or the Macrottzsures, where the submilcrofissures play a loading ro-In. atte.- V. Ye. j~prsukov and ~~ ~tte~: . ,aped to study on t. lec'.1lar 1~vel the cco:-,ipanylnt; thc growth of the T oizssurcs. On t*-e ba-_-is of the zll,_,~'t ' 0.4 1'requenc; Cs. 01'-Vibrat-iona o' atom:; enteri;g the zanctrum of Polymeric mz`rcu_~s th~-y C-st- m, n ':he ated the true -trcssses at the apex of the-=.~ fi5nuzo, renort of A. M. Laksov!'kiy an", V. A, W0_- 'dovot"~d to exper_'- rlen'ts on t~e ki.,~Ztics of qrowth,pf =ain'fissures in polymers which con~irn the tharma.-luctuat-'Onal nature 0i the procer.'. V. I A. N. _prlov showed that the qcnaration of fis- V S~ros- at finite temperatures occur5 zhrouqh th~-rznal flvctuations If the local stres5i:s arl~' zeveral less than ihe critical. lttlln~idn was attracted by the survey V., L. Iden- bo.-n and A. N.,*g;jov an the probier, ol destructlon. in the phyilcz of strength. in the- statements, notp, was,:&ade of the role-. of - temperatura fluctuations in the kinetics of destruction, and also of the- importazice of dislocational accumulztions oi variez- types in the Seneratlon of :rdcrofissures4 , ~e V.-r At the confprie'n"d'e, reports of an enCnearinq na-.ure were ~hoird, reports connected with the sol",itint, c;f certi3in applied problens. , 1. F. Lhraztsov and V V. Vasillyev examined problems of strength atid the optimal rein i.rceF_' ert of shell's of rotztiq~-r of orientca plastic Slasses. A. A. Plutalov~ aY-.1 G. B. Skri~- cht?.-nVo reported on,an inv~eatiqation 7~~. the nechanism of _Gestruc- tion of carbon fibers and composition rta-terial.,~ bi%sed on such fibers. The report of G. P, A. B. K3P~un Mid L. P. arasev told about an eztinat,.: of the S.nflluenz~ of tho vizco5ity ,41.11 of deztructlion, the dimensiorir and forr. of thr., dr~c,~-t and the residual strains on the brittle strength of welded*~ bodies. The reports and the discussion of them shu%4ed that invest- i9ations on the physics and rnechanir= oi destruction heve been considera.hly expanded. As a result our cc~.ncopts of thc~ nature of destruction in solids, of the physical' mechanisms of the qen- aration and spread of fissures, etc, have been mode mich deeper. Successes have been achieved in the area of the phenom%~.noloq_lcal theories of accumulation of damages and destruction under leads - 192 us SRR UDc 61,8'.539.26 KOIMUKOV V-.Y--,. VETMERGFE'NI (L_-ningri~_d), Yhysicotechnicall institute .1 - - 1~ -A. iteni, F..:Cdffe, Fademy of Sciences,~ USSR: surer-rent of Stre.. sses at the Apex, of Main Cracks in Polylliers by the Sbpcroiscpp.ic Method" Kiev-,,. Pkablemy Prochrosti, No 2),1971) PP 51-54 Ab"stract: - An attempt was mqde t, odetermine the stresoes on the interatomic Uindinggs.at- the z?jje_x of --- main crack for 3oaded polymers. The stress izas evaluated on t-he basis of the Sh4fj~ of the natnral-oscillation frequency of r. a load. It turn(-:-d out that 'be exterr-ol the skeleton of.polymer chains'unde lbad~iz; distri ed non-anif crw-l ni2 ngn -but y along the chemical bi ~i The majority ng-, ~d, the value of the. ~;Ixe- C, 4- Inel of. the bindi, i if! equally loade e 11 upon ~. r. i,; 6~'-10. t1-mer, grea-ter than tb~. external stress. At the s;,~~me tI.=, there is a _sm_qll'number of bindings, the load upon w-hich is several hundred times greaterthen the external stress.: 4 figures, 2 tables~ 12 bibliographic k1_2 042 UNCLASSUFIED PROCiESSfNG DATE--230CT70 TITLE--LOWER ATMOSPHERE OF VENUS FRUKRADIO ASTRONOMICAL ANO SPACrz MEASUREMENTS -U- A-D,t NAUMOV, A.Por SMIRNOVA, T.V,., VETUKIIWOVSKAIA, YU. N., tOUNTRY OF INFO--USSR -29r 1970, PAPER. .,SOURCE--PLENARY MIEETING. 13TH LFNINGRADt USSRp MAY 20 ;t,LP-. 6 AT EPUBLISHED ------- 70 --ASTRONOMY,ASTROPHYS[CS,~ATMOSPH .ERIC.SCIENCES ..LSUBJECT. ARZ~AS TAGS"VENUS PLANETt PLANETARY~ ATMOSPHERE ATIMOSPHERIC MODELi RADIO :;~..~'_:ASTRONOMY, RADAR bBSERVATION,: LOWER- ATMOSPHERE ,XONTROL MARKING--NO RcSTRICTIONS '60CUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO 'PROXY REEL/FRAME--3001/0548 STEP 1-40--UR/0000/7~1/000/00;)/001110011 ~,-,qIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0126295 U N C L A S SI F I E 0 2/2 - 042 UNCLASSI,FIED ~PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0126295 -A6STRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT* DISCUSSION OF TWO '-IOUELS FOR THE LOWER -ATMOSPHERE OP VENUS TAKING INTO ACCOUNT AN ANALYSIS oF RADIO ASTRONOMY AND RADAR MEASUREMENTS BASED.ON DATA qF rHF Su-VIEr SPACECRAFT VENERA 5 AND 6. THREE INDEPENDENT EVALUATIONS OF THE PRESSURE AND THE TEMPERATURE OF THE VENUS ATMOSPHERE ARE.MADE. A,;% ADIABAT-IC MODEL WITH RELATIVE ABUNDANCE OF WATER VAP0R OF~ 0.~5PERCENr A140 A MODEL WITH AU ISOTHERMAL NEAR SURFACE REGION AT A TEMPERATURE OF 6500EGREESK~ARE DESCRIBED. FACILITY: A,,KADEMIIA NAUK SSSRIF FIZICHESKII [NSTITUT, MOSCOW -USSR. UNCLASSIFLED 112 049 UN CLASSI FlfD ;,PROC~ESSTlJl'- DATE--02OCT70 PLANET VE.NJS JPi3ATED,.-'tFV:IEWIOF~,INFiCIRMATIUN ~3N VENUS -U- UT~ OF, H[ (62)-V ETUKH40V S44YA, Y U-NI. KU ~M I N A. D. A .o ,--.cGUNT4RY V FINFO_-USSR ASTRJNC,%lfICHESK-1Y VESTNIKt ~VOL. 1V9 NO. 1, 1970, PP. 8-23 0 A T EP U L LISHED ------- 70 ~SUBJECF AAEAS--ASTRONG "Y, AS TROPHY S I CS SPACE T ECHIN I L3GY TA(75--PLANET VENUS, PLANETARY ATMOSPHERE, RADIC, BRIGHTNESS 4PE~'.ATURE, RADAR REFLECT'ON -TE' -v ELECTRON DENSITY, ~JON1,SPHERE/lUIVENLIS 4 VENUS VROH, MVENUS 5 VENUS PR;UBE jU)V.ENU.,& VeNUS PP. OR C C G T? AL MARKING--NO RESTRICTION N 5 "':DOCUMENT CLASS- UNCLASSIFIED "PROXY. !'~EEL/FKAME-1991/1298 STEP NO--UR/0454/7D/OO4lODl/OODi3/0023 7_.CIRL ACC~SSIUIN NO--AP0110891 UIN CLAS _r, Ia k: '. I!I ?i J~ jj 117, --OZOCT70 .2/2 049 UNCL AS SI F I ED PROCESSING DATE C. IRC ACCESSION,-, NO-AP0110891 'ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-M GP-0- A_BSTRACT.~ ASTRONOMICAL 03SERVATIONS, THECP[TIC 'AL RESEARCH ANO SPACE EXPLORATION OF RECENT YEARS H4VE MADE OBSGI.ETE BOOKS AND R.EVIEWS ON VENUS WHICH WERE PU,3LISHED QUITE RECENTLY. 'THE AUTHORS- 14AVE DRAw,,,,, QN 95 REGENT.SOURCES, IN :COMRILING THIS COMPENDIUM OF UP TO DArr- INFORMATION ON THAT PLANET.~ PART I GIVES THE MOST ~,ELIABLE DATA ON THE MOTION, MASS, SIZE, FIGURE AND TOPOrRAPHY 3F V E IN U S .. PART 11 IS CONCERNED 'WITH THE PLANETARY JITMOSPHERE (CHFMICAL CU~'-IKJISITICN, TEMPERATURE ANO PRESSURE, TEMPERATURE DIFFERENCE ON, THE DAYtIME AND NIGHTTIME SIDES Of: THE PLANETo CLOUDS, UPPER ATM3SPHEREI. TABLE I GIVES VARIOUS DETERMINATIONS OFTHE RADIUS OF THE VEliUSIAN ,SURFACE; TAaLE 2, CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF rHE.VENUSIAN AT43SPHERE AS MEASURED BY VENERA-4,5,6; TABLE 3, MEASUREMENTS,~OF THE DIFFERENCE 1.14 -BRIGHTNESS TEMPER-ATURES OF THE I -LLUM.INlATFD, AND UNILLUMIN&TED SIDES OF VENUS AVERAGED OVER THE VISIBLE,DISK.: FIG. I SHOWS THE PROFILE OF THE SURFACE. ELEVATION OF THE EQUATORIAL REG ON OF VENUS; FIG. 1, M4P OF THE REFLECTIVITIE.S OF THE VFNtJSIAN SURFACE; FIG. 3,. EXPERIMENTAL AND ..COMPUTED DEPENDENCE OF BRIGHTNESS TEMPERATURE OF:VENJS ON WAVELENGTH; FIG. 4, EXPERIMIENTAL AND COMPUTED DEPENDENCE OF EFFECTIVE CROSS SECTION OF RADAR REFLECTION ON WAVELENGTH FOR AN ATMOSPHERE CD14TAINING 95PERCENT CO SU32 AND 0.4PERCENT N SUBZO-, FIB. 5, ELECTRON DENSITY 01STRIBUTIONIN VERTICAL CROSS SECTION OF_THE VENUSTANN 1340SPHERE, DAYTIME AND NIGHTTIME SIDES. FAcIL[TY PHYSICS INSTITUTE ACADEMY SCIENCES USSR. USSR ubc: 621-373-531 VETYUGO PLOTNIKOVI A. F. "A Transistorized Shaper or Nanosecond Video Pulses Ftom a Harmonic Oscil- lation V sb. Pollrprovodn. pribojr7rvtekhn. elektrasyZazi 'Semconductor Devices in Technical- Electrical Comm,.mications collection of-vorks), Moscow, No 1, Jan 71, Abstract "Svyaz"', 19T0, PP 195-197 -6m M-Radiotekhnika, I No lG2o4) Translation: The authors consider -the circuit ofa sha-oer of nanosecond -video pulses from a harmonic oscillation~in the frequqncy range of 10-150 MHz. The results of an experimenta-Istudy of a practical shaper circuit based on GT313A transistors are presented. Bibliography of four titles. Resume. A6 404's Ref. Code: ~'Uj?.AD/401? xPASS3.2491 USSR UDC 621.374.38 VETYUgZL.=A=j. and GUREVIGH* V.__EI vtjT~or Probability at the Detection-of Fluctuating Pulses by Strob- ing Method" Moscow, Radiotekhnika, vol 25, No Ii Jan 1970, pp 40-43 Abstract: The error probabi lity in the detection of fluctuating, in phase and duration,,rectangular pulses in digital communication sustems, by strobing method is considered. The relation between the errov probability and statistical parameters of fluctuations and additive noises is investigated,'with phase fluct:uations of strobing pulses taken into account. A formiala iis derived which makes it possible to determine the probability of signal omission at arbitrary characteristics of the instant valur distribution of additive noises, phase fluctuations of strobing and input Oultes, , I T I W, I I",! t il, ,,, .i .....I ... ... .--- ,I,, - .- ".-. ~ i .; -.~ x;, ill- ..... . . Communicitions USSR UDC. 621.374.38 J and GUREVICHI V.. E.~ VETYUGOV, A. I tF,rrojr Probabil~ty at the Detectlol~'of Fluctuating Pulses by Stfob- in .9 Method" 25 N Mos'Cow, Radiotekhnika, Vol o ,~Jan 1970, pp 40-43 :Abstract:. The er-ror probability i~ the'. detection of fluct4 t in~l ia:phase and duration, rectan-sular'pulsf-13 in digital communication ider d. The relation between sustems, by strobing method is cons e the.error probability and statistical pa'rameter~ of fluctuAions and add- 0 i-tive n ises is investigatea, with phase fluctuations of strobing.pulsestaken into account. A formula is derived which makes it possible to determine the'lprobability~of signal omission at arbitrary characteristics of the instaat value distribution of additive noises, phase fluctuations of s"trobing and input pulses, as well as their durations. The dependince. of.,the error to.tal pro- bability in the detection of the rectangular pulse on signal - noise ratio at the computer input i*$ presentedIn a graph and a table. original article has two figure s and one table and five formulas. t USSR UDC: 621.039.564.2 YEHEL'YMNOV, 1. Ya., VEMMY1. X., V..', KONSTANTINOVP L. V. I Kt- 141 KOV, V. V. NAZARYAN, V. G., PAV6r,., POST; IlDiscrete Testing of Distributions of. Power Output in Nuclear Reactor Cores" Moscow, Atomnaya Energiya, Vol 34, No 2, Feb 73, pp 75-79. Abstract: This work presents i .--,tudy of-two metho(15 of discrete testing of the distribution of poixer output: empirical mid calculation-experimental. The first method, the engineering solution of the problem, is based on the unc of simple empirical relationships produced in experimonts involved in startup and initial operation of the first reactor of a given type; Hit- second method is based on simultaneous,uso~of the results of physical calculation and disc-rote measurements of the distribution of power output. The application of both method,, is illu,strated using data from the Belo- yarsk Nuclear Power Plant. The methods for discrete testing of multi- dimensional di5tributions studied in this work are intended for use in the algorithm-s of the computers at nuclear power plants for testing of tho dis- tribution of power output, flowever, with slight changes, they car be used for other discrete measurement tasks as well. 112 013 UNCLASSIFIEO TPROCESSING DATE--230CT70 TiTLE--ALUMINUM OXYGEN 13UND ENERGIES I.N SO, M ECHELATE COMPOUNDS OF ALUMINUM _U_ AUTHOR-(03)-MAY, L., =U_L~ t_,~TRAUSS I -COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ,',_"!.SOURCE--LATV. PSR ZINAT. AKAL). VESTIS,:KIM. SEV. 1_970, (1)f 118-19 -DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 -SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY TO P I CTAGS--ALUMINUM COMPLEX, BONO ENERGY' MASS SP~CTROMETRY -C I NG--NO RESTRICTIONS 04TROL -DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED -PROXY PEEL/FRAME--1997/0670 STEP NO--U R/0464/170/000/001/0118/0119 ~_CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0119578 UNCLASSIFIED 0:19 P OCESSING DATE--020CT70 UNCLASSIFIED -AP0107045 C ERC ACCESSION NO ABSTRACT/1--XTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTR4CT. COMPLEXES OF ALLYL ALC. (RnH! WITH ALt HAVING THE GENERAL FURMULA L(R0)AL(:0R)SU82 AL-(OR)L-1 WHERE L IS THE OF AGETYLACETONE OR ETHYL ACETOACErATEt WITH I 'ANION GF THE ENOL FORM L BRIDGING OR GROUPS, ARE FORMED BY THE ACTION OF ALLYL ALC- ON 9ETALLIC -AL IN THE PRESFNCE OF ACETYLACETONE OR ETHYL ACETOACETATE. FRE -SHLY PREPD., THESE COMPDS. HAVE MUL. WTS. CORRESPONOING~Tg DIMERS, BUT UPON tSTORAGE~THE AOL. WTS. INCREASEt.COR.R~SPONDING-.POSSIBLY:TO TRIMEPIC :,.STRUCTURES CONTG. 6. MEMBERED R I NG S... THE.JR ANO,:P~!.R spEc,rRA OFTHESE .-:COMRDS. WERE.STUDIED. UtwIrt, L AS 5 1 F- I E 0 1/2 008 UNJC I. A SS I Pt ED PROC,ESSING DATE--11,'y',FPT0 TITLE--PMR SPECTRUM OF BETA OXOFNOLATO ALUM INUM, B'i [AYDROXYQUI, NDL INATC: S AUTHOR--VEVERE, I.- TRY OF INFO--USSR (:tUN ;.,:SOURCE--LATV. PSR ZINAl. AKAD. VESTISs KIM. SER. 1970, (1), 118 a ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 ,~_:_SUBJECT ARE-AS--CHEMISTRY %,-::T.dplc TbGS-MOLECULAR STRUCTUR.Ft ALUMINUM COMPLEX, OR"NIC CCt-!PLPX :COMPDUND, NUCLFAR MAGNETIC RESTNANCEt 'QUINOLIVE, PqOTON RES"_NANCE CONTROL !AA;ZKING--'*l0 PESTRICTIOP!,S DOCUMENT, CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PIROXY,QFF-L./FP.A!4E--1989/0536 STEP NO-W4 /0464/70/000/001111 19 1,) 11 S __'C IRC~ ACCESS TON NO--AP0107141 U!"CLASS I F IED "s3lini3mas a3SOdObd ~d 131q1, HJIM ;-'N3W33d!)V! N 1 -3 ligM 3.9X-l'ldWO3 301 :10 V-111-03dS-3141 -b3A3MCH *s*asvo ANVK N1 ~80bd 31MO SIVM 'NIO-Sib ~Hll ONV X-3-IdWOO A?J3A 3'dzlM S3X3-)dWO3 RHI JO Vl~l:)-~dS bviN:3Hl:: *QdWOO- IJ3~j 3HI Slv 3NVXCJ-llSlO-lkHl3WVX3H HiIM 117UF-S 133 NI OSIV '3SVO 3NO NII 'OlqV FOS -13H:) NI ZPW 09-IV 03)insv3w 9b3M 1 30 ONV -nl7Nll,:,fNlnolkXObOAlq8 -W :10 S'Y 1-13M SV S3X31dlV(J) 353HI d0l 'v'8lD3cS NCIObd :'IH-L ~'-)V -30 S3X3ldWG'D OIVNIlCiNintikXO'dC)AH'9#G-LV-ICN30XO VIZ'*13 031111 JO SgIVIS V 3AV5'3f%131AX W NI ( 1) IC;Nl-lGNlntj6lR HIIR IV =0 S3GlXOdObdDSJ(OlVl:3:)VO19:)V IAH1301V 'NO13:~VIA133VIOlV13H310 P., VCNOW =10 NG1.lVSN3ONO3 3H-L *.L:Wd-tS9V -0-d9 T4;11010d'J--ON NOISS333)V ObIO 03 1 -A I S S V'l -DNf) 900 Z/Z -112 006 UNCL3S51 KIED ~PROCESSING DATE--185EP70 p, TITLE--CONDENSATION OF ALUMINUM ACETYLACETONATOBIS.(ETHYL ACETOACETATE) WITH PENTAERYTHRITOL TETAACETATE UTHOR-(02)-VEVEREt I.r MAYSr-L. .-C:bUNTRY OF INFO--USSR -.SOURCE--LATV. P5R ZINAT. AKAD. VESTISt KtM' SER. 1970, (1), 120-1 0 ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 U8)ECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY -TOPIC TAGS--ORGANIC COMPLEX compouNn, ORGANORAUMINum COMPOUND, .-CRYSTALLIZATIUN, CONDENSATION REACTION ACkTATE, P.~.NTA~XYTHRITOL ~',-:CMITAUL -10ARKING--NI RESTPICTION'S 7.,00CUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED -,:PROXY REELIFRAME--1987/1082 STEP NO--UR/046417C./000j'0011012010121 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0104480 UNCLASSIF 2/2 006 UNCL ASS I FI ED PROCESSII-G DATE--18SEP70 -S ION NO--AP0104480 .'CIRC 4CCES :.~-ABSTR-ACT/EXTRACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. BY CO N DENS At I ON OF XX SUB2 PRImE AL (1) (WHERE X IS THE ENOLATE ANION OF ACETYLACETONE AND X PRI,11E THAT OF ET 4CETOACETATE) WITH PENTAERYTHRITOLlETRAACETATE (If) IN '-I-XYLENE, XALIOCH,SUB2 CKH SUB2 OAC) SUB3) SUB2 AND XX PRIME ALOCH SUB2 C(CH SUBz OAC-) SUB2 CH SUB2 OALXXI WERE OBTAINE0 WI:TH 1:2~AND 2:4 MOLAR RATIOS .1-11, RESP. THE PRODUCTS WIRP RESINOUS, BUT CRYSTO. ON STANDIN-Gt AND CHAD MOL. WTS. SIMILAR TO 0.5 OF THEORETICAL VALUES, (DETD. GRYOSCOPICALLYIN BENZENE). THF-.PRODUC'tS,ARE'CYCCIC CHELATES OF THE TYPE :DISCUSSED BY VEVERE AND MAI JS~ (CA, 69--18553S4w!).- UNC s-Z-17-F-11511i Z~o t~ P_5 5 9 X7 OBTAINING VITAXIAL LATYRS Of GEMIMM AND SIUMN BY THE C11LORIDE HL'Tl= A-- RMCPM TOVESATURV,; All,- I rm'SIX, 1. Veve6i YS-. A. Nagiia- Articlab 4 fn baTz, h. Ya. Odat 40vonibir Frq toed, 4k, i~a F,7 ;ro~odnitOv - Truly SJ=Roziu . Russian, 77 1969 At the pros~.nt tine, Ahin .~kly 4111744~ a a and p-typs C*mdugtivity an strOftely, allorad Rubsrrotei ~r thelpame-type end also epitaxial P_U.w hr"iDne, and zPltaiiel layers with defined distributice of tile alloying 9A eaUtuies given to advance are widely u" in the production of semiconductor Thva* Wtbziul Itructurall UsUaLly are obtained by reducing tile girmani.no, tatrachlDtide And silicon by b1drogen. For a lung rim. It wao'considered -[I) that thi "Ltaltat layers of hi%h atructural.porfection can hc!qtit&AnAd by - this If method orklyeast temperatures above 1200'C for silicon and 850*C fur germal"Un' $uch,high t -j, In the thlorida Process paxaturas, cause a I basic deftelonc ro4lertlWtion OU the a4auturas in the cpIt:sx1*X'layor4 "..'a result of 's sharp 4 Incraoowin the diffusion. wi-th, aq, Increaelt,_1z temperakutil. The reduction in jrvwjh temperature expand t1he ration of., applIoation of the chlotLds wethoC Cowporatively.racently to roferentaft M-11 there Woo a raport.on, the growth of the 4pitaxial,leyvro -ef SarmAnium. -a 111=-on, and other mamttanduqtLog "Mt*ZIAI& at t*44COd t1WperAtUt*S. Good qUAjiZj *VltAAiOl layers Were Q~tfijn" at temperatures of sr/tral hurmireds of denvera below th*.vrdtnsry - ttm~ors turns. The growth VrOCd4*,V&M COCrIfid 411t in two stopet 1Y Growth of the thin layer. o4varal tonthe of a micros thick'at the ordinary high tonporatur,a, 2) Craitth of the talc of the layer at a reduced tomperatttC4. It was of Interest to Investigate the conditions of reproducibly obtains Ing hig"ualitr dpitaxi4l layers of SorsamUm *ad silicon by this method and th*Ir plopertles. 1/3- -013 UNUASSIF IECI ~t OROCESS IING DAT E--230CT70 TIYl,*E--l-'REPARATION OF SOME AROMATIC GUANIDINE~ALDEHYDES -U- .:AUTHOR-(02)-VEVERIS, Aer GRINSTEYNSit V*' --USSR UN T R YOF INFO URCE--LATV.,PSR IINATj AKAD* VESTISI KIM. SER. 19701 (,1)# 103-9 ,i) AT EPUBLISHED ------- 70 -giECTI,AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCtENCES, CHEMISTRY --GUANIDINE, ALDEHYDEt~HYDR_OGENATION, ,J-PPIC TAGS CHEMtICAL SYNTHESISp -ACETATE, OkGANIC AZOLE COMPOUND,, TH I OL :AROMATIC NITRO COMPOU 0 N ONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS i-OCUIMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIE-0 ~'~PRDXY:REELIFRAME -199310691 STEP NO-~UR/0464/70/00~9/001/0103/0109 :.Z-tRC:ACCESS [ON ND--AP0113561 UNCLASSIFIED 2/3 013 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 "t, I_R CACCESSION NO--AP0113561 ~~A,13STRAC T/-EX TRACT-- 0J) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A MIXT. OF 10 G' M, NI TROBEN ZALDEHYDE 11) , 100 ML MEOHv AND 1.5 ML 14PERCENT HCL IN MEOH i:.:--KEPT 5 DAYS AT ROOM TEMP.t NEUTRALIZED WITH IOPERCENT~KOH IN MGOHI -TREATED WITH 1*4 M - G NH SUB2 OH,HCL AND~1.2 G KOH IN 5 iL H SU82 Ot AND KEPT 15 MIN AT ROOM TEMP, GAVE 7.5 G,I DI-ME ACETAL, WHICH, HYDROGENATED IN 16.ML ETOH OVER 0.2 G PTO.SUB2.AT ROOM TEM.P. AT 1 ATM. H, GAVE A M,Af4l*3BE.NZALDEHYDE DI-ME ACETAL~(111. SOLN. CF .19GUA.NYL,3,510IMETHYLPYRAZOLE.(111)'AC~ETATE (PREPO. BY1DISSOLVING 8.4 G -elllll.HNO SUB3 IN 65 ML REFLUXING ET0Ht ADDING 4.2 G ACOK, AND FILTERING) ADDEO TO Ift.AND THE MIXT. HEATED 3.5~HRAT 100DEGREES GAVE 4.8 G MtGUANIDIN03ENZALDEHYDEvHNO SU83,. M. 1.98-91)EGREES. 10ECOMPN.) (H SUB2 0). -,.,A REFLUXING SOLN. OF 9.0 G AMINOGUANTOINE-HCL lW20 ML H SU82 0 WITH 5.4 G POAMINGBENLAULIEHYDEP AND' THE' WHOLE KEFLUXED 30 MIN GAVE 7.~_ G P,AMfN0BENZALDEflYi)E GUA.NYLH Y0RAZONE.(I0.2HCL, M. 27()aEGREES (DECCMPN.). A SOLN. OF 7.2 G 1,V.ZHCL IN 20L ML H SU82 0 TREATED WITH 5 G ACONA, SATD. WITH NACLi AND COOLED TO ODEGREE GAVE 5,7 0 IV.HCL. A MIXT. OF 5.6 G TV.HCL AND 2*1 G H-SUB2 NCN TREATED AT 100DEGREES WITH ML CONICID. HCLI HEATED AT 1GOD-cGREES,5 MINt COOLED, TR~ATEO WITH 7 ML .CONCD. HCLt DILD. WETH 10 ML H SU82 Ot AND ~FIIJEREO~', CAVE, 6.2 G P-GUANIMNOBENZALDEHYDE GUANYLHYDR ZONE-i-kCL (V), M. 2?0DVG REES :(DFCUMP-f*lj 101 L. HCL). A SIXT. OF;7.2~Gl Vt. 18 G 3ZHI, 25 14L ETOHI 15 14L ~-,fi .-SUI~2 Ot, AND 15 ML CONCO. HCL RE-FLUXED 3*-5 HR GAVE `2.2 6 PtGUANIDINGBENZALDCHYDE (VT). HNO'SUB3t M. 2.00-2DEGRLEES IDECOMPN.) (H SUB2 0) ; 41 9 M. L70-2DEGREE S tVEC04PN,);~VI.HCi_ M. 228-90EGREES IDECOMPN. t; VT. SEMI CARBAZONE M * 2ZIL-20EGRFES 0ECOM1114. SUB2 0) . UNCLASSIFIED 013 UNCLASSI FI;E0 OUCESSING DATE--?_30CT70 C:IRC' ACCESSION NO-AP0113561 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--A MIXT. OF 10 G PvNITROBENZt~LDEHYDE (VII)o 4.4 G HOCH .- ,.SUB2.CH SUB2 OH (Vill), 35 ML C SU36 H'SUB69 35 RL DIOXANEP AND 0.35 G P,MEC SU86 H SUB4 SO SU83 H REFLUXED 30 MINI GAVe 9.2 G OF THE ACETAL (IX) OF VII WITH Vill, M. 89-91DEGREES. -THE ACETAL (XI OF I WITH Vill, RLY PREPD, IN 65PERCENT' YIELD. A SOLN. OF 54 6DEGREESt WAS SIMILAi ..0.01-MOLE IX AND X IN 15 ML ETOH HYDROGENATED OVER PTO SUt32 AT ROOM j..TEMP.i AND 1 ATM. H, FILTEREDY-TREATED,WITH 0.01-MOLE OF A SUITABLE KEPT OVERNIGHTt AND FILTERED GAVE A PPT.v WHICH AFTER ..-CRYSTN. FROM ETOH GAVE XsZC SU86 H~ SUW NHCSNHAR tZ EQUALS .1#3vDIOXOLANv2vYL) (XI). A NIXT. OF 15 ML. HCONME SUB2 'SATD. WITH NH SUB3, 0.01 MOLE XI I AND 10 G PB0 SHAKEN'4:-HR GAVE 'A SOLID PRODUCT, ,.-.,WHICH* REFLUXIED WITH N HCL 3.0 MJN? GAVE X,ARNHC(:NH1NHC SUB6 H SUB4 CHO CRYSTD.- FROM DIL9 HCL OR FRDM~ 1.`4 14,HCL-f)IOAANE. THE FOLLOWING -XI -WERE - PREP0. ( X I AR, M. P. , AND PERCENT YI ELD GI VE.N) P p PH, -~-.162-5,UEGREES, 92; Mp PH, 153-5DEGRE.ES, 194;~~ Pi 1tNAPHTHYLYL, 91; Mt ItNAPHTHYL 154-6&GREES~ 9-?;! P, P,f3IPHENYLv '-.~-'181-20FGRFES, 86; M, P,131PIIENYLYLt~,141-~CiEGOEES, SZ; Ps 'BZ, .%144-6DEGREE:St 50; AND Mr BZt 130-20EGREESt 61, THE~FOLLOWING XII WERE ~':PREPDO IX, AR, M.P., AND PERCENT YIELD GIVEN): PvPHp 128-30DEGRE-ES (HYDRATE), 65; M, PH, 10,5-80tGREES (HYDRATE)t 62; Pt PpBIPHENYLYLr 110-13f)EGPiEES (HYDRATE), 0.t.tM, P.1BIPHENYLYL, 93-6DEGREES 4HYDRATE), 53; P, 1,NAPHTHYLt 2G4-5D6GR5.ES~(0EC0MPN )v 60; My ___...1.tNAPHT11YL, I08,-110EGREES (HYDRATEh' 56;: Pt Ri 236-7DEGREES (DECOMPN.)v 56; AND Mf bZj 224-50EGREES (DECOMPN~)s 78.. fACILITY: INST. SIN.v RIGA* USSR. UNCLASSIFIED fflf~-'Itiwm-4 USSR '547 ux 615-216.5 484- - 4511 - 0L21 SOKOLOV, G. P., KBENIS, A. A. VEMIS, .14. M. and GrLJZI, R., S. A., Institute of Organic S~nthesis, Academy 6-f-Te-i-e-n-le-e-s-lZrrim~-,'-Sil, 'Riga perties of -~Quaternary Az,,.noniuw Derivatives Me Synthesis and Curarifom, Pro. of Cyclic Acetals of Levu.1inaldehydeandlevulinic Aci&' Yoscow, -XhJ-nLtko-Farmatsevticheskiy Zhurnal -13 110 3, 1973, PP 8 Abstract: Studies were conducted on the curariform proporties of quaternarj ammenium derivatives synthesized from levulinal.dehyde in~ a Pmnner analogous to that ernployed for succinaldekyde, except that~ 2-.,pe4vhyl-2,5-dizethoyyteti-ahycLro- furan was used in the reaction. Quaternary amponium deriwatives of levulinic acid were obtained by reacting 3-(2'ir;etliyl-,ii-chloromethyl-ll,-,-.1-dioxolanil-2) -,c*d with secondary amines, ,rl-bh the ipitial formation of the corres- propionic ponding salt andl on gradual heating from 100, to 15CO, tbe- Cl atom on the chlororethyl. Group was replaced by an amino group. The salt wits separated from the coneorzitexitly fomed hydrochloride salt~of the secondar amine by dissolving -nines. A diiodo- it in ethyl acetate, and then reacting- it.vith cUloroethyl~~, methylate derivative of leralinaldehyde showed the greatest curariform activity of the deivatives that were obtained whichy in cats', exceedand that of D- tubecurarine 2-fold, but.was 11-fold less than that of dioxonium. The duration 1/2