SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT VORONINA, A.I. - VORONKUV, V.V.
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP86-00513R002203610001-6
Release Decision:
RIF
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
99
Document Creation Date:
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 1, 2001
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
December 31, 1967
Content Type:
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP86-00513R002203610001-6.pdf | 5.56 MB |
Body:
USSR T= 616.381-w003 im0z. 9"022:.;6 1.516. 858.095.H3
-IIENKOVA, A~. M., Institute of Epidem-
KHESIN, Ya. Ye., Y.QHONINA.- E..j and:AML
~o ogy -r iology:.imeni, N. F. Gpmal
cd Microb P~a,~Acade Medical Sciences
my of
--,IJSSR-- --Moscow:--.
"Cytological Study of the Peritoneal txudate of Mice: in tlie Coursv )f I-nter-
feron Production in Vitro"
Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii, No 5, Sep/Oct 70, pp 544-549
Abstract: Cytological and cytochemical studies were made of cultures obtained
from peritoneal exudate of mice which were producing interferon owing to in-
fection with Newcastle disease virus and of mntrol'groups. During the pro-
duction of interferon (1-5 hre afterinoculation wish tha virus), signs of
the activation of RNA synthesis appeared,. includingAncreased activity of
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, some oxidative:,eazymes, and, particularly,
acid phosphatase,.In cells of the peiitoneal emudate. These shifts were not
associated with multiplication of the virua in cells, Surelling of lyaosomes
during interferon production, formation of-Hoiflori-V baitive vacuoletj in macrc
and release of these vacuoles.into the' culto're field suggest that the
lysosome. apparatus of the cells takeg part, in,the:piroduction and release of
interferon.
-1 ~Fl F
7 UNCLASS !;!PROCESSMG DATE--30OCT70
AND RADICAUTOGRAPHIC STUOY OF 104A SYNTiiESIS IN
C~JLTUR' ES OF LEUKEM"A CELLS SFNSI-TIV'EAND KESISTANT TO COXSACKIE a3 VIRUS
WTHGR-(05)-KJiE--Slktlt'v YA.E.v TKHORLHEVSKIYv VeV42 YERMAN.o B.A., AMCHENKOVAt
VORON I NAl, -F. V .
MSR
~,.QJj9CE--00-KL. AKAD. N' A UK 5 S S R1970t. 19.0512 18 -1
E: PUBLISHED ------- 70
A'AiEAS-BIOLOGICAL AND -MEDICAL-SCIENCES
ap;,C~-- TAGS--,LEUKEMfA, COX SACK I E.8: VIRUS,, RNAj:'BIOSYmTHESIS, TkITIUM'
HEMICAL LABELLING* ALITORADIOGRAPHY
tNTROL MAqKING--N0 RESTRICTIONS
OcUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
RbXY REEL/FRA-IIE--1998/0705 STEP NO-7-UR/0020/70/190/00511218/1221
Ikc ACCESSION NO-Al-0121364
UtNC LAS S I F I E 0
Z/2-, --~035 UNCLASSIF~AED:: ~PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
I.R~.A-CNSSZOPI NO-AT0121364
BSTIR-ACTIEXTRACT-1U) G P-0- Aj3STIRACT.. K INET IC CURVES WERE SHOWN FOR
IIN RNA CONTENT OF NCRMAL AND~ SPECIFICALLY RESISTANT LEUKEMIA L69
':.CELLS, -AFTER INFECTION' WITH HO-1-10LOGOUS VIRUS. T FJ ERESISTANT CELLS
-~DOSPLAY A PECULIAR METABOLISM IN TffAr THE- INTFAC'ELLULAR DEVELOPMENT OF
THE VIRUS IS INTERRUPTED AT AN EARLY;STAG,C WITHoor REACIHING FULL
'DEPROTEINIZATION WHILE THE SECONDAPY~:GRUdTH-GF RNA CONTEN'T 15 OT
-AT NMETIC~ ACTIVITY IN T14 CYTO LAS-t
COM?, .41 ED BY A RISE OF VIkUS RNA SYP E p I
-PATHIC CHANGES 0.
-'C-Y-TC P THE CELLS. TREATMENT OF THE INFECTE0 CEt.LS BY
~-ACTlt HP c 11)
-- NOMYCIN FOR 1. 1 Z MMPLETELY INHBIJTED NUCLET AC SYt THESIS SO THAT
:4N:-5UB.SE,jUENT TREATMENT il'ITH UR.IDIINE PRIPIE3 1.4 SULI-STANTIALLY NO TAG IS
,NTRODUCED INTO THE NUCLEI OF THE CELLS. THUS THE. PRODUCTION OF
14ESSEIMER RNA FOR THE VIRUS INHIBITOR: OF S-INTHESI:S OF. CL-LLULA.;, RNA IS
'CODED NOT BY THE VIRUS G-NGME BUT BY. THE CELLULAR~ GEP'Mmt.
,FAClLITY: . INSTs EPIDEMIDL. MIKROBIGL'. IA' GAMALE~ MOSC04t USSR.
mc,6t6.155.3--008.13;576-858-13-095-383
BOCHARW, A. F., MOYSIADI, S. At, AHCHERKOVA, A. M. , VORONIKA, F. V., and
XMIN, YA. YE., ChaIr of
Virology#. Central Tr~.ilning
of Physicia:ist Ministry of Health USSR, and Instit#0 of oEpidelalology 'Lnd
MicrobioloG7 itie-ni 11. F. Ganaloya, Academy of Radic~ia Sciences LISS, Ioscow
"The Effect of ImzunologicxI Reactivity of.Rabbit Loukocytes ar-d Macrophages
on-Interferon Production in the Pres s vlj="'
Once: Of He~jpe
Moscowl Voprosy Virusolog.'Ii, No 6, Nov/Dee 71t.pp M-731~
Abstracti Upon contact with
herpes virus n vitroj interfeTon ;Is produced
in~ small anounta try leukocytes obtained from the periphenl blood of control
zabb."Uss #in larger anounts of leukocytes and nacroph4lig
,es obtained from the
peritoneal exudate of control rabbits, and In the larjTrst azountz and at the
fastest rate by peritonea! leukocytes and iaacrophagei'p of pL;xviously immunized
rabbits. After vaccination# white blool cuIIB mobillzed. In the pi5ritOnea.1
a5ter r
exudate have a f, etabolic Mte, ineltuling a hIgher =UvIty of oxida-
tivd and hydrolytic enzymer, and a 8reater RNA conc6ritrat Iion, than in the
C
rol state, and they also absorb the an 11gon more 'eadil , Evidence
ont ~ t X 4.Y
ij~~lcatea that these factors are responsible for the augunted production
-of interferon.
IA
~~ffliffiw I HIP-M- tit AP4 IM I
,~212 015 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
ACCESSION NO--AP0125465
7.ASSTIR ACT/ EXTRAC T--- (U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE CAPACITY OF LEUK(JGYTES OF Zllt
~~,HGUR AND 72 HOUR PERITUNEAL EXUL)ATES AND OF LEUYGCYTF-S OF 'THE PERIPHERAL
RABBITS TO PkGDUCE INTEPFERr-N.VJAS STUDIED. CELLS OF THE
PERITONEAL EXUDATA WERE FOUND TO PRODUCE INTERFERON ft. QUALLY HIGH
TITERS RE'GARDLESS OF THE PREVALENCE. J,N I CEI '- S
IT OF ANY -LULAR FORM
-1EUKOCYTES FG TH& PERIPHERAL BLOOD PRODUCEO~ LESS INITERFERON THAN THOSE
_:_0F THE EXUDATE. INTERFERON PRODUCTION BY LELlkOC,YTES OF THr-- PERITGNEAL
:EXUDATE WAS ACCOMPANIED BY ENHANCED IINTENSTIY OF! THEIR REAMON TO P~.,A,
INCREASED ACTIVITY OF GLUC,)SOt6lPHOSPHATEDEf.IYDAO,,GENASE AND ACTIVATION OF
lYSUSCME APPARATUS. FACJLITY: KAFEDRA ~VJRUSOLGGII TSENTRA-LIN-OGG
ml
NSTITUTA USOVERSHENSTOVOVANLYN VR.A,CHEYj.,0Tt)EL V'IRUSOLOG11 114STITUTA
-~~E-PJDEMILOGI I I t4lKROBIOLOGII IMEN1. N F., GAPALEV:~, AMN SSSR, MOSKVAm
IF
UNGLASS lCo
USSR UDC 621.372.826
VESELOV, G. I., VORONINA G. G.
"Calculation of an Open Dielectric Wave Guide of R6ctangular 'oss Section"
Gor'kiy, Izvest:Lya vysshikh uchabnykh zavedeniv, Radioftzik Vol XIV, No 12,
197
1, pp-1891-1901
Abstract: The method of partial regions is used t :solve the problem of propa-
gation. of electrom, agnetiC Taves along,a regular rectangular dielectric wave
guide in an unlimited homogeneous.medium.~ The dispersion equations are obtained
which determine the propagation constints of all types of surface waves that
can e
xist in the irvestigated ryetem. The disperuion, curves for the even wave
even
of the dipole type are calculated on tlki~basis of the approximate
equations. A comparison is made with the'.results.obtained by other methods
[Coell, Bell Systen, Technical Journal'a Vol 43; No 7 ', 2133, 1969]. Tables of
special auxiliary functions simplifying the practical calculations on the basis
of the dispersion equation of the first approximation are presented. The pos-
sibility of calculating the parameter,s of a rectangular.dielectric wave guide
..by the proposed equations is proved,
008, UNCLASSI FIED:: PROCESSING
_fI-TLE--P 0 S S I BL ERAPID DETERMINATION OF ;EXCHANGEABCE BASKS,IN
-AREAS--AGRICULTUREt CHEMISTRY
UATE---:27NOV70
SOILS -U-
TORI.C TAGS--SOIL. CHEM ISTRYv CHEHICAL ANALYSISi CALCIUM COMPOUNDi MAGNESIUM
.'~".."i"-.CQMPCUNDi-.TITRATIONI CHELATION
CONTROL' MARK I NG--NO RESTR ICT IONS
DOCUMENT~ CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
USSR uDc 6A. 2 3:614. 88 ]:6:L2 .82 1
BARYBHEVA~ L. M. and VOEONINA, 1. A.., Institute of Experimental and Clinical
'M-dici PF 173 t --mar tm"161,11
-ne and Tallin
re- of- ~,the
'!Natu: -Work. of 'Physic-I ail the- -T#*-Ik Firr. -Ai& Ptation and Changes
sychophyd Vft!~n"
-Thdir u4
Moscow, Gigiyena Truda i Professionallnyye:7,abolevaniya, ITo 8, 1972, PP 10-15
Abstract: Physicians of the Tallin First Aid Statiod Ywork a24-hour ohift,
spending, according to time-maotion studies,, about half the. tir,,e providing
medical care riding ambulances, collecting case histories, etc. and half
the time sleeping, eating, reading, etc. To study the correlation between
the physical and mental stress associated ~rith the work and the degree of
reaulting fatigue, the following psychophysiolo[-,ical *parameters were irivesti-
rated in 10 physicianG 5 times a day for 4 days* cent~ral and autonomic nerrous
aystems, cardiovascular function, EKG, arterial presaure, leukocyte count, and
blood sutiar levels. 'The subjective sensati.on of fatigue iras generally ratched
Ir 0 le
y corresponding chan-g-es in the physiol g' a! parameters ztudied. 14hile
fatigue insome systems decreased toward the, end, of the shift after rest, the
sensation of overall fatigue steadily.intensified.
USSR UDO 621.,;%74.4.029.65:62l. ~82.2
VIZOLI, A.A., INAVRCTS-1-1Y, V.1., BERLIN, A.S. V.P~
V, VOP'o
nFrequency 1-bltipliers Based On GaAs Diod.es or, Mttllimster 'Wevelengtha"
F
1~7
Rediotekliniks i elel-tronike, Vol XVII, No 6, June 4972, pp
Abstract; The results are t3reeented of a-etudy of f requency triplers and quad-
-(-36 Gliz
ruplers of millimeter wavelangthe (2 ),based'an GaAs diodes. The subjac~
of the study was diffusion diodes with junation. oat)acitanoe 0 o.24--o.4 Pf,
a. -b
(0 R 0.6-~-,Q.18.:nsa' akdoiin volt,~ -of 40-60 v in an
-n a re
v
c a :,a so diodee withie. metal- eemicondticto~ barrier
oidinary metalcoraiaic a in-; and' ~I
with 0 0.8;noea.and a breakdown volta-e of 11 24 'V*
OV =0-5--l-0 Pf' -r-2v = 0
(in a Email-Dize Metalcer~=c The. exnerimantal study of the diodes wa5
conducted in a frequency rwltiplier of the waveguido "croso overl8p" [L- 1.0 at
vrwkhlef;t] type, with open circuits which have a high efficiency end a satis-
n th
factorily high output porter. It is shown that on th~~ base of Ga,~s diodoz will
a m-etal-- somic onduct, or tavri-r~ and also of diffuciron i3a,ks diodes it is pocsible
to create effective frequency mltip~iera for millirzeter-ijavolenrjhs. The
principal reaulto of the work were reported at the :1971 aiiropean 21iorowave Con-
ference. 3fig. ';i ref. Received by editors, 9.Septetnber 1971.
183
USSR no: 616..931+616.081 -092 9-07-616-36-008-092-07
.553
KUM, YLOV, V. V., and VQEQI~~, Chair of Pat hological Physiology ire-.n
A. A. Bogomoleta, Saratov Medical: Institute
"The Mechanism of Drnainnent ~of Bile Se ret on, Con6entration, and Clearance
Functions of the Liver in Experimental-Botuliam ands Diphtheria It
Moscow, Patologicheskaya Fiziologiya i Upperimenta.1-Inaya Terapiva, VC11 14,
NO 6, Nov/Dec 70, pp 36-41
Abstract: Exueriments on dogs shoued, that the concontrebion, clearance, and
bile secretion fulictions of liver are intensi-ftt-4 in botalism but we---Ocene-d
in diphthdria. Liver dys.fimction in bottixi-ism is attributad in part to the
=rked activation, of the a r.,i-athetic-ad-re-na
-y. systtei-,iq In diphtheri a, on the
other hand, 1-Jiver activity is. af f ected not, cply as a result ol' irrC-7,srsible
.:Injury by- 45he toxin to the 3drenergic portio" of tl~e nex1roti.-i syotcm. but -1 on,
-e tne liver Da-renchyma, -spe-cia-Ily in the late stages of the
becaLs is involved, L
-disease.-
'i"Emuma ~2111,
OEM
"Influence of Surface Hardening On Propertierli of Structural Steels"
Sudostroyeniye, No 2, Feb 71, pp,47-53
Abstract: Studies were performed to determine the influeace of
the form of microirregularities on the physical properties of
surface-hardened steel specimens. Specimens~of type 20 steel
and type 12 KhN3A steel were subjected to carburizing with sur-
face rolling, while specimens oe.type 40 Kh liteel were subjected
to induction hardenina. Microhardness and surface smoothness
0,41 the specimens were measured. :Carburized type 20 steel was
found to have a maximum microhardness of about 900 kg/mM2 at 0.1-
0.3 mm from the surface. Surface rolling was Eound.to increase
surface smoothness, increasing the radius of,,;curvature of peaks
and hollows, thus improving the operational proper-ties of the
metal. Fatigue tests were also performed iwair and in a 3%
acueous solution of sodium chloride.. The sur,face rolling increased
1/2
-CCNTROL 'MARK I NG-N[l RESTRtCTIONS
CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
RO-,Y.Y--:,REEL/FRAME--2000/0162 STEP NO--UR/03901~?0/033/00210219/0224
--AP0123933
_~R C, ACCES51ON NO
C
UNCLASsir-ro
-2/2 620 UNCLASSIR ED ~4PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70
~~_C-IRC ACCESSION NO-AP0123933
:.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-IU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. PROLONGED~ADMINISTRATION OF SEVIN
TO RABBITS AND RATS CHANGED LIVER.FUNCTIDN AND:REDUCED THE
CHULINESTERASE ACTIVITY IN THE ::BLOOD' ANO INTER~JA.L ORGANS. SEVIN
JNTRODUCED THEOUGH A 1TOMACM PROSEL AT 38 MG--KG DAILY FOR I MONTH
INCREASED 5ERUM ALANINE AMIXOTRANSFERASE AND AMP PHOSPHATASE ACTIVITIES
AND INCREASED THE RATIO OF LIVER WT.~To'BRAIN W-1. AT 7.6 MG-KG (ADDED
TO THE FOOD) DAILY FOR 3 DAYS SEVIN INCREASED THE DURATION OF
HEXOBARBITAL SLEEP AND SOMEkHAT~INCREASED THE WT'* RATIO OF- LIVER TO
BRAIN, SEVIN ADMINISTERED TO RASBITS~AT-~O.T6 MG-KG AND TO RATS At 0.38
MGr-KG DAILY INHIBITED LIVER FUNCTION*~, REDUCED~CHOLINESTERASE ACTIVITY
AND CHANGES IN SERUM PROTEIN FRACTIONS.WERE OBS04, WITH ALL DOSES. THE
I.,-,PESTICLOE INCUCED NECROTIC CHANGES,IN THE'LIVER.-HITUCHEM. STUDIES
SHOUED SHIFTS IN THE CONTENT AND-DISTRIBUTION tJF::lGLYCGGENt IN LIVER
~.SUCCINATE DEHYDROGENASEt AND IN, ICHOLINESTERASE OFTHE BRAINP SPINAL
.,--d-COLUMN, AND MOTOR NERVE ENDINGS OF.THE..~TRIOED MUS'CLES. SEVIN DID NOT
ACCUMULATE IN THE BOWES OF RAT&~AND WOMB FACILITY: VSE-r-o
NAUCH. ISSLEDo INST. GIG. TUKSLKOL* REST-ITS.v POLIM. PLAST, MASS# Kli:Vv
UNCLASSIFIED
~j
USSR UDC I
517. .615. 7/9~
VORON 'A
WJBMIKO I. P. LIATOSH, N S Y
:irlElov, D. 1.
Ife -C g
ci of Com-lexcing ents (im-4nodiacetate Deri~iatiws cl~' th-2
MI-IT'hane Series on the Behaleiar of I - n
"59 Zilla-65,
dCerl w, 1' -n aw OrFsanis-"
a
ll
Ti,_Tn ta &kc- ~-as' _i z--, i v( kh. Ural s-
-fil, _u ss"'sR 'W:)r*.:s Cc
Institute of Ani-nal, ~-~~d _7~1,mz L-col-ngy., IAffil-4,it-' -d-ty of
-Of ~L - I I eUS 1-53, 'C-o 6 8-7 5 f i B
1.0 23, 10 E-z c-jC, ikbstl-ract Nia 23F2205)
Trans lati cri TnfL of the colrapl-2xing
t' ttr-lum and cvr~urr, I'l-rom tht, erganima andl the; de rrez_- c C re duc:4,_,c'-r. c3 f
.1-0r. 0- y
their AeVoLilAon in qtraiu;iQally vrl~h tne In-- ii
y
n A 1;
i t m b 1 e c
e -I rza-,i
-31z -wi h re-a an dftur s~ are t'-
0 na level -4,1'th acid ralt (drti'r4 I*.',-,.,I%
perimutc with yttrim-.) and in soiae ins :tances (VKZ~erj .Wi'rAtZ-
dera5,lv Iore ro the &:uth6is i~e s
consi r r-
AN
-USSR
YDRQLI&,_N_ N.
Transmission of Blecti gnetic Radiation Through the Skin of Fishes and
Amphibia
Alm Vestnik Akademii Nauk Kazakh,SSR,INO 2, 19.73, pp 6B-70
Abstract: Hypomesus pretiosus, Hypomesus olidus, Szhizothorax argentatus,
Paralichtys coreanikus, (fishes), and.Bufo viridis (toad), Rana chensinensis
(frog) were subjected to irradiation with incandescent.lamp.vith wavelength from
6400 L The amount of light passedthroughtbe subjects vas automati-
3700 to
cally recorded. The obtained results indicated that the penetratinf- ability
of ultraviolet and visible light is.inversely dependent on the skin thickness
of fishes and Amphibia, their physiological staU (ex]*nsion, contraction),
melanophores, and the amount of malanin in inglarnophoreb. Irte thicker the skin
with a large n=ber of melanin grains in melanopli3ores,:,the lower the peretra-
tion of it by incident liGht rays. Ultraviolet radiation was absorbed in
higher percentage compared with infrared, The celomi&~piorentation rannot
protect fishes and Amhibia from ultraviolet~radiation~:because most of this
radiation is absorbed by the outer skin layers and other bodv components. The
skin of Amphibia absorbed much more.ultraviolet rwUation compared vith fishes
75.
UP L, A.S.S- F 1 E~i
(IF 1.
4-CEiS'P!G UATE
-.)SYNTHE-51S. OF-,
PRQXY,kEEL/FRAriE--3001/0498 STEP NG--U~q/0216/70/00,,I/003/i')435/0440
.cTRC ACCESSION NO--AP0126246
I-A", I F IF D
0 0.
RROCESS I PIG DATE --I "NOTT 0
ACCESSION NO-AP 0 12 6 2 46
.ABSTR,Acr/i-XT.RACT--(U) Gl)-()- ABSTRACT. mEi PRESENi' f) A P ~R 0 E A L S I ri-i THE
e QUEST,10,Nt, 'J F F 0 RM A T 1 10 N F E T A LYS [NIL- 1 1,1 ~ 11.1 COURSE OF bli3SYMTq;zSIS OF
ANTIBIOTICS. UTILIZAFION OF C PR I M, E 14 LAeELL__D
A-MtINUACIDS. HAS SHOWN TiiAT BETA LYSME~r Ir-AR
BON IN C'UNTRASr TO OTHFR
AMUNUACIDS BECOMES PREFERABLY lNc0RPU,'4AT.E0, IkjTO PQLYMYCtNE (A, ()I
T
F- TYPE.,:, OF 5TREPTQ0lHlNjCj.jS) A,14() ~,Sl'klif;TGTHRICINE~ F~ . DETERAI?.~ATIOM OF c
I i. 16
IN DIFFEkEPIT, PARTS (W. THE STPEPTOTkICINE ~ MOLECULE O'HICH Is
H THE
FORMED IN THE PRESENCE OF lyC P q UI E 14 OCrIALPHA, LY . $INE SHOWN Ti AT
-INCORP-ORATED CAkBON OF L,i: ;~,RIMEL .4 0 L I'A L .IA, LYS lE E S. CGIMP LETE LY
pf
IN RGTA LYSINF., WHEREAS~Aqlo L4 -IS f G U,-:; c~ bOTH STREPTOLIDINE
A ii D GU L 0 5 A M I N E- TH 1 '12' S 1-i 0 ii I ~,l 1; T H E. 5 P E. C 11 F I Cl T Y Q F INCURPORATION. JHUS IT
C-0 CLUDED THAT ALPHA LYS_INE-_.~m:tlES VC-kY~ C LOS E E. PATH OF aUk
1W THE & -,RE RT.
En., PtEN TAT I ON CQWRSE-~-UF j OTHkICIA 81USYNTHESIS
.1-L't-TY-1 -,-TNS_-T I TUTf-: OF C EA U;
WATURAL7 PkbdOCTS~t ACADEMY OF
-.&C, r E MC k S USSR-%
UN'CLASSIFIED
USSR ubc 633' -632-93
KRUPNOV, V. A. and VORONIKA, S. A.,~ Institute of Southb-astern Ac.-,ricultuxe
.-I'Susceptibility of Soft and 11tard Irftleats lath, Gene and C toplasndc Male
terility to Loose Simat - Ustilago trit
Vioscow, Doklady Vsesoyuznoy Ordena Lenina,Amdemii Sell s-kokhozya7ystv-eirnykh
:Nauk,- iia n, ig7p-, pp 6-8
Abstract: Pot and field ex-perimento were: perf oxmi~,-d with t-ha soft spring
'wheat variety Saratovslmya 29 and hard wheat. variety Cordeifor.!-u 4:32 inoc~zllated
vit In spores, of the c--uf;ati-.re agent of loo,,e, mmut to the ::;uFceptiIL,fl:Lt-,,-
of.the plantz to the disease. Mile results showed that indUation of the fert4lity
gene in the Saratovs~mya 29 variety- and transfer o- ~e .,h
fthe f, nome of t is va-riety
ana that o:C Gordeffo=.c to tho cytoplasm, Tlriticiw-i did not ha-ve
2, (:)I,*1-.'sp-l-inj! of'
anY UPPMCD3~vie v"fuct oil thoir rclviGtance t6_1oose ~L. n t1w
-plantti; with ei kher Gene or cytcqAdornic malc stL t1w 4
x1lity -incidence of inf -~c-
on was Lhe same as in the fer
tj~,e analo
78
USSR uDc 6_Po.l806.5:66q.i4
I., PEL' TS E. I. and PRUSAKOV, B .A.,
Phase Recrystallization of Steel at Heating"
Moscow, Mi-atallovedeniye itermichesk~aya obrabotka metallov, No 6, 197o, pp 6-2-63
Abstract: An investigation was made of two steels.(typei3 40 and' 50) to confirm
an earlier-proposed recrystallizzation. scherre. :, The structure of overheated steels
after repeated heating at 50 degrees/Min changes substantlially and depends ureatly
on the microstructure developing at overheating. After repee,".-ed heattinL-,, sections
resembling the initial overheating grain in magnitude an~L shape are clearly vis-
re assumed diameter of the real austenite grain. rornmed durinj:- repeated
ible. Th
heating at a magnification of 100 is 40-50 times. smaller than the diexiet'er of the
sections observed at a magnification of 5- 'I"he real grains increase with increas-
ing repeated heating temperature, but even a' r a 28-hr holdinG tire, they remain
Ite
substantially rznmller than the initial overheating grainru. A mietall(tcraphic study
of sections at large magnifications did not:show any sig-t of botmdaries in places
corresponding to the grain bowndaries at small nagnification. 'Eiis suggests that
s observed are not gmins, 'out
the section ratherl"pseudolTains". This is confirmed
by the results of a study of the microstructure formed., during the repeated heat
treatment, in the preliminarily oyerheated,and,water-coDled tne 40 steel. The
1/2
I -.- ~ -. --, !~ :. ..I -- 7 ' I' T - . - 7 : I
..-- - I - -- . - - - --- . t . ~, I ; . ': :ti.~, ! I I I I I- I ; I , . I . -1 -
1- - v-
Nr' 'i Ref Code:
-Ace.- Abstrafeting: S
erv ce
OP0049172 C-HERICAL. ABST. 5-10 -0
r 10390le Physicochemical p tltfievaf 1,44'tetra-'.and 1,8-
f octamethylene. dRsocyanatta.1 Z&~ravley;-. E. Z; na.
-Ppereslegiva, L. S.;,:Korr~usTt-e-gE-kina---4L.-L..!
Ung 0
Al Zh
*1104'( e ) ~w 'r"_9M'wd
3j i5i "VARMS"!+ kuss)~ From
ternp.-depen en f ii.),pqco), 4 or
id in
S
8" a~s well a from teftip'.'cle n ened of their d.4 +iseosi6 ind n,
itwascolic
ItId
tnol. -rots. depends not -brdy':itin-lhe tenip. bul - also - gn' their
location in the inol.' Aaiv'ation. enmy I?f Ilow IS, InCrMsed by
NO cat-,'male iy-r M.hiltlw 2Q,-5011ititerval, au~f by 90t im the
60-80* interval. TheiNyt." 2700'c4l/mole
G7z-Fxp-u-p contr
and, 2350' cal/mole, resP. Thui;~.thes -,,a nates ~ ave a
tiot only vil~iyl
dezree of nttracti n or conjug4tio . tlP ,NCO g~UuP3
but also between 11148 icr~ inaj+p~,Co group, whlc)!w I
I ec 'With
ing value of~
Mcreas
R&JEORAME .
.7 ~l Ili!;
7.
7-
Cj7
-V. T. Yu. Ye., and V. :A. 1."oscci; z~ t:-, -,3.
and 17 o"5; U" r a in i a;,n Sci ent'
Steel 1161
Ing- 2ro-oerzies or
S re
-o 8, Aug 70, p-p 40- -12
efosc-cl;..., Y'- ---a
Ab f i L, r i~ k~ ~-r. seL~cti-n- miaterial-, fo-~- snruc,--u~--al j~ n C. i a- a - s
nus, stLdy i,-as o--
pro-, T.
zraTISVI~zi"12 IcrenZth, torsic-mal st-rarq-1- .-i-c endura7aca o :-
az:1 on 9 0 6 c. CS 1:
ut-actic hi--au-crea-rad L Z: i~.: ar:L.
no~- SU LO SUCII A rrDPf217V.-,,' 01: 1:0., L
The C'a s Li.
";h-
t8
hi 'A a: c c r MI..
~
Ceis. A n- e S.E,Za
for On"', G: C!-
1"I J.
.06--KIr forL,,ec'
V: of
--c'm 55"' L.1-1 -KO-F,'PeCt tO
V"i
1/2
UDC 615.917
SSR
'A
PO- 11, V. it.
-ic Effect of Phtha1ophos"
Experimental Data on the LmbrZrotox
sb. Cigiyena prinieneniya, toksikol. pestitsidov i Idlinika otravl. (Ii--iene
of the Application and Toxicology of Iles ticides. a[Ld 'the Clinical Aspects of'
Poisoning - collection.of works), vyp.1911-kievp 19 71.:1 pp 2,54-257 (from Uh-Far-
Makologiya. KhiLdoterapevticheskiXe sredstva -'TP1"sij,~oloAiya, No 2, Feb 72,
Abstract No'2.54.771)
Translation: On intraventricular injectionof plithalophos (Ii insectoacaricide;
derivative of dithiophosplioric acid) in. the amount of 15 m1r,/1Cg (1/10 DL _-n
50
rats every other day,beginning with the first day of pregnancy, by the 21st day
of pregnancy. death and resorption of the embryos were observed in 90.3,a of
tile cases. The weight of the ei-~bryos rerairling alive V:ias appreciably lower
than in the control group. On intraventricular injection of I every other day
in the anount of 7.5 mg/kg, doath ~ and resorp*tion of the embryos occul-red
in 73.6"0' of the cases (97. in the control.group) , and t4p number of baby rat i
n in
the litter was 27.2% less than in the control group. A decrease in weight of
tile live Mlbt' C, -In g
yos was also rioted by, comparison.with the control. proup. Wlien usJ
thu chr'omnatog-raphic method of
unvestigation... meta bolit or;~ of I - hydroxymetiiyl-
phthalinide and phthaljmide~were detected, in the experimentc-1 rats in the urerus
the'Placenta and the tissues of tile fetus*. Tile conclusion of I the potential
daniar ot I was dra~in.
54
7--
USSR
IJ 1) C 57. 1: 61.
VORONT "Ma". ~Mf
"Expe i Rental Data on the Embryotoxic A ct i n o ll-tthalopllo_s"
V s b G i g; I y e 'n 1 1) 1, c ni y a t r; Ics, ik o I e s t I t i (I C. A i 1, 1 i n 'R al
__j_o c y
--l"URT~n CT
SaR., ary sures I n
g
ana- t Me- Poison C-linic--collectioll of vier 9, Kiev,
1971, pp 254-4157 ll'h:hn4v~v No 6
(frolp '~.,711-biol
Mar 72, Abstract No 6F"FFT)
n -a r s a t - n., r:,; v ccric if'! plltllalorlllo;~: ,I of,
phoorhoric
p in lt~;
'~Iln 'he' f;tofnach' t"':'.. of
-Hhal' J
e-re. it, Un- Wl'~-'-I;'Z~
=-RIM
F-MIUMMOMM Owl. ffl 14,
V,
USSR TJD3 577 -l;547.q63-3-632_.8.oi5
VORONKA G. Sh. DEIMN, N. N., RUBINSKAYA, K. L., and SOLOVIYEVA, 1. A.,
physiology imeni I. P. Pavlov, :Acadr.-TV or, Sciences USSR, L-aningrad
praopt
"RNA Content of Neurons and.Their Glial ~Satellite Cello in the Su UIC
Ifucleus of- Rats Wring Natural.. Slee De]~Avation of 'the M fee Phase and,
PA
Amphetamine Insomnia"
Kiev Ukrainsllidy Biok-himicluniy Zhurnal, No 6, 1972, P13 712-717
Abstract* During n-,cWral sleep the IM concentration i n the cyll-loplasm of
neurons in the supraoptic nueleus.of the hypotha1,L,,1.,u; ond in the glial s-atellite
calls remains virtually unchanged; In rats deprived oT MM the 1W.
concentration in the neurons likewise sca.rcely chnnges%,but ircreases markelly
in the neurogli a. Hawever, the absolut-e: MIA con-tent del!rear-,~,s in the neurons
ged in tJhQ surrounding
(especially after the first Jay) while remaining un:--hang
neuro.-lia. Insohmnia induced by amphetamine injections~reducC!d. the absolute
RUI-content in all the rells,, but does not alter the MA concentration. Diria-
sleep af ', er partial and complete . 96 hours I inso-mia, thz~ M.M. content reTra ins
low in the neurons bu t returnD to the no=al: level in i;he neuxoElia.
1/1
(7
USSR
h
DDIfIN, 14. N., and PEVZI~ER, L.
. Z., Institute of Physiology
avlov, Academy of Sciences;USSR, Leningrad
"Total Proteins and Content of Simple Proteins in the Neurons and Neuroglia
of-the Supraaptic and Red Nuclei,in Rats During Natural Slee and After
p
Deprivation of the.Paradoxical~Thase of Sleep'.'.
Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 198,' No 4, 1971, pp~974-977
Abstract: In.rats, natural sle
ep resulted in the accumilation of total pro
teins and especially of simple proteins in the neuroglIal cells of the supra-
optic nucleus of the hypothalamus,and.ofisimDle proteins in.the neurons of
this nucleus. In the red nucleus,.howeVer,.total proteins decreased both in
the.neurogUa and especially in the. neurons, -while the!content of simple
proteins increased only slightly,-in the glial cells h*ut remained virtually
unchanged in the neurons. Insomnia for 24 hours resulted in a sharp decrease
in total proteins in the neurons followed bV a slight increase, while total
proteins in the neuroglia decreased slightly.~ The simple proteins decreased
only in the neurons of this nucleus but remained unchanged in the glial cE7.1s.
Deprivation of the paradoxical phase of sleep caused 6 rapid decrease in total
proteins in the red nucleus, but the decrease was smaller in the neurons of
USSR
VORWMj, M. A. and BESM, A. V.
10th All-Union Conference on Powder Wetallurgy"
Kiev-, Poroshkovaya metallurgiya, No 5j, May'71, pp 103~105
Abstract: An account is given of the work of the 10th All-Union Conference on
Powder Metallurgy, which was held in Kiev on 19-22 January 1971 and organized
by-the Scientific Council on Powder.Metallurgy., the povder retallurgy section
of the Central Administration of.the Scientific-Technical Soaiety of the
Mchinery Industry, the Institute of Problems of Yaterial Science, the
Acadeqj of Sciences.Ukr SSR and by the KiewHouse of bcient~ific-Technical
Propaganda* It was attended by-385.representatives from 98 Soviet cities and
_150:organizations. Eighteen survey reports,on important problems and trends
irt powder metallurgy were presented- Twenty-eight reports on problems of the
development and introduction of.methods~forlthe produotion of powders, forming
the sintering of new kinds of,retAxl-cerifmic materials and items were presented.
Particular attention was given to prdblems.of the development and application
of metal-ceramic Products.
p
USSR
MC 669-539-43
KARUSHOV, A.V.jl ROICBMTKO, A. I.; 7A-M., YA. and, ~2R.01 F., Kiey
Institute of Civil Aviation Engineers
d
"Fatigue Resistance of Corrosion-DamagedAir'craft Covering U,
Kiev,,- -Fi2~iko-3Mizni6heskaya,MpkhEinika~ Vhteriql6v iAcade~my of~'Sciences
SSR-- -Vol. 7,~No,lj---19a-1'.:pP453:5
-was ma-de of effect that a group of corrosion
Abstract: An investigation
craters,simulating local corrosion of aircraft coveritig., has on the fatigue
longevity of smooth and structural specibiens made, respecti,;rely, of D16ATI
(1-85 MM thick) and D16ATv (2-5 mm -thick). sheet materi*ls. The fatigue tuests
of.the smooth specimens of two batches -viere performed v7Lth net symmetrical
'bending ( 0- 14 dynes/mm2) at a frequencY of 70 C.PM. he corrosion craters
on- the surface of the first-batch,specim.ens.were,of eqnstant geometrical
dimensions (depth t = 0.3 mm and diameter d - 1.3 mm),..varying only in tbe
number of craters per unit surface. On the :~'Decimmens of the second -catch,
in the middle of small craters 0.3 mm deep awl 1-3 am in diemeter there was
one general" crater: t = 1 - 0 mm and d ' 3- 5 mm - It 11OLs folmd that the ad-
verse effect of a group of corrosion craters of identical geometrical 2ize
covering approximately 10,t of the area involved is practically the same as
the effect of a single dawrage arel%j in the variation oT fatiLrue longevity
1/2
JPRS 5605
22 August 197Z
V)
THE INFLUENCE ON BEAT EXCKANGE OF MEZING Cj-.1211CXL REACTION'S
IN A NON-EQUILIBRIUM I.A.-IINAR BOUNDART
,~oron6,;j. Monrow. It Ak Nauk SSSR Mv:chnnl~s Xhi,MoAtl t
(Article by Y__C,-.Y.
J9; Gaza, Rkisojen. February 197-0,
It hen been shown that in a non-equ -ilibrium boundary layer on a wall
wltb a finite catalytic activity, the ratio of hent currents 44h ~Ipnificnntly
difft~r from that of'on equilibri= cc" u'4nG 10 the vari4lolt freezilr..3 ~c;:
~Trzctiz=z -In'"d1V1dUa'I7 Vo8lon~ -r,F rhi-vouacory I .are,r:
It Is "own that for a boundary layer In a perfect gas or in Air
dissociating at eqtilibriam In truincated bodies. the ratio of heat
-- In the ~Qatjlow at the eapanj4
q/q...wbere q 41tl
z.a thermodynamic state of the gas (in other words, on =I,& adiabatic knde~,yj
1. a bound4ry.layer and an Its upFer border [I, in the case of a
boundary 14yor. In air, d1onclating at aq,;011bzt(ne uuder hyperocnic ~ondl-
Lionsi of. circumvention, th~ia-ratio In dater=ired prjimir:tll~v
Clon of pro6sure' 4'oni the b6d~* and pjactj~ally *dots. not depend on the
veloiity and height of flight 12). In-the layar
On_* will with~ a SIAlte catalytic activity. the indicatcrd a IItuirlon does
n t.take placaIowing to the variable freezing dairce,of chemical reactions
it the Individual regions of the currezt~ in thin case =he heat flow essea.
ti4lly'dupeinds on the thcrnu~chsm:lcal state of, the Sam la~ the Wtmddiry
layer [31. and therefore: one , '' pact a large difference I= the zsgnitude~a
'an ex
cili la.a non-cquilibriii~ .~ad_for tx=pla, in.an.sq0111brim flow in 4
boundary, layur.
Tnir conclusion Is confirmed by. r"ults af numerous calculatlcrs C!
ain,~n-cq4f.librlum pIcno laminar boundary layer In multi-component ilisscr-latrA
a r for A.dimatric body with a constant thickness 2A and a plane rose "c-
tion. For such a body the pressure In the aDproach to rhe.ar.;ular poin- amd
in f cxhatirtiol, fan. originating from this point% chingem rapidly
7> wbi% rllcl ilitates the freezing of chemical reactions in a bo-indary lay
-Z [I USSR DI
USSR MC 577611615.7/9
GISYBEPM, S. YE., and
Oaq?U"R To Mi
"The Dynamics of the Absorption, Ac=mulation$ and Elimination of Delthyl-
toluam1de During Application on Skin"
Sb. nauch, Tro floek, NII vaktaiii eyvoro.tok (Collection of Scientific Works of
the Roscow Scientific Research Institute,of.Vacclnes atd Serum), 1972s VyP
22, pp 235--242 (from M-Biologicheskaya..Xhimiyal No 16, Aug 73, Abstract
No 16FI951)
Translationt Tests on mice, rabbitz, and guinea pigs shov that diethylto-
luamide is rapidly saboorbed into the blood through un(tuaaged skin. It is
distributed to vaxious degrees in the organ3.and permeates through the hema-
toencephalic and placentarian barriers. The,dynamice of th(!i development of
the clinical symptoms of poisoning.and their~manifestation are a direct func-
tion of the dynamics of the diethyltouamide content in the blood whIch in
turn is determined by the preparation dosage applied to ~the skin. The
diethyltoluamide concentration in the blood Is determined by Its absorbability
through the.skin, by the abzorption and reabaorption by~tissues and or&ins,
by its elimination from the organismp and~poaalbly by the partial breakdown of
diethyltoluamide molecules. The disContinUOUSLnature OfLtbe diethyltol-
ee 'a for
uamide content curve for blood o _M all: the. anima specles sttilied.
1/2
USSR UDC 632.95
GRONUNA, T. V., ZHUKOVA, Ye. V.
"Quantitative Determination of DETA in Concentrates, Alcohol Solution, and
Aerosol Cylinders by Dry Titration~'
Sb. nauch. tr. Mosk. NII vaktsi7n i sy-vorotok:(Transactions of the Moscow
Institute of Vaccines and Sera), 1972i-NO~22, pp 222~224-(from RZh-Khimiya,
JqO 8 (11) ,Sep 73, Abstract No 18 N438 by S. G. Zhemchuzhin)
Translation: A method is'suggested for determining the content of the re-
pe.Uent diethylamide of m-toluic, acid in' concentrates,~alcohol solutions,
said aerosol cylinders by dry titration.,Some 200 to 300 mg of a sample of
the compound or 10 to 25 mg of a concentrate ate dissolved in 10 to 15 ml
A 20 and titrated potentiometrically ;ith~O.leN HC104 solution (prepared
f C W
0
frome-722 acid) in absolute dioxanoin an LPU-~-01 apparatus with glass and
calome1electrodes. The analytical error is,1.5~:to M
L eta.- &I mad~ai:s~
USSR UDC: 535-343+535-371
VORONIKO, Yu.-K.,,OSIKO, V. V.,.PROKHOROV, A. MI., SHCHERBAKOV, I. A.
"Some Questions of Spectroscopy of Laser Crystals With Ionic Structure"
Moscov, Trudy Ordena Lenins, Fizicheskogo Instituta imeni P. N. Lebedev
Akademii Nauk SSSR. Spektroskopiya Lazernyk-h Kristallov s Ionnoy Struk.-
turoy, Vol 60, 1972, pp 3-30
Abstract: The paper analyzes the basic spectroscopic characteristics of
ionic laser crystals (structure of absorption and luminescence spectra,
quantum yield, kinetics of intracenterxelaxation, prccesses of excitation
energy transfer) which have a direct influence on emission pp-rameters.
The authors discuss the effect wbich the. distribution. of impurity ions of
rare-earth elements with respect~to centers of different structure has on
these characteristics. Methods are outlined for analyzing the complex
Stark structure of the absorption and luiiinescence spectra of trivalent
-eart
rare h itms.
F FA E M-1 W
IjSSR
ALEKSANDROV, V. I., MI)MAISVICH, T. G., OSIKO, V. V.,
PROKHOROV, A. M., Aca emicranTATARINTSEV, Y.N., UDOVENCHIK, V. T., and
GMT= G. F., Physics Institute imeni, P.-N. Lebeae'V., USSR Academy of
sciences, Moscow
"Spectroscopic Properties and Generation of Nd3+in Crystals of ZnO~ and HfCC
Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Vol 199, No 6, 1971o pp 1282-1283
Abstract: The spectroscopic properties of Xd3'1* are known in various crystals
and glasses. Materials such as crystals ofN Al 0 and silicate glasses
sed ja 12 '
activated with neodymium have been widely u asiars. The authors of this
article first describe the spectros--opic propertiem and generation of NO+ in
cil-bic crystals of ZrO2 and HfOp- Thesa materiala havoia fluorite type
crystal lattice in which the Nd3+ ions rep]Aje the.tetravalent ions of
zirconium or hafni-am. In addition to the Nd + the crystals contained impuri-
ties, of CaO or V203 for -the purpose of stabilizing the cubic stnitture of the
ZrC~ and RM2. The authors describe the: experiment ancL give 1 ftigure arid 1
table to Illustrate the results. The figure graphica1V shovs the optical
spectra of HfO~-NO+ crystals, including thespectrum'of absorption, the
97
USSR
V
QRON'KO, Yu.., Y...,OSIKO, V. V., FROKHOROV, A-M., and,SIICHERBAKOV, I. A.,
MMY
-Ph fi "fe imeni P. N Lebedev
ns
Academy of Sciek3ces USSR
"Study of the Mechanism of an Elementary Act.of Excitation Energy Transfer
Between Rare Earth Ions in Crystals!
7--;:,j Moscow, Zhurnal Ek-sperimental'noy iTeoreticheskoy Fiziki, Vol 60, No 3,
Mar 71, pp 943-954
A
tract:
bs The micromechanism of the interaction of impurity ions in crystals
with one another and with the crystal lattice matrix is investigated. The
variation with temperature of the probability of excitation energy transfer
between rare earth ions was studied using doubly activited fluorite to e.x-
elude the effect of energy migration along d6nor ions.~ttt is shown that the
transfer process varies directly with,temperat~4re, even~in the case of the
absence of spectral reson,-,Lnce of electruTi transitions of the'donor and ac-
ceptor. It is concluded that the results:indicate that the probability of
excitation energy transfer in the absence oUixverlapping of donor and ac-
ceptor spectra is determined by-the density of~phonoa states in the frequency
region, corresponding to the Stokes resonance,detuning. ~:The m,echanism of
-d with,the population of the phonon state
temperature activation is associate
-1/2
7- , - j! i ~~4 : 4-.1 11:!! -T~ wl I -~ 13.11F ~, U: ' 'M
li'llraRm "l-l-l"Wilow,4~4H., ill., .! 1661131. loi~ljj 1 !.It -. Idi
1 1 *mi~iRigtli~~4--.ICK!P-'EnTg-,'M!;-E I
I I J - ~ I P ; w v I I
USSR UDC: 539.293
KOBTSEVI Yu. D., VORONKOV, 1,~, Kiev,Polytechnical'I*nstitute
sit
"Using Semiconductor Oxides to Make Nonlinear Resistor
Kiev Poluprovodnikovaya Tekhnikad Mikroelektronikbo~" Res-o. Mezh,-,ed. 8b.,
-N6-7, '19~2 pp 116-121
Abstract: The authors discuss the possibilities for using semiconductor
oxides to make nonlinear resistors. An investigation is made into the
mechanism of nonlinearity in sintered ceramic systems.based. an oxides of
zinc, tin, and nickel with various dopantsused to control the coefficient
of nonlinearity. Various semiconductor systems are gi.-ven together with
their coefficients of nonlinearity an & "im tion of s r,,ti~ring emp(!rati r
t
Mie current-voltago charactoristiev ~of the;InVeWt."At~0 zyutefyx 11re glifell.
The results of' the studies show that tfi;e,'caoffici-,-nt 6f norilinearity in
such systems can be increasea by,.usIng dopants whose Ion radii are con-
siderably greater than the ion radius of the main component. The technioue
for making such resistors is extremely simple and requires no expensive
materials.
74
-----------
USSR UDC.
01.391.81
ZOLOTAREV, I. D. ,VOR0IFICOV,,3vL N.
"Passage of a Pha.,5e-Keyed Signal ThroughaTrcwsistbrized Resonance Ampll-
fier
V sb. Radiofiz. i mikroelel-,tronika (Radio Physics and Microelectronics-
collection of works), Voronezh, 1970, -pp 9-12 (from RM-Radiotekhriika,
act iio 6A82)
No 6, Jun 71, Kbstr
Translation: To evaluate the effect of transient process on intersymbol
distortions and distortions of the auto corre! ation. fLmction in the case of
optimum processing of a phasev.-keyed signal, thelauthors determine the.re-
pponse of.a trans ietori zed reson*ance av~blif~ier t0 L: CO-.I)le.X phase-keyed
gual as a whole. Expressions are de ived which described phase and anmli-
rl
tude-variations of the output signal in time. One illustration, bibliog-
--raphy-of sevun titles. 11. S.
-621- 39,1.81:.519.2T2
LISSR
ZOLDTAMt I. D., VORONKOV, B. N.
."Evaluetion of the Effect of Transient, Processes on the Autocorrelation
Fwnction of 114ultidintnsional Wide-Band Si als".
gn
V sb. Radiofiz. i mikroelektronika (Radio.Physics and Microelectronics--
collection of works), Voronezh, 1970, PP 7-8 (from ',97,li-Radiotekhnika, No
61 Jun 71, Abstract No 6Ar-6)
Translation- The authors consider distortion of the *utocarrelation func-
tion of multidimensional viOe-band signels under the influence of transient
processes in an optimum processing channel. Distortions in all elements
are taken into consideration in the part of the cbennel preceding the
compression circuit, in the compression eirciait, and in the orptimmu filter.
The, greatest danger is presented by the first section,, where the addition
~of distortions takes place. One illustration, biblio&aphy ~of two titles.
USSR 1537-226+537-311-331:1537+5351
SHALMVA, X. V., i an& 14JEAV "aV, L... N.
."Kinetic, Study of _Photoconducti,%~ity of Cadmium Telluride Films"
TonIkiye enkI ye=t
V sb. ~_dineniy tell~zv; a I'll tpR tsinka i
ja~lllya 7111in Mnz of Tellurium Compounda:Vlith~. Ma-tals, of -Zinc and Gallitur,
Subgroups Collection or I'loxir.0 _ViV~us, 19TO, p ~2 (6*om RZh-Fizik-a
'No 10, Oct 71, Abstract No 10YEBOO br authors)
Translation: A kinetic study was made ofthe photacoi~ductivity of CdTe t7hin
layers obtained by the method of -aculum condensation on various substrates.
Basic parazqeters were determined for films a=ealed in Cd and 'De vapor as well
as those doped irith elements of the first) third, and!;reventh groups of the
jrriodic oyatuem of elemnta. The, aahoi-a investlgatc,-& the lux-wnpere and
rNlaxatlon photocurrent characteristics inthe 100-4000,K tenmeratmre range.
~On the basis of the results obtailed~an estlimate,was ~made of the trapping and
L
recombination center parameters.
7777"
0,Cd UNCL ASS IF I ED PIROCESSU!G 0ArE--lIDEC70
-'T I T L e-- AIN T bu C Y Vq I NINH WIT ION
AUMN 01X IDASE ACTIvI T
, UF. THE OF PE.R.3XIDASE
:
A 6. AG
R
L.A
TRY- rjf-,:, I NFO--USSR
UkCE~ S E L'.S'kf-KHC Z'* :6 1 UL 19 70v- 51) 58~1 63.
PUB-L ISHED---
7 C
$U,3JEC T 'AREAS--610LCGICAL ANO MEDI~At SCIENCES
.-JISPIC TAGS-B IC)LOGIC.-PIGMENT, CEREAL CROP't PLANT PHY:510LOGY, ENZYME
z,...-;ACT- -VI:T
-Y
T& GL MAkK I NG--NG RESTUCTIONS
-c
:~-OtCUMENT-:CLASS- UNCLASSIFILD
PkJXY zREEL/FRAhE--3CG7/0298 sTE P N
0--U4/9062/701005 /001/0058/0063
11RC ~ACCCISSICN NO--AP0135793,
IF" Il 2 0 0' 7 UNCLASS11F ~PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
'.''DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
,.-,..PROXY R~EL/FRAME-1997/1099 STF11
_cin ACCESSION NO--ATOIL9958
UNCLASSIFIED
'3/1.4$5
NO--UR/0020/715/1901006/143
USSR UDC 547.245 + 543.422.4
WYMOV, V. M., VORONKOV. M.,Q., SIDORKIN, V. F., D'YAXOVA, T~ L., and
ORLOV, N. F., Irkutsk Institute of Organ',c Chemistry, Siberian Branch of
the Academy of Sciences USSR
"PINM Spectra and the Structure of Trialkylsilyl Estersof Aroylphosphonic
Acids"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey 10iimii, Vol 43 (105), No 73 Jul 73, pp 1535-1539
Abstract: PMR spectra of bis(trietliylsilyl)aroylphospliaiiates
P-XC6H COP(o)(OSi(C2H5)312 -- were studied. : The data obtained from the
M ani IR-spectral analyses were. compared.with the calculated results
of the distribution of electronic densityby the method'of SSP MO LKAO
(PPP). No satisfactory correlation was observed between the chemical
shifts of aromatic protons and the Hammet a-constants in the 1mvestigated
series of compounds. Anomalous behavior was noted for P-halogen substi-
tuted derivatives for which a mechanism has been proposed for.the reaction
of the halogen substituent with the,reactive center.
47
USSR UDC 547.26'118+546.287
TROFIMOVt B. A., GAVRILOVA, G. M., KA-1ADIN, G. A., and YQR011M~M.
Irkutsk Institiite of Organic Cheadstry, Siberian Branch~of the Academy of
Sciences USSR
'Bis(trimethylsilyl)phosnhonemeth~ldioxacyclanes, Cyclic Addition Products of
Bis(trimethylsilyl) Phosphite and Divinyl Ethers of 1,1~ and 1,2-Alkaned-iols"
Leningrad, Zhurnal 0-oshchey Khimii, Vol 43, No 11, Nov 73, pp 2420-2-425
Abstract: Homolytic addition of bis(trimethylsilyl) phosphite to divinyl
ethers of 1,1-diols led to the formation of 4-methyl-5-/~is(trimethylsily'L)
pqosphonometnyl/-1,3-dioxolanes. The reaction proceeded:stereospecifically
with the formation of cis-isomers to.the eitent of 92%. The reaction of bis
(trimethylsilyl) phosphite vith -the divinyl ether of othyqeneglycol resulted
in-the formationlof 2-methyl-3-/bis(trimethyl-silyl)phosphbnomethyl/-1,4-dioxan.
1A
35
USSR UDC 541-91:547,111181128
COV, V. M., and VORONKOV, M. G., Irkutsk InstiLute of Or,r
DIYAK -ar2lc
Chemistry, Sib eri aff-Dr-a-n-c-h-Trf-ttn3-7Ve-&deniy of Sciences USSR
"TrIalkylsilyl Esters of Polyfluoracylphosphonic Acids"
Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR,, Seriya h3ximicheskaya, No 2,
1973, pp~399-402
Abstract: Studies ivere conducted on the reactions of tris(trialkyl-
silyl) Phosphites with trifluoracetyl chloride:(I) andOC-hydrohexa-
fluorisobutyroyl chloride (11)., with the formation of the corre-
sponding bis (trialkylsilyl) per (poly.) JC oracylphosplion,
ates in 31-52%
yields. The following were syntliesized: bis(trimetl-iylsilyl) tri-
fluoracetylphosplionato (111), bis(triethylsilyl) trifluoracetyl-
phosphonate (IV), bis(trimethylsilyl) -0(-Iiydrobexaf.tuori.sobutyi-oyl-
phosphonate (V), and bis(triethylsilyl) -,fX-Iiydi,-opevf.Luorisot)uty-
mryl phos phonate (VI). The products were viscous.o colorless,
liq--lids with weak cliaracteriqtic odors;~:tliey had low indexes of
refraction in conparison with organic and silico;ov--anic 0--keto-
phosphonates. Their structures were confirmed:.by IRj NMR, and PIM
spectra,, Compound III was synthesized by percolatizig a solution
1/3
U SSR
D I YAKOV, V. M. and VORONKOV, M. G. , Izvestiya Alcademii Nauk SSSR
Seriya Khimicheskaya, No 2, 1973P~pp 399-402t
0
f (27.6 g of I through 20.0 g of tris(trimethylsilyl) phosphite
at 400; a residue was obtained which, on fractional distillation,
gave III and 8.5 g of a fraction with a b.p of;88-930 (7 mm), con-
sisting of unreacted tris(trimethylsilyl) phosphite, bis(trimethyl-
silyl) phosphite, and fluorine-containing products. IV was syn-
thesized in a similar manner from 10.0 g of tris(tr.,.L'ethylsilYl)
ph..Dsphite and 9.3 9 of 1; the, yield of JV was:3.0 9 (31.3%)[b.p.
123-11260 (5 mm)~, n20 1-4436~ ld2o 1.0701- In a,ddition, 3.1 g of
D 4
nidentified fraction (b.p. 145-1480(S mm)) 'ere-obtained', as
an u
well As 1.9 g (54.4%) of triethylchlorosiline. V was prepared by
the dropwise addition of 19. 0 g of f resh 0~ -hydrohexaf luorbutyroyl
chloride acid over a 15 min period to 20.0 g of,ltris(trimethyl-
silYl) phosphite at 400. Distillation of the residue yielded V.
VI was prepared by the dropwise addition of 9.0,g of fresh _/Y-
hydroperfluorisobutyroyl chloride over a 3 jllin~Period to 10.0 P, of
tris(trietliylsilyl)pl-ko,-;phite atA00, The0rfaction m1xture became
opalescent and.the temperature rose to 65 ;-the, syst6m was rapidly
.22d,carefully vacuum evaporated to remove, (C211 5 3SiCl and unreacted
so -
~ --mr-m-rM07.64~~
: : I : C - :I
I :; I . ; ; ~ vill;V113, ',~.Jffa
- -I . . - : I I z . ~.! 1. -1 z UT .
: ~ ;_ I I , - - --- L ~ . . ,, ~ ,, _.. , " I I I . I ; '..
.2P2 020 UNCLASSI'VIED PROCESSING DATF--11S':P70
CTPC ACCESSION ND--AP0107046
~ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-t.U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, RAMAN AND IR SP~CTRA OF ME SU33
SI(OBU) (I), ME-SU82 SI(OBU) SUB2 (11),:MESFIOBIJ) SU82 (III)i ST(OBU)
SU84 (TV)r ST(SEC-BUO) SUB4 (V)v AND SI(ISn-BU0)-SU84 (VI) WERE'
MEASURED. FREQUENCIES, INTEGRAL INTMSITEEES, HALF BANDWIDTHS, AND
05GREES OF DEPOLARIZATION OF THE RAMAN LINES ARE TABULATED. THE
USr
SCATTERING COEFFS, IN THE SCALES 58iPRUME2 PL JG PIRIME2 (S) ANO 5a
IME2 PLUS 13G PRIMF2 -(R), -THE TRAClEf AND -THE ANIS t IPY F THE
0 Po 0
ROLARIZABRITY TENSOR W~RE -CALCD. CSM.OF FORCE CONSTS. FOR [I[ AND
TV, WAS, MADE,* - THE al SP.E.RS LON'IOF,~THE REFR-ACTION..CQEEF. WAS STUOTED IN il,
V9 AND V1 AND THE -ABS* RAMAN SCATTERTNG CROSS 'SECTIONS' FOR THE STOKES
WAVES NU SUB3 (S1-0) WERE EVALUATED. ~.'THE CORRECTED' FREOUENCIES,
HALF-BANDWIDTHS*-AND ABS. INIENSITIES OF,SELECTED IR. VIBRATIoNS wERE
OBTAINED BY NUMERICAL BAND StPN.~ THE. EFFECT 0 F. SUBS71TUEN-TS ON T14E
TERS IS DISCUSSED,
;STUDIED PARAME
UNCLASSIFIED
USSR
UW 5 17. 45
MAWJR, L z
VORM 4.0 Leningrad Institute of Textile
and Light Industry imeni S. M. rdrov,~Leningr Oj Ministry of 4igher
alized Eduoation RSFSR
and Secondary Speci
T
ria
lkylsilyl Ethers of Hypophosphordus Adid".
Leningrad Zhurnal Obshchey Mimi i Vol. 40 No 9, S eT 70..
21~3-21356
PP.
Abstract: - Reaction of a=oniura h7pophosphite with triallcylamino-
-i-ijanes or hexaalkyldisilazanes gives,complato organosilicon ethers
of hypophosphorous acid. The reagents are heated to:1000 in a
nitrogen atmosphere. The products isolated by fractional distilla-
4sn are: bis-(trimethylailyl)-IiTnopliosphite, b,j), 5,20/10 mm,
n 1.1~116, d lsilyl)* hypo]piosphito,
'40 O.g369; and bis-(triiethy
96-970/1 m 1-4517~ d40 0-92"230 The mi ounda are color-
1p
less liquids, self-igniting 'An air and very react170 towards oxygen,
au2fur, compounde with labile hydrogon., varimxsi~alidps, unsaturated
ampoun4s, etc. IR spectra show a~,strphgly shifted F-i-H band at,
2165cm--L
UCSZSP, ,,45
WX 5W. -
axild O-Tw~ X. F.., Instwil-Wte
of the Textilc and Light Industry~imzeni~S. M. Kirov
"Cleav6Ge of ffexap-lkyldisiloxanes by:Mbnoalk"l Phosphites"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Ubshche-:1- !(hir 0 '37
-ii, Vol 40, 11 7,1 Jul '0, pp 16 -.1663
Abstract: It was fowid by the authors that: hexaa1ky1d1.,A1oxane5 are cleavea
by monoalkyl phosphites according to t4e~.Geueral ~chemq~
7he Yeaction proceeded in the nresence of protonic~ and rotic acids
(fi~so p-CH C6H,SO H, Zn'l,;j) r,-rovided there.is continuV-us
41 off of
th~e -w-ater that f It'w'dis siap~3uted that Ile reaction was, a ste-owise
process.
MEMO=
or osDborout Con
Gem s
USSR UD-- 547.245
DDWOV) 0. 7-1. and X Textile and
Idght'Industry imeni S. 14. Vdro,~
".Telomerization of Dialkyl Phosphites and. Bl-,(triaj]~yjsjl.yj) 1-hosphites with
Vinylsilane DerivativeG
ingrad,Zhurual Obslichey MiDidi,'vol 4o, No 7, Jul 79, pp 16653-1669
L
en
Abstract: Dialkyl phosphites -and bic(trialkylsil,,I) phoscll't'~F' to tri-
alkyla3lenylsilanras in V of tert-butyl peroxitle accmdim to the
k he presence
general scheme 09; 2"
It was found by the, authin-s 1;hat a t n 0 the arldition reac li -,,I-r bv~-- acconi-
anied by, a ~eloxerimtion -nacti, 'Di latter in adducts of.the
-d by the pnes.~-:fj~~ce
hich. was romote
1.2) 1.3 etc-., t"'3 fOrMaUOU, Of W
ylsil e! la the re-actibli mixture.
of an excess. of trialkylvirr V-11
(110,01(o)II + llcll:=Gll~ jlpycli2c
5"13 ('191
PROCESSING DATE--30OCTTO
UNCLASS'IFIEO
f2 014
G,LRC- ACCESSIGN NO-AP0124552
ABSTRACTIEXTRACT-W) GP-0- ABSTRACT. HEATING ME SUB3 NEGATIVE SINET
S-U.32~0 ME SU82 SI(NET SU82)SU82 :61TH HIGHER AmUNES $LICH AS MORPHOLINEt
1.%~-METH-,LPIPERAZINE OR PEPHYDROAZEPINE GAVE.- TRIMETHYL(MORPHOLINO).
:SILANE,- S-SUBLS 61-2DEGREESp N SUBD~ PRIME20 1.4385, ID PRIME20 0.9014;
DIMETHY LDIt-109PHOL INDS ILAN E, Ei SUB4.106-10DEGREES, 1..47439 1.0163.
METHYLTRI MORPHCLI NOS ILANE t M. 109712DEGREES.
SUB35 65DEGREES, 1.4461s
TRIMETHYL(PERHYDROALEPIN ItYL),SILANEI 8 SUB21 74-60EGREESP
1~45-25v -C~~8547. DIMETHYLOLPERHYDROALEPINilo.YLS[I.ANE;v U8z
-20DEGREES* L.4860, 0.9380., ::FACtL!TY.-: INS
U~ ORG. SIN.v RIGAa
I
UNCLASSIFIE0
-0 FROCE~SING 0ATE"IMOV70
UNCL&SSIFIC
,TITLE --~-NITR,*GEN CONTAINING GRGAN0Sj.L,"jCGN.cijrpL
u ",4 u sxlx~
Nj3 TRI-ALKYLSILY,ALLYL AND N 3,TRDiLKYUSIL~ PKGPAKGYL A)E-(1VATIVES OF
-AUTH0R-(04)-LU4EVITSt E lVI CH t YE PESTAINUVICH, V.A., VORONKOV,
PESTUNC,
WNTRY '_`F FNF0--USSR
~-SOURCE-ZH.~ OJSHCH. KHIM. 1970, .40(3) 624-16~
DATE -PUBLISHEO --- 70 04
susjecr 4,R EA SC H FM I S T R Y
IC TfoGS-09GANOSIUCOM COMPOUNDI ~PYRROLIWjiEjl MGKPHGL[r,E, ORCJA-,,Iic
'
op ITROIJEN COMPOUNDt CATALYTIC ~OFJGAULC SVNTHES 15
MARK I NG-NO RESTRICTION
CC. s
00CUNENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIE
.".:-PROXY, REEL/FRAME--2000/09Z6 --UR/0079/701040/1)03/0624/0626
STEP. NO.
GIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0124587-
NC L A S 5 1 F I E 1)
7, i~~-
'2 / 2
UNCLAS~[FFEO. PROCESSING DATE-13NOV70
~CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0124587
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. REFLUXING HSIET SU83 dITH
1.0ROPARGYLPIPERIDINE. IN THE PRESENCE OF H SU[12 PTCL SU66 CATALYST 10 HR
GAVE 27.4PEi-Cr--MtT ET S053 SICH.GHICK SU.52 R .( 11 llk:EQUALS PIPERIDPID) , S
SUal9' 141-30EGREES, N PRII'le2O SUBD-1.*'4456t I), PRIME20 0,8696. Sl'-IILARLY
EES, 1.4743v
WAS PREPO. THE liPYR40LIDINYL ANALGG,*, B- SUB 3,; 13 1 -2.L Ft
ANO MDi-,PHOLrNL Pi, SU1317'~ 145-70E'u
L.4765, 0.9155.
.-008657., ANALOGt
-RE-ACTION OF ET SUa3 SICL WITH 3RMGC :TRIPLE BOND ~~rfj EQU
SUB2 R (R ALS
--PIPERIDI,*40) GAVE 40PERCENT Er S,UB'3- SIC.- -TRlPlE 30PID (;CH SIJ62 R (11), B
SUB5: 123-60EG~%EESv 1.478Zt 0.789.1a, HEATING 4.3 :G~ PYRROLI0[,NE el I TH, 8 .42
G 3 r TR IMET HYL S ILYL r I i CHLORQ o 2 p PRDPYNE~ 1 NSOB6 Yll SUB6 W I TH 6. L G r: F
SU83 N 5 'iR GAYE 38PERCENT. AF SUB3:;SIC TRIPLE BOIND CCH StJb2 R (R EQUALS
1.vPYk-",;JLID11'llYL) (III)v 8 SUB48 96-100DEGREES1 1l.;4650, :0.3636.
-90E:GRFES;
TREATMENT WITH HCL-E,r suaz 0 GAVE. zTHE: HCL SALTS, :011 It, M. 157
It -241.5-2.5D-PGRE-ES; L11, M..' 1'29*5.-3:lDEGREE5#;; FAC I L I TY;
I NS T ORG. S IN.
UNCLASSIFIEO
wtv
"1/2 027 UNCLASSIFIED PPnCESSING DATE--23(3CT70
OF MATERIALS BY.ORGANOSILICON COMPOUNDS. XVIII.
AGING OF FILM FnRMING SOLUTIONS OF HYbqtJLYZED TETRAETHOXYSI LANE -U-
--,AU'THOR-(.04)-V0RONKOV, M*G.t. PASHIC~H/EN, A,A'4 pI-ISHCHENKO-t V.T..t ZAGATAP L.
COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
_-_ --SOURCE--ZH. PRIKL. KHIM. (LENINGRAD) 1970t 43(3),, 611-15
... .. . .
T.E',.PUBLISHED
--'SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS, CHEMISTR~
~,TIOPIC TAGS--WATERPROOFING9 ORGANOSILICON COMPOUNDtORGANIC SILANE, ACID
.,CATALYSIS, HYDROLYSIS, HYDROGEN. ION. CUMENTRATIONi METAL COATING
2/2 027 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
.CJRC ACCESSION NO--AP0116900
~:ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. INCREASES 114 HSUB2 0 CONCN. IN
ME SUB2 CO AND AQ. DIOXANE SOLNS.:OF SI(CIET) SUB4 (1) RETARDED
CONDENSATION REACTIONS AND INTENSIFIED THE ACID CAT4LYZE0 INITIAL
HYDROLYSIS PROCESS WITH THE RESULT THAT.THE '4AX. IN, THE-: ISOTHERMAL
CURVES FOR THE VARIATION OF N SUBD PRIME20 WITH TVAE WERE SHIFTED r0 THE
RIGHT. THE EFFECT OF CATALYTIC AMTS. OF ACIDS LASTED ONLY BRIEFLY WHEN
300 DAYS WHEN,H SU83 PO SUB4 WAS USED
-.HCL AND HNO SUB3 WERE USED AND FOR
~BECAUSE SOLNSs CONTG. THE FORMER RAPIDI_Y~ APPROACHED PH 7 WHER2AS TliOSE
-.CONTG*. THE LATTER REMAINED-AT PH IS SMALLER THAN 7. ISOTHERMAL TIRE
VARIATIONS OF ALL OF THE PROPERTIE5.TESTED (D.f-U620v WSUBD PRIME20p
VISCOSITYt AND OPTICAL D.) EXHIBITED MAX. CORRESPONDING TO THE HIGHEST
-CONCNS.,, OF S101i GROUPS, THE AMT. :0F WHICH:VERE RMUCED. LATER BY
:CONDENSATION REACTIONS, METAL COATING', PROPE RT.IES ':OF PART I ALLY
.*HYDROLYZED I WERE BEST WHEN ME, _SU82 CO. SOLNS.~CoNt&. t~ H SU82 Ot AND
SU83 IN AMTS. OF 0*1-1.09 2-31 AND' 0. 15-0.04 'MOLE-L WERE USEO,.
; 1i :
I I
2/2 019 UNCLASSIFTIED 0RdcEssING OATE--30OCT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0119593
.-ABSTRACTIEXTRACT.--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, TRANSFER O~ THE ELECTRON EF,
m
ALONG THE SATD- HYDROCARBON CHAIN WAS,STUDIE 1IN A SEPIES OF CO, jDDS-
114E(CH SUBZ) SUBN CL IN EQUALS 0-11) BY PRIME35 CL; NZR SPECrRA AT
770EGR EESK o ON PASSING FROM 1% E-,~UALS 0 TO N EQUALS I THE RESONANCE
FREQUENCY, NUP IS HARPLY REDUCED OWING TO A LARGE'INDUCTIVE EFFECT OF ET
'AS COMPARED TO IME GROUP ENHANCED.ALSG:IN. THE FORMER C0,10D. BY THE
SIGMA,SIGMA CONJUGATION. r-Ok N.EQUALS.,?-,~THE 'NkJ M4tUE BECOMES LARG'ER To
'ITH
-OSCILLATE AROUND THE AV. NU VALU& OF 33,0~,Mfft W INCREASING N* HIGHER
:NU VALUES FOR EVEN THAN FOR 001) WS ARE'N,OTICED, ~ANOMALOUS BEHAVIOR FOR
IvCHLOROBUTANE WAS OBSU. ALSO HERE.INU 33-'.*255 MHZI. THE VALUE IS
CONDmONED BY THE ELECTRON 0. DISTRIBUTION BETwEEN THE CL ATOM AND THE
-.~'-CLOSEST CH SUB2 GROUPS IN THE CHAIN WHEN THE HYDROCARBON CHAIN BECOMES
LONGER (N GREATER THAN 4) THE AV. NV VALUE AROUND. ~WHICH THE OSCILLATIONS
GRADUALLY INCREASES. FACILITY# ANST.ARG,~ SIN., RIGAv
-USSR#
UNCLASSIFIED
212 015 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING OArE--230CT70
'_..ClRC ACCESSION NO-AP0119561
~-~ABSTRAGTMXTRACT--.(Ul GP-0- AtiSTRACT. "WITH THE POkPOSG TO LEARN THE
NATURE UF THE ELECTRON TkANSFER THROUGH SATO. NYOIROCARBOi'll CHAIN THE
"PRIME35 CL 111QR SPECTRA WERE 1_014POS. OF THE TYPE
STUDIED IN A-SERIES OF
X(CH SU52) SUBN Ys WHERE ~ EQUALSME OR COCLr N EQUALS 0-10t 12Y 131 ANO
X EAUSLS Y EQUALS COCLt N EQUALS OL B. THE, SPECTRA WERE MEASURED AT
77DEGREESK ON A SPIN ECHO TYPE APP# THE KESONANCE FREQUENCY V FOR BOTH
SERIES STUDIED ARE SIMILAR (SIMILAR TO,Z9!MHZ) AM LOWER THAN IN THE
:_.-CORRESPONOIN G.CL ANALOGS (X EQUALS MEt YIEQUALS CL, OR -X EQUALS Y EQUALS
CL). THIS IS DUE TO THE GEM[NAL CONJUGATION BETWEEN THE CL ATOk AI'm THE
-C;0 GROUP IN THE ACYL CHLORIDES. THE RELATION V I/S. 14 14AS A DIFFERENT
CHARACTER FOR EITHER SERIES. IN DIACYL CHLORIDES,JHE V VALUE DECREASES
ON PASSING FROM N EDUALS 0 TO N EQUALS 3.0WING TO:'A DECREASED MINUS I
-EFFECT, AT N EUUALS 3-8 IT OSCILLATES-AROUND.-AWAV. AVLUE LARGER FOR
-,.EVEN AND SMALLER FOR ODD N VALUES. THE AMPLITUDE OF THESE OSCILLATf toNs
AND THE AV..V VALUE INCREASES WITH LENGTH:{"F THE C:HAIN. IN MONOACYL
-CHLORIDES THE V VALUE OSCILLATES ZEGINNING FROM. N, EQUALS 0. FOR N
V IS INCREASED CONTRARY TO THE EXPECTATIONS ON THE BASIS OF
THEIR SIGMA -VALUES. THIS 15 DUE TO THE SIGMA, SI.G14A INTERACTION EFFECT
OVERWOGHING.THE PLUS I EFFECT OF THE ALKYL. GROUP,;l~. WHEN PASSING FR.O,%l !,4
EQUALS I TO 2 THE V VALUE BECOMES:LOWEK AS THE PLUS I EFFECT f3EcomE5
~.JNOPERATIVE THERE. ON FURTHER LENGTHEWN6.0F THE CHAIN 4N LARGER THAN
-2) THE PER110-DIC CHANGES OF v RESULT CNL,.Y FROM THE OSCILLATION EFFECT
1"WHICH IS REGULAR THERE* FACILITY: INST. ORG. SIN., RIGAP USSR.
UNC LASS I F
1-100809a PyrolyqLs of CrYa~c.etoxyoff dEm4thylsilonnes
AA
au4 dimethy1diacetaxyziland. 2"A. N,
b
rL (VHS,. Nall ini, Lebid~ya
LenivInd, USSRI- ~7h. hilick- Whim-" 1970,~1140(1),! 90-7
(Russ). Pyr*sis at-42,500: m- ainiaut6tlave:bf Ajib(SiMe~OLAc
(1) jave AcjO aMd*analog~uS'iPolY$'ilPx'an'Cs with-.16A~ as.4-ell as
greater value 6f-,x than in~ tbe~ iniflat -mviterial. PyrolysN of
Me2&(OAc)-. led also to,A~a an :synt.ar po
0 1~-SilDiiiil(IS With
2, 3, or 4. Such lyiii'iii thi ~resmce of H:50j~gave ;~24%
pyro
4 (z = 2). 1 may be diiiee, tly-p- m, pd," &6ni W20,axid Me2S-.Clj in
the presence of FcC -m typicalIrun'MM 9~Mezgi~lj and 632.9
g Ac%O, hwed until th~ :4ko, ia.of AcCI 46td. ~n~'the iesi
due
heated with 2 g FeCb,' gave a distillatiof AcIO anil:residiial I,
which were fractionated 6uvend6nall ', Aihe'yi Id OcOned with
le
increasing value of X. G. M., Mosolalioff
REELMME
IL9800.939
TO
.R. d
'128
USSR UDC 5411124042.938047.14118t547.1
D-YAKOV, V. M., VORONKOVo 14. G.# ORWV, H. F., IrkutskInstitute of Organic
Chemistry of thes"ftl"rPMment of tlh6~ L]SSR Academy of Sciences and
the,Leningrad Technological Institute Imexi lensovet
"blechanizz of the Hydrolysis of Trialkylsilyl Esters of Phosphorus Oxy Acids"
Moscow, Izvestiya Akdemii Nauk SSR No 11,, 1972# pp
2484-2488
Atztracti A study was made of the hydrolysis of the ab6olute and acid
trialkylsilyl-esters of phosphorus acids ofi the (R3SIGI)~ and (R
--YPe
3S'0)2pHo
X ~NKOY(6a YPO
and aroylphosphonic acids of tbe' 9e t (V. M. D'yakovp
.4 3.2
at al.# kremniyorganiche'skiye materialyi 11aukA Laningr*A, 139, 1971). In
order to establish the hydrolysis mechanism lijk vAth different content& of
18
tagg6d oxygen was used. By the j%ctioa ifith Hi 0it was' fourid that, during
neutral and acid hydrolys.s of trialkylsilyl.,06ters of the trl and quadruple-
-coordin
ated -phosphorus atom there 13 predomin=t 'kavaking of the Si-O bond in
theT-O-Si and P(O)-O-Si groups. The-experimentaLprooodures and res-ilts
are prosonted for the hydrolysis of ~tr~o(tilethylollyl)l?~it)opl)).tow bls(trlothyl-
silyl)phosphita wid bis(triethylailyi.)o
54
USSR UDC 347.25154i.64s632.933
VORONKQV# V. A., and'AZERBAYEV 1. N.,
MUMp D# A.# t
Institute of M. e Acadelk of-8ciencesIUSSRl Moscow, and
T
-1natitute of Chemical Sciences$ Academy of Sciences UV~'SSRJ L Alma-Ata
*Biologically Stable Grafted Copolymera:of.Parchlorovinyl Basin and Organotin
A=Ylates.and Formation of Film- on ThOW'
Aba-Atal Isvestlya Akademii Nauk KazSSR, Seirlya MiWcheska~m, No It
Jan-feb 72, pp 78-80
Abstracti Copolymers of trialkylmetaMloxystannates irith perchlorovinyl
(PCV) resin were obtained by heating tho'components in,a. mi-xture of acetone,
-"toluene# butyl acetateg In presenm OfLisobianitrylizobuiyric acid. These
copolymers provide strong protective 0W;?erjngS L with high antifung-al activity.
Optimal tensile strength, heat co.-Auctivity~and teupernture conductivity
uere obtained with 1% content of.organotin setacrylates. PCV films modified
with I-2,0S organotin additives showed ImprovedLphysico-mechanical propel-Lies
and higher beat stability. The new copolymers were tested ont Chaetomium
globosum, Stachybotrys atrat Aspergillus nigerl, Aspergillus amstelodamy#
Pacylomyces variety, Fenicilliun cyclopiumo Penicilliui brevicompactux.
Kone:of these cultures showed any growth on ~aapleS Protected by experinenta.1
co ymer films.
UDC A621-3-032.269.1
USSR
BUGDANOVICH, 3. Yu., WW~O V R. GABS, V. and D'INIUMV,
rs
Autoelectronic Beam for Linear Blectroa Accele'rato
ribory i Mkhnika: -Ek-6Derim~enta, No l,' J.-:,Liu: ary-February ,
1971, pp 44-4b
6 b s t r c TI, eauthors Present the results of their maeasuren, ents
of electron beam parameters from a 'Cun designed to inject electron
bunches throughout a lphrtse of 30-400 and with an ener,-7y of 300-
400 kev in `the accelera;-ing section, with a conbt-ant phase velocity
~ht a I a field: intensity, of 100 IC~I/cm. They
epal to that, of lit tit
also describe -'-.-he equipment they us,ed to ~ rim~ke these int---~asurements.
i. cross-sectional drawing, of:the-electron gun la.i this device is
given. and its dimensions specif ied., , A "Nord-10 1' and a "Nord-100,
both.-ol'* them electric discharge:Dump's, .were Usel'.1- 0 obtain ~Iie re-
r-m HE
quired. degree of eva-cuation, which *is Afrom 2-10 a 5 -10
for the fi--st ex-ocriment-alrun. A block diprrrwii of the entire
eq ip-nient -s given as well as. curves for the equipment character-
-U
istics and for the i-esults oblva-ined4. Al-I measurements, lastinE
-iours, were made with the same cathodes Ij 114 ch, underwent no
or. 20
change in dimensions.
USSR we 347,25,.Ya.641632-953
XOaMN, D. A.l VORONKGVj If. A. ,nRAUMV. V j and:.kZERBAYEV, 1. H. j
Institute of Physical Chemistry, enff~ ; o ances USSR, klascow, and
Institute of Chemical Sciencesj~ Acad94 of. Sciences KazSSRV' Alma-Ata
"Biologically Stable Grafted Copolymers of Perchlorovinyl Basin and OrganDtin
AMIates and Formation of Mas Based on Theile,
Alma-Ata, Imy st-1ya Akadezii Nauk KazSSR, Seriya Xhimichaska-ya. No I ,
Jan-feb ?2, pp 78-80
Abstracts Copolymers of trialky1notacryloxystantkites vith porchlorovinyl
NO xvain xere OWned Irf beating the coAponettsAn a mix-turv of acetona,
tolusnap butyl. acetate# In - pmaence of isobianitryllmobutyric acid. These
copolymers pru---lde strong protective coverings with high antifungal activity.
Optim-1 tensile strength, heat conductivIty and temperuture,conductivity
WM obtained with 1% content of organotin. metacrylateas PGV films modified
with 1-2% organotin additives showed ipproved physico-mochanical properties
an& higber Jwat,ztabiUty. The now copolymers wexeteri-ted ant Chaetomium
globcaux, STAchybotrys atra#'Aspergillus ftivr, Arspex-Sillus amstelodamy,
Facylomyces varietyr Penicillium.cyclopium# Penicilliun.brevioompactum.
ffone~ of these cultures showed any growth; on samples protected Iq experimental
lyzer films.
CORO-
RadUtion Chealstry
USSR UI)C 6?8.O1t53i66.095.Z6-13
YAUNOVp V. YA. p KOCMN, D. A., and Academician Vict. I.
SPITSYV, Institute o?4&ijcaT'4C&eaistxy,. Academy of Sciences USSR, Moscow
"BoAUtion-Chemical Synthesis of Grafted Polymer Materials With Fungicidal
-*626w# Doklady Akadoxii Nauk SSS901 ')to 3. 1971, pp 628-629
V 200
Abstracti Triethylmethaerylo;qs-tannane Nas graf ted onto polyethylene, polp-
propylene, polyartide-sl polyethyleneterephthalatel and polyvinTl chloride fr)m
solutions in suitable organic solventst. The,direct radiation-chemical method
of grafting krom the liquid phase of.Dre-irradiation of.ithe polymer was applied.
1=41ation was carried out with gmma-mys at dosW riites of 0.3-5 rad/sec.
Total doses of 04-15 zrad were applied. :The solutions: of the monomeric Sn
compound were deaerated by passing Ar through thez. Wood. slabs (spruce, pine,
bi=h, and oak) were grafted with the Sn compound by direct irradiation after
wacd that had been dxled in vacuo was treated with a -'O%;;b-.nzene. solution of
this -,compound. The fungicidal properties; of the _tpated ~ materials were tested
bY--&p1Aving:mven species of -:funoi, and using -.tho sothod ~;rtcomnended by tho
Tnternational Electrotechnical Associaticm. The materials exhibited fungicJ.-
dal:characteristies which, at a do o,of' rafting amounting to 0.5-1%, wev,
gre .9
2 050 W-11CLASS1 rlM' IPRrjC~SSING DATE__o?nrT70
;,,;~",UITLI~--EFFECT ;)F ULTfl.AVlJLET PADIAT KV*4 'CIN: THE STRUCTIOPE AND PRF)PEKTIES DF
5 UBJE C,T AREAS- MATERIALS, PHYSILS
00CUMFNT
CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
:'.PROXY lklVEL/F RAME---~-l 992/1552 :STEP I/D2 t)5
-7'.
,-CJRC -AC
,C E S S I INO A110112546
UNLL A SS -1 F I-E-0-
212 050 U-NCL AS S I F t t
)ROCESSING DATE,---020CT70
,-,:,-:-CIRC !XCcESS1tjh' NO--AP0112546
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ARSTRACT..' A: STUDY HAs BEEN MADE OF THE
EFFECT OF ULTRAVIOLET RADIATr0N* AS.ONE OF THE qAP10 ~METHODS DF TESTING
COATINGS F13R DURABILITYt ON THE MOLEtULAR AND S UPERMOLECULAq STRUCTURE
OF EPLIXY COATINGS AN'D THEIR PROPERTTFF STRUCT
URAL TPM4SF3Rv1AT[ jl,'S IN
COATINGS INDUCED BY ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION ARE A MULT1:STFP PROCESS
AS53CIATED WITH THE BREAKDO-A',N Of: MOLECULAR AND SUPERMOLECULAR STRUCTORES
ARISU~iG DURING THE FORMATION OF COATiNGS1 AND 141TH 1`14f. APPEARANCE
OF NEW
..:.M0PPH-fJL0.G1CAL FORMS OF SUPEKMOLECULAR STRUCTURES i:ACCOPWANIED BY A
.:CHANGE IW:MECHANICAL AND THERMOMYSICAL: PROPIERTI.E-S OF COATINGS.
USSR :394-!1Q.621-376.56
Im 62.1
VOROMVO V. D.; KAZAKOVI A. A., RAMOSHCE[b, NKOV, N. A.
"A decoding Device for Cyclic Majority Binary Codes witla Redundancy When There
is Multiple Repetition of Message
Moscow, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya., Promyshlennyye.Obraztsy~, Tovarnyye Znaki, ILVo
1970,,P 39, patent No 261460, filed 14 Oct: 68,
Abstract- This Author's Certificate intrcxiuces a decodlnE; device for cyclic
'Majority binary codes with redundancy when there is multiple repetition of mes-
sages. The im-it contains a shift.register, addersp a dietributer and counters.
As a distinguishing feature of the patent.,. the:device is designed for more- com-
plete utilization of the correcting capacity oC the code. vith improved resi6tance
to. Interference in reception. The ruod-two outputs of the addox in the ma,lority
decoder are saries-connected through the dlistributor to the majority check coun-
ters for all repetitions, the number of such countei-s being equal to the number
of information symbolso The values of the information symbols are deteridaed
-from the majority of the results of these checks.
USSR UDC:S36.~463
ROZENBERG, A. S., ARSE"'YEV, YU N "SAW MOSCOW
"Ignition of Gaseous IMixtures of Hydrazoic. Acid WlthNarious Diluents"
No. 3, Sep 70, pp. 302-310
Nlovosibirsk, Fizika Goreniya i Vzrvva, Vol. 6,
:Abstract., Most studies on hydrazoic -acid have noted t ha tthere is a
pressure threshold, below whith decomposition of HN )ccurs at a measur-
able rate. Tn recent times, thc*value of this threshold has been mcasured
and its dependence on the power of the igniting spark has been demonstTated.
This report present--, the results1of studies -an the coi* a oundaries
icentration b
of spark ignition of pure HN and its MiXtUTC5 Wi th: various di luents. The
analysis results in the production of a.formula for the concenrration bourt-
daries of ignition which is found to describe the expeximentally observed
dependerces well. Qualitative calculations,demonstrate that diluents with
high also have high values of the ificliPation., of t;lt ie slope of the linear
portilon of the experixnental~4e~ar~denaae~
USSR UDC: 539.293
KOBTSEV, Yu. D. ZAP,OROZHETS,.L. F.,:Kiev Polytechnical,
Institute
"Nonlinear Resistors Elastic Films".
Kiev, Poluprovodnikovaya Tekhnika i Mi%roelektronika, Resp. Mezhved, Sb.,
NO 7, 1972, pp 11-3-116
Abstract: A method is proposea for making nonlinear.resistors in the form
of elastic films. The nonlinear current-voltage curves for such resistors
based on zinc oxide with a polyvinyl butyral binder are given. The charELC-
teristics of films at various ambient temneratures are studied, and it is
found that their thermal sta:,)ility, is determined by the choice of oreanic.
binder, and that their resistance decreases:,vith increasing temperature.
The capacitance of the film' is 50-60 cuC i~
pF 2. The r~sulta of-the studies
shoved that the.film resistors c;~n- be: unOd- 16 gciod eftect in electrolutai-
-nescen
t matrix- display panels for: controll-in;g brigbtn6ss and contrast.
USSR UDO 621-3822
VYATKIN, A. P., an Siberian Physico-Technical Institute imeni
-D. Kuznetsov t"Mkoffita-t"e" Zs ty
V
. a Unive i
"Influence of the Conditions of Formation on the Electrical Properties of
Alloyed p-n-Junctions in GermaniuW':
Tomsk, Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedeniy, Fizikaj No 7v 19711 pp 12)-125
Abstracti The electrical properties of alloyed p-n-junctions depend sub-
stantially on the conditions of their formations, the crystallographic
orientation of the semiconductor surface, the purity,of the surface and
medium in,.which the Interactiowtakes Dlace,bettieen,the seiiiconductor and the
~xolten metal, the temperature u-tde :of ~the -allaying. All these factors ultiw~-
tely determine the geometry of the p-n-junction. The authors briefly describe
the method used to set up the problem and cite their results using schematics
asAllustration; these schenzUes predict the manner in which the p-n-junctions
will vaxy by increasing the allaying temperature from,~400 I.o.8000c. They
find thats 1. the solubility of In in solid germsnium increases as the
alloying temperature is raised; 2,~ an intense thermal conversion takes
'place in the Ce at temperatuxez higher than-5500C; 3.~ as tKe value of.6- 11
72
er
UUSR UDC: 621.315.59
VORDNKOV, V. 11. VCR(;YXGVA, G. and I,31ITSTIT, M. I.
"Effect- of 0-1coad-11hase inclusion, on Conductivity and the Hall
Effect"
Leningrad, i tekhnika :polu-otovodnikov, Vol. 4, No. 12,
1970, Pp 226~5-2266
Abstract: The included second phase is represented by the impurl-
ties that precipitat-e out of the semJconductor~solid solution.
Because of this inclusion, there is a deviation in the conducti.-
vi-ty in the neighborhood of the incluzion-from~the volume value.
If the inclusion is metallic, it acts as an emitter; if it is non-
metallic, the diotortion of, the con:ductivity within the Debye
--creenine, distance 13 low. In addition to thuso phfunonena, this
article considers the ca-'e in which th r diua oo tho nonuni-
a a
~ormity in the sen-.iconductor caused'by the inclusion is small
e
compared to the average.distance b1tween inclus-ions, and esti-
mates the correction th.at muqt be given the measured value of
the conductivity and the Hall effect obefficieat. The authors
also discuss zheir study o'l-" the form of Cu pre6ipitation when
troduced into Si for diffusion as. well as. f!)r, alloying.