SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT YERASHOVA, E.M. - YEREMETOV, A.M.

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CIA-RDP86-00513R002203630008-7
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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7-1 1 2/2 0 2 G ON C LA S E F L'E D PROCESS [NG DATE-23-NOVIG C IRC A CC I: "'; S 1 CN INL"- -A flu" I_, "1 3,4-1) fRA%C.T/t--XTPAC T-- ( 0) GV-0- A P, S r ;t C T THE 14 T URA CJ 113 ''I (IF UASS A ~ALUH.~S' ii.,~ r E 1:3 F7 o s p c '-LUUe';'FSCEl'jT L A H; P 5 '-'s lo!YE---S'T I Gill ED 3 Y LIS ING I S PH -'r-! I - - iz C:' F~ ti F riNcr, 5 Lp, F GLA')--, 5 G F V- ~,t t ni - 2 . c; cEiiir) , TfiE 5A." E t i.',v E IR fi-.D A'4 GP 1 Til I CKI:L*, 5 C F THE I-11`111NESCk~,T LAYER. RESULTS- tim~iuTco TH;'J N U~.-Cik'EMSE [IN' 1-It 'D TO A DECREASE IN 4 C U-` C;N L L- C Rif: E s A i"i E X P L A N A T I wA S OF FE R E 0 ~ THA T I H 11' V A S 13.11E To rFIE F0- R X, '~Tl I Get G F 'A C C NT Am I NA T i ~i G L A YER o E T ii E EC N : k4l i~ ;io r li C :NA PRIME POSITIVE ON S, FROVI THE GL'ASS JNTO TH'E PHU'SPHoko, FAC IL I TY: ~SE S . :S vElcl rEK~i. I NST. U S C U USSR t1l 'L -1 F- I E 0 U LAS 5 USSR UDC[537-P-26+537.'d'11.331:1537+5,-)51 YEI IA IT. A..? KPINYiAIR 3ASO' )v V. I. NOVICialav, A. 1.~ and. 1,100M IY, A. B. ar mi2te "Apparatus -for fligh-Speed Meacum-m~ent of Thermoztlectric F -Clt -,rs of Semi- conductor Materials in 150-500o Y, ~emp--1!4ture Ran e, Tr. Lenin.-Ir. r-oliteklin. in-t (Works of Leningrad Pol3technic Institute), 197-1, No 325, pp .10-16 (from, IC/h-Fizlika, No 1. Jan 72, Abstract 4o 1a;11469 by authors) Translation: The apparat-as ir, J-, ended for similt-aneaus deUeImIIIa!;IoII 0 f specific electrical and therzal, conductivity ana t1m) coelfricient of' thor.~,o- electrofmtive force ir, a idde te-mmerature ran c. Chanre:s 1--a-ve bacn vin-de in the conStm.-ction of"' the device, as compared with It h e X cz~lorim~tter, viiich thu influence of pur; ,AV*Lc~ helot uxchan.- - parmit rodiiction to the tAni,,-.,..%m of An av&,Iua4-ioj-L ol' Jw and crintact th!a~-,--nA. rur~i~taricec.: cirrors. rihows that in the det,~rmination of the thermoeleoctric coaf-Ifte-lent of the materia.1,! sfmclied the error connectt--d vith the ammacy of the 'xneasurerie%i-I,'.s, thermocoaple cali- bration, and 1-,,eanetry of the does .knot exceed MIA imi" USSR UDC 621-1717-71c9:57/7-;~M-zl )LERAIQLA,_N.~A I'AYDANOY V.I., NC'VICF':.0V? A. I., Y, U R C r.'s I YB. Eq~uipment For High-Speed 11,.'ev mu re went Of the: Thermoelee Lric Formeters Of 0 Semiconductor Materials In The Temperature Range 150-~kb i% Tri. Leningr. polite',;hn. in-t Of The Len4narad Polytechnic!~il Institute), pp 10-16 (from RZh:Zlektronika i yeye primenenive, No 2, Feb 72, 1971 No .5 ~AbBtract No 2377) Translation: The equipment, in which a normal reEir-e of the vecond hind is used, is-intended for simultuneouo determinatioh ~of the therma.1 conductivity, the snecific electrical conductance, and the coefficient of.lhermo-emf over a wide range of temperature. The error in determining the thermoelectric coefficient does not exceed 4--5 percent. 2 ill. 4 ref. SummiarX.' 023. 'CLASSIFIED PAGCESSfNG DATE--18SEP70 UN .c AC.CESSION NO--AP0105561 Clp ,-!Aa~fRACT/EXTRACT--tU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. JHE~ TEMP. DEPENDENCE OF ELEC. ~COND.; THERMAL E14F.t THE HALL CONST.t AND THE TRANSERSE 4ERNST :ETTINGSHAUSEN EFFECT WAS STUDIED EXPTLo I IN:: SN SUB'L".14EGATIVEX BI SUBX TE (0 SMALLER THAN OR EQUAL TU Tl-'4FS SMALLER THAN OR FOUAL TO 0.1) S!JLI0 -SOLNS. AT 80-500DEGREES K. IN COMPARISON TO PURE SNTEr A PFCREASE 'IN HALL 140BILITY IS NOTICED AND A IMAX, APPEARS ON THE,TEMP. DEPEND ENCE 'CUP NATIONS FOR THESE WE OF:THE HALL CONST. THERE ARE 2 POSSIBLE EXPLA, _AND OTHER OBSO. CHANGES: (1) THE.ADON.~01f:BITE LO`qERS THE ENERGY GAP -BETWEEN:REGIONS-OF LIGHT AND HEAVY HOLES;.;(2) IMPURITY (DONOR) LEVELS OF 131-1 SPL ITJ NJO~::AN-- IMPURITY BAND iO~A-T-Ef) BEL01W THE: VALENCE BAND. IN BOTH DDN. OF 611 LITTLEANFLUENCE ON THE;tONCN. OF HOLES. 7CASES THE -A HAS UNEI-f'~'-S IF I FD~- --- i7, -- I - - liommm 2/2- - OW- ~PROCESSING DATE--230%-.T70 - UNCLASSfktd: IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0125386 ABSTRA CT/EXTR ACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. OBSERVATIONAL DATA FOR 46 FLARE STARS DISCOVERED IN THE PLEIADES.OURING 196B AND 1969 AT THE TONANTZINTLA, ASIAGOP BIURAKANr BUDAPEST# AND ALMA ATA OBSERVATORIES. A STATISTICAL STUOY OF FLARE STARS SHOWS THAT THEIR OVERALL NUMBER IN THE PLEIADES SHOULD EXCEED 600. THE DISTRIBUTION OF:FLARE STARS ACCORD~'NG TO THE NUMBER OF OBSERVED FLARES IS WELL REPRESENTED BY THE SUM OF '11140 POISSON DISTRIBUTIONS WITH DIFFERENT, MEAN FREQUENCIES. ALL, OR ALMOST ALLv OF THE MEMBERS IN PLEIADES.WITHV[SUAL MAGNITUDES IESS THAN 13.3, ARE'FLARE STARS. AT A VALUE'OF 1.3.291 THERE IS A SHARP' BO.,,.UER BETIEZEN PHOTOGRAPHICALLY OBSERVABLE FLARE STARS::AND NONFLARING STARS. THE llE-~ki FREQUENCY OF LARGE FLARES:(AMPLITUDE GREATER THAN 0.6 MAGNITUDE) WAS .0001 PER,HR FOR MOST STARS. FACILITY: -84URAKANSKAIA. ASTROF121CHESKAIA OBSERVATORIlAt YEREVAN#.ARMENIA.N SSR. UNCLASSIFIE0 uDc 62l. 396.6:621.318(088.8) ARON, P. VI. RYABKOV.A., L. D. , ITRASTOVA, V I. "A Method of Producing Ferrite Powders" USSR Author's Certificate No 2 249 Filed 15 ja 66, Published 13 Feb 70 (from n RM-Radiotekhnika, No 10, Oct 70, Ab-,tract No 1OV409 P) The proposed method of producing ferrite powders by crushing a mixture of initial oxides and annealing the mixture,witiz subsequent pul.'rerization is dis- tinguished by the fact that the activity of the~powders is increased by adding to the mixture of initial oxides UP to 5 ~~.% ammonium sulfate, aud annealing the mixture at the teraperature of interaction betueen ammonium sulfatk tuid. the oxides for five hours, followed 'by a raise in temperature to 800-1,0000c.* 3.1 USSR UDC 599.323.4 L N GLOTOV, I N., and NIKOLAYEV, A, S. Institute of Biology, Aer-ian'tt=ftr ment, Academ'y of Science6 USSR, Novosibirsk "Dynamics of the Mobility of Murine Rodents.and the Effect on Mobility of Some Abiotic Factors" 3olvosibirsk, Izvestiya Sibirskogo Otdeleniya Akademii, 111auk SSSR, Seriya 31ologicheskikh Nauk, No 10 (190), 1971,Tp 161-168 Abstract: Field study of 12 species of Vales mici~, and other rodents (Sicista Letulina, Apodemus agrarius, Micromys minutus, Phodopus sungc)rus, Cricetus cricetus, Clethrionomys glareolus, Clethrionomys rutilus, Clethrionomys rufo- c=us, Arvicola terrestris, Microttis grecalis, 14icrotus*a-restis, Microtus ceconcmus) in forest biocenoses in the northern part of1the Baraba Lowland (Western Siberia). Each species develops a definite seasonal- rhythm in its movements about its range, the determining far-tars being the local climate a!xd ecology of.the specieo. Species periodicity is fairly conservative and iz is little affected by alight fluctuations in. temperature and moisture, W".thougli it can shif r in time as e result of abrupt climatic changes. Sig- WIicant changes in the rhythm of rodent mobility take place only when cl4matic facto.-s coincide or nearly coincide with peak activity, 74 USSR Bioloa A adeny of Sciences USSR 1J.. ical Institute c Siberian Branch,.Novosibirsk "Quantitative Characteristics of the Daily Behavior Pattern of the Water Rat (A:rvicola terrestris 1.) and Common Hamster.(Cricet-us cricetus 1.)" Novosibirsk, Izvestiya Sibirskogo Otdelehiya Akadendi Nauk SSSR, Seriya Biologicheskikh Nauk, No 10, 1972,- PP'15-:80 Abstract: Observation of rats and hamsters kept in open-air cages revealed that the animals perform a great numberof behavioral acts daily (sleeping, eating, MOV4 grooming, about, ate.) that follow:a general pattern for each specic3, with aome variations depcnding on the age and seasonal changas in the environ- ment. Young hamsters, for example, perform an average~of 650 acts compared to 600 in the case of adults. Both rats and hamsters e_xhibit a:persistent behavior- al stereotype and individual deviations are insignificant-. Traus, the average stereotype can be regarded as a species-specific characteristic. USSR UDC 612.17,1,44,2+612-745 V,-, ABROSIHOV; V. Y. j6 TIGI" RK01 Y. D. j PUKAYLOV V. V. Y~,E FP~Y M' A 13 .1117isiology Departraenit State ln~;titutrl of PAVIO'cal. ~rxlturfl, rnimi -Blazechanics Sectorj, All-Union Sdientllia R~Voea2jch~ II j+J-Ltj~,O 041 P11ySIC0.1 rM Culturet Moscow "Energy Value of Muscular Work U~der kti Conditic,47C, GUq Leningrad, Fiziologicheskiy Zhurnal BBSR imeni I. M. S-Chenov,, Vol Ito -9;, 1972 vpp 1097-1 t402 Abstracti Hypothesej3 regaxding the mechanism of Inmease In the vn,;,rj7,y value of work am based on the fact that additional rauscles,axa sunrzoned ill situation3, changes in the physical properties of the mu:,clenj and discocid-ina- tion of functions. Consicioxing tho ponsibility of fatlgm-~I b j~lycoly!;Is of respiration during mus-ular An& tha reduction in cut.,ij,,on consumption, in the ca--a of acute fatigu*,, V. 17010 of activation of: glycolysis with low enerMr effect and nimultaneous suppression of the UF)ily a~-T-Iclent oxydatim phosphorylation in the nechanism of increased ezpendituay~.-s during fatigue ia proposed. A study was mado to check the hypot-heaes. Experienced bicylists doing a variable amount oT iroxfc of aub.-IlzY.Iv-al Ile capacity on a bicycle ergometer were Uste& t detorrdne -2e oxygen ed 1/2 USSR 44IMY-LOV, V. V., et al., Fiziologicheskly Zhuzmal SIO~SR Imleni 1. 1-11. Sechenov, Vol 58P No 9, 1972# PP 1,3097-1002 of lKoek periods which varo stan&rd with rearxeo~; to capa-city and duration and also the vegetative and biozzetric indexes. Durii.,q t~e fatigue Per"rod, the oxygen demand ucnj3 104-1'76% higher than otheniise4 The phenomena of using additional nuseles in tho presence of 'fatigue nat faxictioning pleviously and also discoordination of the functione Wre not dsitected in the study. An increase in work value in the case of fatigue was caused by recruiting additional motor units of the primary worki zuscleq- and also activation -ng, of glycolysis with lowt energy erriciency.~.: Mmon mwm- USSR UDC: 62i6-tqi-'793 SUSNOV, V. M., All-JJnion Scientific Research, Planning and Degign Institute of Hoisting and Conveying Machinery, Loading,:Unloading and :Warehouse Equiprnnent and Containers, Kramatorsk, and YERMIN L .'.and MAUY, A. YE.,:New Kramatorsk Machinery Plant imeni V. I. Lenin -~'Deformations During the Electr --ZlagMelding- of, Alloyed Zrades of Steel" o Kiev, Avtomaticheskaya Svarka, No'1O, Oct 73, PP 52-54 Abstract: The authors study the nature and the magnitude of t-he shift ii edges which are to be joined in conjunction with.,tha necessity for the electro-slag welding of large products made from the 20KhN1,T~,25Kh2GIMT, and.20Kh2Kh high- strength grades of steel. For comparison, the authors studied deformations during ..the electro-slag welding of dimensionally analogous parts made from the 25GS grade steel. I-larks were made along the seams and measured for changes before, during and after weldinv. The results shoi 0 -t that the magnitude and the nature of the shifting of the edges are diverse during the electro-slafr, welding of anaular and straight seams. The results provided correction factors for the errection clearances bet- ween the parts to be welded.These data may also.be -useful in developing the tech- nology-for the electro-slag.tielding of other.parts. The existilig data have made it possible to weld a large hydraulic press,and a hammer.* N U$~R UDC 591-524.12(26):639.32 and Y=AKHBAYEV, S. K, , Combined Institute of Natural Sciences, Karakalpak Branch, Academy.of Sciences Ukrainian SSR "Zooplankton of Aral Sea Spaiming Grounds 0 ynak, Adzhibay, and Dzhyltyrbas" Kiev, Gidrobiologicliesk-4y Zhurnal, No 3, 1972, pp 86-90 Abstract; The hydrological regime of the southern Aral Sea changed con- siderably during the last decade because of the installation of wateniorks of water from the Amu-Dar'ya for. agricultural purposes. Salinity increased, the area of the spawning -rounds shrank, and the food supply of the main car-miercial fishes diminished sharply.. -Most of the spaming grounds in the southern Aral Sea - Muynak, Adzhibay, and Dzhyltyrbasi are located in freshwater bays. This study (made in 1968) revealed th6 presence of 56 species and forms on the spa,,ming grounds. They consisted of rotifers, cladocerans, copepods, harpacticoids, an&Dreissena larvae. The species composition was most varied an the DzhyltVrbas spawning:ground where 46 species (33 rotifer, 9 cladoceran, and 4 copep9d) were -1"ound. The Adzhibay zooplankton was the le-ast-varied. Its Aspecies incluied 121 rotifer, 4 cladoceran, arid 4 copepod. The species poverty was due~~to Llic, greater salinity of the water in this rc4;lon. During the period undex study, the 1/2 z.:7;1 IIIMII'~I_Ivull u1 USSR YEREKEYEV, U. Ye. and KAZAKHBAYEV, S. K., Gidrobiologicheski~ Zhurnal, No 3, 1972, pp 86-90 dominant rotifer forms were B. plicatilis in Muynak and Adzhib*y bays and B. quactridentatus and L. bulla in Dzhyltyrbas Bay. Among the clasocerans, A. rectangula and11esocyclops lauckarti were. dominant., The hydrological changes in 111fuynak Bay reduced the zooplankton:abundance and especially biomass 6- to 110-fold by 1968 compared with the 1964 levels. The crustacean 'dis, which constituted 33:'to 80% oi -the total zooplankton Acanthocyclops vir-- biomass itil 1964, disappeared A years later4 2/2 III V i;:: USSR UDC 53.07/.08+53.001.5 KO.WUSHKOV, G. V. , UE EKLN V, lf,.x FEDOROV, X~ I. "Effectiveness of Diffusion Joining of*Metals in the Stemless Pumping of Electra- vacuum Devices" Vakuumn. tekhnika. Nauchno-tekhn. sb. (Vacuum Technology. Scientific-Technical Collection), No. 2, Kazan', 1970, pp 117-iZ4 (from.RM-Fizika, No 1, Jan 71, Abstract No IA140) Translation: To obtain a vacuum up to 10 mm Hg in the~working space of dome3tic electrovacuum devices and to maintain this' vacuum during use of the device, dif- f usion welding of the components of the de~vice in stemle.,~,s pmping after degassing Is recommended instead of scaling the stem~by soldering or cold welding. Com- parative characteristics of the vacuum state in sampleat tioaled by varioun methods over the course of a day, week, and month, and.also.metallographic studies of seams obtained by the diffusion m -1dering are giv n. It was shown ethod and by sL that the.sealing of metalloceramic electrovacuum devlces~,with a diffusion joint makes it possible to obtain a quality-reliibleijoint in, these components. '~u. N. Kogan. 1/1 2/2 007 UNCLASSIIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT7C :~.CIRG ACCESSICN NU--AP0128032 .'.4BSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE FORMULA OF THE PREVIOUS PAPER MODIFIED FOR THF kEPLACERENT OF. H PRIME POSITIYE UK OTHER 'NOMOVALENT ,....CATION :BY A DIVALENT CATION (M) TO READ I-LAMBUA~EQUALS [BETA-C, ~'.'SUELIJNFINTTY PRIME2) PLUS l(l~8ARC.S-UaINFV%ITY)--MIhUS [-aARCM--4,BARC TY PRI14E2)) C~ SUBM ~A',;kVaL'SI&~UBH PAIME2 -K, LAMBDA WHERE;:ZET "ECUALS THE DISTRIBUTION' OF THE METAL tdN::8ETW;EEN THE RESIN AND THE SOLN., BAkC SUBM AND BARC SUBH ARE.THE METAL ION AND H PRIME POSITIVE (;0NCNS- IN THE Rt:Sli SARC SUBINFINITY IS ;EXCI siGE LAPAC.ItY Of THE RES Itit C SUBH IS H PRIME POS.1 T IVE CONCN. IN THE EQ :Ul L. I SOLN. I AND K IS A S.ELECTIVITY CONST. TABLES AND GRAPHS-DEMONSTRATING THE SATISFACTORY APPLICATIGN OF THIS FORMULA U THE EQUIL. BETWEEN JHE 14 AND NA FORIMS OF WJTH ZNV mGp CDs CU9 AND CA JONS, AND~OF THE NA FORKOF KB-4 WITH -,THE SAME.CATICNS.ARE GIVEN. -FACILITY: INST. KOLLUID. KHIM. KIEV, USSRo WK 1, ~ 7 _-UNCLASSIFIED DATE--Z30CT70 007 UNCLASSIFI,Eb-~ .-TITLE--FFFECT OF BACKGROUND tSODIUM.CHLORIDE CONCENTRATION) ON THE EXTENT EXCHANGE CAPACITY UTILIZATION IN KU-2;AND KB-4 CATION EXCHANGERS -U- N UTHOR7103).-~-ZAGRAlt YA.M., KOGANOVSKIY*T AK.v YERERE, KOt A.G. COUNTRY -OF INFO--USSR KHIM. ZH. 1970, 3612)t 161-3 PU13L ISHED ------- 70 SUBJ EC TAREAS--CHEMISTRY SODIUM CHLORIDE,, ZI:C/(UIKUZ [ON JOPIC TAGS--CATION EXCHAINGE RESINv N _,EXCHANGE RESIN, (U)KB4 ION EXCHANGE RESIN, CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REELIFRAME--1999/1848 STEP NO UR/00T3/70/036fQ02/0L6L/0L63 CIPC ACCESSMN Nf)--AP0123637 5' 7V m!1 -Tl-lFWr-l?rlnE7,l m1morl 1? 1gymn ln~~arl ------------- -777-7- 2/2 06t UNCLASSI FTED:` PROCESSING DATE-Z30CTTO ~IRC ACCESSION NO-AP0123637' .-ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-M) GP-0- ABSTRACT. TABLES AND GRAPHS ARE GIVEN FOR THE EXCHANGE OF ZN PRIME2POSITIVE 141TH THE NA FORMS OF KV-2 ANO KB-4 IN THE PRESENCE OF 0-180 G PER L. NACL. ~ THE VALUE.OF THE LIMITING COEFF. OF DISTRIBUTICN4 FALLS RAPIDLY . 14ITH NMCLI C PICN. THE LIMITING COEFF. OF -.SELECTIVITY IS-PRACTICALLY MNST, ASlS THE EXCHANGE CAPACITY OF THE RESIN. FACILITY: INST. K0LL0ID#.r.KHIM,..KljI:M. VODY, KlEVj USSR. if stract: A test' procedure and results from the vi1bration testing of welded Joints made of transfor--4r steel are Dresented. It is shown that the presence of a Z~ia -lower the vibration strenj-t-i of t le paqple. in ai~dition to comparing the does not UA ngth of the basic metal an'" welded.joints, the effect of the silicon vibration stre content in the steel is also noted. Samples 3-50 x 20 x 0-5 mml cut with and across the rolling direction -were used. The test results showed that the vi1bration strerirth of the twelded joints and basic rkleals depends on the E;ilicon content and ~on the welding. direction of the sheet (the strength across fiber is greater than along. _~t). Fracture of the atal r v2ar !.~.e weld-affected carrples with, a weld alwayr, took place in the basic rn zone. 7ne vibi-ation stren8th of welded joints iwide of transfo=er steel in the case of 'rhree-phase are welding with nonconsu--able e1ectrodes in argon in the ~section including the weld and wela-affected zone is appreciably higher than the vibration strength of the welded steel* The vibration strength:of the basic retal and welded joints of transformer steel increases with an increase in silicon content, 1/2 -55-- Mfirtilli .11- "1 - I . .1 1 1 , , ;... ~, !i . 1 11 1; ! 1: it - i ; I : . I USSR UI)C- 539.3 T or osed- Cy! c S'~ejjll _prcx -ate Ca1c, of a,Cl- al, I - 4- T-r-. V-cl -'te'khn. i-u-t-~ Olork-,-~ ITOvoc-herkassk Poly~,echnical T-P-sti- te), U, '11371, No. 2Z2, f,-5-I';2 --um FZh~-aVhanika, No 3,. Illar 72, Albs le No FV2I ct 1) --f long cylind::,ic I 0~ ID- Os e d acted czn dli~-,:-ributed surf-=Ce Ic-ads of -m~MtL-ary is discusssed. .At, the eaz~-s t-h-- slne'U may rest on d, -r 'aph agms that are fje~% or Can he f,--S-Cezed. ?--e calcuLition vetho-I pi--opcseld, is a development cf a CallcuIzat-cn, 7~at~c-d pr":-gposed hy V. Z~ Wasov for Cn opell Circular -the b:qn--thesis, oF stra-it nom-a-Is is ~ussunned, the ralio of -Zhe thickTess of tke Z a ON e-- n, "adius is as-sk=;ed t b all in witIn unity the tangentia.1 stresses d --E- cormidered- tc. h-e constant aver thp thickness of tlhe,lshell- The con-tom of a transvei-se secl-ion of The she2l -z considered -1-o ba ricandeo--m-able in 4tS Dlane. Ine e=-::~ Of -,he md-=- theese initial ~ kvpothesc-,t, is allalyzed i cn for a p--P- ti-cular 'law of diarqe in the loaa in a longitudinal direction. V. S. Khar'kav- USSR Ma 549.91,547f416 CAFURDY, -R. G. SOGOMMIAN, YE. M*, and, T; Institute of Chemical L Pbysics, Academy of Sciences WSR *Synthesis of Nitroalkyl-K-nitrosoamines MadwWr izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Xhimicheskayap No 11# Nov 71P ~pp 2606-2608 Abstracti The authors studied the U-nitrosation of different F.Lnnich bases n1troalkane derivatives -- with nitrous acid and its acid. halides. N-Nitroso- anines are ottalned by the action of an NaN02 solution in concentrated ",S04 on. nitroalkylanines. 11-Nitrosoanines counter synthesials effected by the fluo- -rination of the dipotasslum salt of 3-nitroso-1,1,5,5-t6tranitro-3-azapentane. IfItrosyl fluoride in an excellent N-nitrosating agent toicards amines, forming the corxesponding U-nitrosoamines. Mitrosyl chloride energetically nitrosates Mwnich bases, but does not react with weakly basic amines In; nonpolar organic solvents. All the resultant N-nitronoamines axe smoothly converted to N- nitroanines by the action of concentrated'nitric acid, bat are not oxidized bY trifluoroperacetic acid. However# X-nitrosoamines axe readily converted -ta-M-nitroamines If the reaction medium contains concentrated,HSO4 along with tbe trAlniioroperacetic acid. I-A ...112 019 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 .l`T,ITLE--NFW REACTinN FOR THE PREPAKATIUN,:OF PEROXIDES OF --.POLY. N1 TRO~,4R BOXY L I C ACIDS -U-- -(03Y-f NATSIBULLINt -,AUTHOR B4rLNKOi L.T.v FsYA.j TROFIMOVAr G.P. ~C-OUNTRY OF INFO--USSR YER$miet~ ~5,bURCE-I-ZV. AKAD* NAUK SSSRt S E R Ki H I M s: 1970t (3), ~.630-3 ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 UBJECT~ AREAS--CHEMISTRY JONC TAGS--ORGANIC PCROXIDE, ORGANIC NITRO COMP(lUND.,j.CARBOXYLIC ACIOt FLUORINATED ORGANIC COMPOUND.t BROMINATO OR GAN I CCOMPOUND, CHEMICAL MAR.KING--NO RESTRICTIONS -POCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ~PROXY REEL/FRAME--2000/0735 STEP NO--UR/0062/70/000/003/0630/0633 :--,C I RC ACCESSION NO--AP0124405 UNCLASSIFtED : I . ji , I .; : ~! 11 1 1 1. ." . i I :' ~i . I I .. . t I ~ : 1; .1. 1 . I -Tl~l ~J - ~ 1 .1 - I , ; ~ : 1~ . . , I !I : I . i;.! - - - , - 1 V , . , - 11, i. ~ i -I M r. Tilm, 114M.1, 1:, 11 HJL~, 'III! lli-~, 1 : ~J- - T - 1, 1, 1 .., If .: rlli6, U41MVP . iil; 1 ~ El? ~ M.-MmillIFTIT ~~ .1 0 . I I I,-;i,,i,, I-M nlm!-71; M-M tm.I.~ T! M r m P 2'/2:~ 019 UKLASSiFlb) PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 -;-CIRC ACCESSION NO-AP0124413 -ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-LU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. KEEPING 12 ~41. 40PERCENT FOR44ALLN WITH 17 G 1,FLUORO#Itl,4,TRINITRfJ,4,AZABUYANE 3 HIL AT 40DEGREES ANG PH 6-7 (WITH ADDED NA SU8Z CO, SUM, THEN 24.HR AT 15-2obEGREES, GAVEr AFTER ACIDIFICATION TO PH 2-3,.96PERCENT (0 SU62 N1 SUB2 CFCH SUB2 CH SUBZ N(NO SU82)CH SU82 OH (1), M. 37-80EGREES. SIMILARLY WAS PREPO. 48PERCENT -C (NO SUB2) SU83 CH SU8Z NANG ~ SU-B?) CH SUil,2 ON 4 11 J 2 DECOMP. 75-60EGREES i ANG 95PERCENT (0 SUS2 N). SUB-3 C(CH S.1-182) .512Z N (NO SUB2) CH SUB2~GH, M. 78-9DEGREES. I AND ACCL-ALCL SUB3 4 fjR AT 50DEGREES GAVE 192PERCENT RMNO SU82)CH SUB2 r-L iR EQUALS CFINO SUB2) SUB2 CH SU82 CH ~SU82), M. 44-50EGREES. SIMILARLY WAS RREPD. 92PEFICENT~CIF THE ANALOG WITH R EQUALS KING SUt32) SU82 CH SU82* 14:-62-3DEGR'E5; 93PERCENT R EQUALS (0 SUB2 NJ SUB3 CCH SUB2 CH SU8.Z It il I J , M. 6'8-91)EGREES; AND -93PERCENT R EQUALS (0 SU82 NJ SU83 CCH SU82t, 14. 55~-6DEGREES. IUKEPT 2 CAYS IN ACCL GAVE LUOPERCEtiT RN(NG SU82JCH SU62 OAG (R:EQUALS 10 SU82 NJ SU83 CCH SUB21 v 10. 74-5DEGREES. 111 IN; MECN TREATED WITH AGNO SUB3 0.5 HR7.GAVE- 87PERCENT RNINU SU82)CH SUB2 GNU SU82 (R EQUALS (0 SU82 NJ SU83 -CCH SU82: CH SU82)v M. 97-80EGREES.- :SIMILARLY,WAS 11)IREPO.: THE ANALOG WITH ',:,'--~.R:.EQUALS 10 SU82 NJ SU83 CCH SU02o He 41-20EGREES..~' FACILITY: --INST. :F-IZ. MUSCOW, USSR. UNC LASuf ,:::.I: i. I i.!; I.. li, ~ , ; :! I. Mi", 1] '!!.1l I - _4 -,"I -h - L ~ -L ~ i -1111 , la! 1 ~ - I '_~-'2/2 026 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 CIRC ACCESS1014 ND--AP0123584 :~,A&STRACTIEXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. PASSING CH SU32:CO 2 HR INTO 29.6 G-(O,SUfiZ N) SUB3 CH IN ET SUBZ 0 AT 0_5DEGREES GAVE AFTER AN AQ, :UEATHENT 34PERCENT RED 10 SUB2 N) SU133 CCME SU82 O.:AC, B SUB0.5 33.80EGREES, N PRIME20 SUBD 1.4512, D PRIME20 10680, ALSO PREPD. IN 23PIE-RCENT YIELD IN ME SUB2 COT UNDER SI.MILAR CONOITJONS. TREATING 10 G '4 A -Ci ..SU132;CMEOAC~ WITH 15 G (0 SUS2 IN) SUB3, CH IN ET'SU82 0 4 IT, TRACE OF Z.F S1183 SU82 0 AND REFLUXING 3, 11R GAVE 7412 SAME PRODUCT9 WHOSE IR AND '41MR SPECTRAL CURVES WERE, SHOWN. FACjLIYV: INST. KHIM. Fl Z. 40SCOW, US-SR. UNCLASS-IFIED- i :- !l . . I ~-: , :.. 7 :: " " i I ] ,. f2 i: L 11 ; . , 1, :13, ,,, ;t ~ - ~ ;;!, I --; i, ; 1-1 :~~, ~- 1, 1 1 - 1 - . I I . .11 H -11:,: 1 '' I - - ': - - i - , - i , ~ " .- . c il. !;~. I " I I I . 'i I i ~ - ; :- , '. I I PROUSSING DATE--,230CT7C 1/2 018 TITLE--SYNTHESIS Oi: BIS,2,FLUORO,2'.21);ItJl~rP.OETHYL,:AMINE AND T.klS,2,FLUORO,2,2tDlNlTROETHYL.AM,INE: Ul AUTHOR-404)-GAFUROV, F.G., SVIR.IDOV.t Sijar NATSIBULLIN,. F.YA., YEREMENKO, L T.: COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR S OURC E-- I Z V. AKAD. NAUK SSSR# SER. KH I M19701 2 383-7 -~DATE PUBLISHED------70 i.~_-,:_.._SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY, PROPULSION AND FUEL S :T09I'C TAGS--CHEMICAL SYNTHESIS, FLUORINATED ORGANIC CO.APOUND' AMINEI FLUORONTTRO COMPOUND, AMMONIUM SALT?, CHEMICAL DECOMPOSITION CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REELIFRA,4E~--1997/0822 STEP NU--U~D,10062/i7O/OQO/OQ"c'/0333/0381 AAC ACC E S S I ON NO--AP0119726 r UNCLASStFtED UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT7( ACCESSION NO--AP0119726 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-M GP-0- ABSTRACT ADDING 39:#8 G HO SUB2 N) SUB2 CH SU62- CH SUB21. NH AS TNE 01,K SALT TO 200 G HNO SUB3 I(D. 1.5) AND 50 G H SU82 SO SUB4 (D. 1.84) AT NEGATIVE5.TD NEGATIV&IODEGREESt FOLLOWED AT 0-5DEGREES BY 850 G H SUEB2 SO- SU64v AND~KEEPING,JHE MIXT. I HR GAVE A PPT., WHICH AFTER BEING WASHED WITH,H.SUB2.SO SU64 OF GRADUALLY DECREASING CONCN. (FINALLY 5PERCENT) YIELDED 0 SUB2 'NNICH SUB2 Cli(NO SUB2) SLIB21 SU82t DECOMPO. 100-1[)EGkEES,i WH'ICH 'EN MEPH WITH ALC# KOH O*f HR GAVE THE OliK SALTI DECOMPD% 128DE-GREES; D101A SALTj PREPO. SIMILARLY, DECOMPD. 121DEGREES; DJOH SU84 SALT DECOMPD. 99DEGREES. THE DltNA 0At.T IN H SUB2 0 TREATED AT 0-50EGREES WITH F DILD. WITH 20 PARTS N GAVE 45PERCE14T 0 SUBZ NN(CH SUB2 CF(NO:SU82) SV82) SUB2 (1)f M. 86DEGREES. I FORMED FROM THE DI,NH SU84 SALT IN,40PERCENT YIELD AND FROM THE DItK SALT IN 44PERCENT YIELD* TO 15.~- & CMNO SUB2) SUB2 CH SUR2-OH IN H SUB2 0 WAS ADOEDj AT~500EGREESJJVER.4 HR, 34 ML 5PERCENT NF SUB4 OH AT PH 7.5-8 TO YIELD NHICH SU32 CF(NL) SUB2) SU82) SUB2-) M 42-3DEGREESY WHICH IN CONCD. H SU62 SU SU84-WITH:HNO-SUB3 (D. 1.5; AT ROOM TCAP. 2 HR GAVE 70PERCENT 1, AUo SUN#, OF: ((0 SUB2 N) SUB2 CKCH SU62) SU62 NCH SUB2 CHINO.SU52) SU821TREATED KITH, FiN GAVE 75PERCENT 1CFINO SUB2) SUB2 CH SUB2) sua3 N,' M 76DEGREESO FACILITY: INST. KHI,!-4# FIZ.1 MOSCOW, USSR.- UNCLASSIFIED Genetics L, USSR KojiONDVA, S. D., KORVIEVi A. m,# YEEOPIEUXO~ L. Tit an~ GUI.W10Y, L. L., 71 Institute of.Chamical Physicst AcAlemy OT SUFnces WSH "Hutagenic Effects of Primarj Alkyl Nitrates" Sep/Oct o 5, Moscow, Izvestiya Akademli Nauk SSSR, Seriya Biologichtiskaya, N 71, pp 762-763 Abstractt The mutagenic effects of mothyl nitrate, ethyl nitrate, propyl -e investigated nitrate j vd butyl nitrate on the bacterlophage T4B E. coli wex by keeping the bacteriophage in 0.084 M solutions of the alkyl nitrates with a 0.2 M carbonate buffer at 27 0C for up -to 48 hours under constant stirring, The results vere exprossed as the number of i-nutatioas observed per ItOOO plaques. 'After 24 hours of exposure, tte number of mutations was 5.6 in methyl nitratep 0.4 In ethyl nitrate, 0.06 ift.propyl nitrate, 0.1in butyl nitrate, and 0.1 in conzrol tests. After.48 hou_-8 of expo5ure, methyl nitralts induced 14.5 mutations, thus considorably exceeding the Putagenic effect of -nitroso-h-metehylurea. The itlativie rates with whteh i~,-ethyl, ethyl, and propyl nitrates entered nucleophilic t-eactions were calcu- lated to be 9.1sliO.I. It Is concluded that thene substances Induce muta- tionz by alky:Lating DINA molecales. The zutLigenic effectidecreases with increasing size of the alkyl in tho alkyl nitrate, lecauiia tha Induced 3-:~" 0't8 UNCL ASS r F1 ED PROC15SS ING DATE--30OCT70 ~l _.C-lRC-,ACCESS+ION NO--AP0119752 %A6STRACTlE--:XTR_ACT-lU) GP-0- ABSTRACT ADOG. SLOWtY 7.5 ML 14N0 SUB3 f0. _10511 TO 2.1 11; FC(INIG SU62) SUB2 (CH SUBZI SU82 NHAC~IN AC SUB2 0 AT AND KEEPING 5 HR AT 15DEGREES GAVE 76PERCENT FC(NO SU82) SU132 :4CH SUB2) SU52 N (NO SU82) AC -( I A) I M. '63-4PEFCENP" Kf AND (0 SU32 NJ ~'-.,SU83 CCH SUBZ NHAC IN 12 HR IN 85PERCE-NT:MEOH GAVE '4,TPEkCENT ACj%HCH SU82 .(NO SUB2) SU82 K (1), DECOMP. 226DEGREESY WHICHs SUSP ENDED IN H SUB2 0 -.-AT, O-CEGREES AND TREATED 3 HR WITH 1:45F#,Nf GAVE 92.8PERCENT FC(No SUB2) -~SU132,,NEGATIVE CH SU32 NHAC.(Ill, M. 57-80EGREES., WHIlLE REACTION OF THE K ...SALT: W*ITH AQ. H SU82 SO SU84 AT PH,Z AT OOEGREES GAVE HC (NO SUBZ) NHAC tIll). 14. 58-9DEGREES.! SUB2,CH SU82 I AND 8R,]CH S032 CL SU82 GAVE KOR AND 100DEGREES BRC (NO SUB2) SU62 CH SU8Z NHACoim. III-12DEGREES. --NI-TRAT, ION IN AC SU132 0 OF I I GAVE IN 10 :HR 46PERCENT FC (NO SU8?_) 2 NEGATIVE CH SUB2 N (NDSU82) ACj M. 36.5-7.5DEGREES~ SI.MILARLYi III 45PERCENT HC (NO SU82) SU82. CH, SU82 IN (NO ACr~ M. 73-41)EGREES. _1A AVO IZPERCENT.,NH SUU4 01-i AT ODEGREES UNTIL:DISSOLVEDr THEN TREATEO ~IWITH HCI TO PH 3 GAVE 96PERCENT RNHNU SU62 (R EQUALS CF (NO $U82) SU82 'RCENr FC .(CH -SUE521 SU82), M. 56-7L)EGREES. SIMILARLY ~WAS PREP0. , 62PL '5U82) :SUB2 CH SU82 ANALOGf. DECOMP. 30DFGkEE.St WHICH ~WAS UNSTABLE IN 2cz ;~~f,_.'~-STGRAGE. THE LATTER KEPT id"TH 27PERCENT! FORMALIN HR iv: 0-51)EGREES -7DEiGREES. PERCENT 1: r3 TRINITRO,.~ AiA,4t8UTANOLt:M. 56 :GAVE~82 *FLUORDYIsl v UNCLASSIFIED. 112 007 UNCLASSIFIED Pt4b C E S'S NG DATE--160CT70 i j-.ITLE--PLATINUM MUNOCARBONYL -U- iuTHOR-(03)-RACHKOVSKAYA, L.N., YEREMENKOv N-K.~P.MAI'VEYEVi K.I. 1JDC 632.95.028 SLESAREV, V. N., and Western Kazakhs'tan Agricultural Institute Aftereffects of Various Doses of Simazine Under.the Conditions of Western Kazakhstan Moscow, Khimiya v Sel'skom Khozyaystve, No 9, 1971, pp:53-55. Abstract: The results of experiments performed in 1966-1969 on the Frunzen- skoyeiexperimental farm of the WOstern Razakhstan:Agricultural Institute (Ural.Oblast).to determine the aftereffects of - various doses of simazine are reported. The soil in the test area wns~dark chestnut, clay loamy with a humus accumulative horizon of 35-40 cm and a humus coatent of 2.77%. The -heat were studied aftereffects of simazine applied to millet, corn and spring ur in the presence of weeds calculated to~reduce-the spring wheat harvest by 16%, the bar1gy barvest by 13%, the millet harvest,by 58% and the corn harvest by 732-without theapplication of herbicides. Under.the given conditions, simazine in doses of 2, 3 and 4 kg/hectare kills weeds for 2 to 3 years. In increased amounts,-~perennial..weeds were killed even in the fourth year after injection. The.greatest iticrease in millet 112 UDC 621.514.58(083.8) USSR YEREYEMCO [.%'os*c. enorg. in-t-loloscow 2owerJnstitute] C2 Orre quency Gonverter With Direct Coupling And Artificial Switching" USSR Author's Certificate No 269287, filed 21 jan 69, published 16 JulY 70 a, No Karcft~.1971, Abstract No .(from --Slektronika i yeye primeneW.Ly Translation: A device for artificial riskusstvonnyyj swLtching contains com- L mutating capacitors located between two hai-moniously connectad thyristor recti- fier bridges, one oil which is connected to -the input of,,the '%frequency converter and tho other to the output. It is !proposed to connectv*~.a thyristor in parallel with.the first brid-e,, and a choke coil in parallel with~the second. A variant circuit is preeanted with. bridgeo twing 0.0miconductor 41,o'des uind two thyrietorB in the.circuits of thecommutating.capacitorso Thermomechan ical Treatment USSR '0V, V. I., BEI,YAVMYA, V. M., and,,YEREME-, KIDIN, 1. N. LIZUN, NKO Moscow Institute of Ste'161 band Atloys~ Study-of the Mechanism of Hardening of~ Wir~ by El ec troth ertno - medhanical Treatment" Moscow, MI Z Chernaya Metallurgiya, No 3, 1971, pp 129-132. Abstract.- The influence of electrothermal and electrothermoriqechanical treat - ment on the structure and properties of wire made of type 60 steel was studied. The electrothermomechanical treatment was found to,produce a higher tensile trength (130 kg/nm2) while retaini e1 of.ductility. Electrother- s ng a high lev mal treatment produced a tensile strength of 126 kg/miII2, while ordinary patent- ing resulted irt a strength of,117,kg/mm2. Electrothermal and electrothermo- mechanical treatment significantly ,improve~the struciure. -iwl "11 USSR UDC 621.396.961 BELENKIY, Ya. Ye., Y _,EZ~X~NZO, V. K. SPEKTOR, Yu. 1. IfError in Determining the Velocity Vector of 'HovingObjects ia the Case of Two-Point D-irection Finding by the Doppler Ef f ect" otbor i peradacha inform. Resp. mezhved. sb. (Information Sorting and Trans- mission. Republic Interdepartmental. Collection), 1970,. vyp. ~4, pp 130-125 (from lah-Radiotekhnika, No 8, Aug 70 Abstract No 8G6) Translation: This article contains an investigation of the problem of calcu- lating the error in determination of velocity by the Doppler effect in the case of two-point direction finding witli respect to a target, i It io demonstrated graphically that when determining the velocity,with a given error, doubling the measurement error of the angular coordinatelleads to A sharp decrease In -Lree the. region in which theradiated target is~localted.: Ther*(,- are;tt illustra tions and a two-entry bibliography. WSR UDC 66 TZEM~-Z'AL -and S'. -obl 2mm IIITHMI!;T D Inst:1.tutc-i of of platcrio. Y 19 , , cet 'ca-lent ol. ci,~Ilces adiml: ~!Y,-AQHIS' ase MuE-muyrt of Kiev mctullurziya, No 31 1972 PP 7~-81 act - - 3 - -L.-, di~ Abstr, Tlw mc ons. terjoy of caruer vemions of the phase agran fo ii-Itli thcdx Y--3:,-iy dcat r)im 0 r, -a y pted tlle '01 tl-li, Of s d ctw.~~ of zn~'Llcoys of this sYsterl new 11 an a detal.1c involvinl- )--ruy diffraction ~~nd diffcrenti~Ll 'hennil amilyses. I~c c c- ai nto the new 1)110.--e edacpvnm" is ollown to fcrml vdth paUncLitut in 11-1 -rinc:diatc pllmses based cin I-KI2 -d~~ 1) T 2 T-i-I'llipand TiPd~ c-ompounds. n cortria t 0 othor -jued at 60")'-)(" 'J!i2r-tlI chown thut the TJII)~Pdl plam;e is fai res-mIt ol, tha Or6o:,rinrr cif th?2 Leta-solid zolution; the TiPd. a CC)ng- VL":, n tmoLl'u-irit.-I 3-joint. and TilAlf2 U; formcd by Vic- IiL~ritcctuic rccluion it (3 MuisLrzitions, 2 tablcq, 12 biblioGraphip, 2-Oftrences) USSR Editor in MAef rizichaskaya Yldniya Poverkhnostnykh Yavleniy v =pl~vakh,(Physical Chenistry of Surface Phanorlana in Malts)~~ Aev, ~"Xaukiym duWm!' Frosat ig7i, 296:p.j,illustrationst tableso,bibliographic, referenc*s Translation of Annotations The booh- is acollection of artioles on recent research results on the theory of surface phenomm IA maltsw the develop- sent of experimentUt zethodr. :for studying- free surfaco energyp matting and the kinstics of spivAding, Included are now and relieible ef;qeriaental data on fivo surface energy and tho taxperature.coeffielent of surface enerGy of pute raetals, as mell as data on tw)-srA~multlconpcaer-t nelts, -astals, silicatesp ozddes, and salts at high tempexatum, T14D rolo of surface phenomena in technological procassou of poRder wtallurgy, slectrometallurgy, and other related sectors is discuased. The collootion is intended for eagineerin and techrdea personnel and Anstructors of: highar e&uoatioual g iWtjtUtiOnZ. 1115 T, ~:T USSR -YEREMENKO, V. N., Fizicheskaya'khimiy,~ poverIchnostnykh yavleniy V.-,rasplavakhj, Kiev,, "Naukova,dumkd",Press, 1971. q6lx~on of TABLE OF COMMA'S 277 PART ON-A. General Problems of Surface Phenomena JIV, Salli.. Role. of Surface Energy in iS'ructure:~ Formation of Alloys 3 Tu. Ya. Golger, V. I. Klassen and~A.,' RusanOv. Power Engineering of Surface ~Trocesses 9 pf Surfac67jebsion:;,by I?ree Viii Pavlov, - Cal culation , Volwne T.- I Antonenko. Law V. -1. flykov, G.-S. Yakovleva and 'Energy e. of Correspondiftg S:tates'f6r.Surfac , of a Liquid-Saturated,.Vapor.System.~ N. P. Fedoseyeva, L. A. Kochanovaiandle. D.. Shchukin. Surface-Phenomena-in~a.Binarv Syst-e4a-Vear the Critical Solution i;-Tempeirature 25 2115 USSR, YEHICNX0, V. N., Fizicheskaya kh Iimiya poverkhnostnykh yavleniy V rasplavakh, Kiev, nliaukoira dumIcaPPress, 1971. Oshcherin., B. N. Structural and.:Thermodynam.ib Calculation of Enthalpy Cond ~hsatioj~ ~ in:~ the. Surt - ce 29 S. N. Zadumkin, 1. 0. 5beb i Re D~gilov. And h6va ~ ztik . , ,, _ Effect of Dispers:~qri_-.Interabtlob of;jp_Sph.~res axiz4t on~:'bn';.the~~l$iix~fa6b~iEnergy of and !on Pol Metal 32 V.-S. Yushchenko- and B. D. Summ, Initial'Stage of Sur- face Dif f usion ~ of . 14elts 36 VO V. Baydov, L. L, Kunin and L;, N.~Sokolov. Surface Phenomena and Compressibility of Oxide Me'lts in Terms of a Solid,Sphere:Mode' 40 Yu. I. Malov and V. B. LazareV.;'.Ufi46r Relatibnship Between the Work Functioh - ofdan: Ele~ct;ron and Surface Tension in Binary.and Ternar~ bletal Solutions 45 V. K Yatsimirskiy. Calculation of-the Surface Energy of Metals Using,the,Concept'.0f the Finite~ Thickness of a Surface Layer: 47 '7 11'RERENK03, V. N., Fizicheskaya khimiya poverlchnostnykh yavleniy v rasplavakh, Kiev, "Nauk-ova dumka," Press, 1971. :V. 1. Rykov, G. S. Yakovleva, L.'F. Slonovskiy and T. I. Golonoz. Relation of Sound Propagation Velocity in Liquids To ~,ITheir'Surface:Enerky V. A. Petrovskiy. Surface Layer and -MetastbLble States A. 1. Temrokov and S. N. Zadumkin. ~Surface,Lenergy and Ion Tension of Crystals'With a Fluorite, Structure V. A. Grigoryan and V. P. Karshin. Role of the Anisotropy of Surface Properties in the Dissolution Kinetics of Solids in Liquids-- N 41 P. Konyukhova, V. A. Kuznotsova 4hd N. A Dudina. Electrocapillary Phenom na Ion In-i :~~Melts, e Vo G. Kovalenko and Yu..P. Nikiti.n.~~ Use. of ~E'Iectrocapil- Motions for Detecting the:Conditions of Interaction of Liquid 144t.ta. With.8149 1. Bykhovskiy and A. Yu..Pro'le*skovskaya. 1heritio- mechanical Effect Durin the Spread of i Liquid 9 Drop Over a Hard Surfam 4/13 51 55 57 61 64 67 71 USSR YEREMENKO, V. N., Fizicheskaya-khimiya:p6verkhndstnyk~ yavleniy. rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova dumkatt Press, 1971.- V Yu. A. Minayev. Role of Surface .'?orcds in the Motion ..-of, ~Partkcles in Solutions-With-an Inhomogenous Concentration Field -P. V tkin.: "Face.Effect"'and Nature U. M Kulish and A. ya ~of-Alloy Admixtures in Semilc-onductors P. A. Savintsev, V. I..Rogov and A. G.:Mikhaylyuk. Diffusion Phenomena in the,;Coh-tact of, Dissimilar IMetals B. Khokonov and S. N. Zadumkin& Size Effect of the Electron Work Function1roih VL- ~11 1 an A. I. Bilyak. Coalescence:Kineticss' :d"Determination ;So urface Tension on the I'd Phase~Boundary of~s in Sn-Sb Al-Sij A _8141nland Al'Si-Cr. Melts ai, chanism OPThreshold P. S. Kislyy-and M. A. Kuzenkov $~e Creep Under the Effect ofi' S urface Ten6ion-Forces 'in Sintering PlIetals. land Refractory Co:rlpounds I. Ye. Titova. Correlation. Betvieeri Changes of.':Surface Tension and Hydrogen ro"ratme. on 1-letals and Alloys 5115 75 79 82 85 90 93 97 :77 USSR YEREMENK0, V. N., Fizicheskaya-khimi poverkhnostnykh yavleniy P v rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova dumka!' Press, 1971. L'. Le Kunin , Yu. P.Pimenov, L. A. Arbuzova-and A. I* Demenkov. Hydrogen Interaction WithAluminum Oxide at High Temperature6,and Pressures 99 N. V. Pertsov, V. Yu., Traskin) Z# N. Skvortsova and.' le. 0. Shchukin. Destruction'-of Crysial Ions t4e Presence of Salt Solutions and;Melts 103 Ye G. Ageychenko, Yu. P. Dubovenko' V.~~ A. :Mai~Veiyev,; -Lati"stical V., A.. Tereshin Ana L.-H.-Shpherbakov.. S modynamics of:,Nuc1:euti,6a;..11 106 Ther 0 G. A. Sakhnoo I.. V. Salli.and i0. ;Vomichev. R le:of '0 -ic Surface Energy and:ForinatioA f Eute at,' 109 Structures S. L. Goltdshteyn, V. A. Lebedev, 1. F. NichkoV, V. I. Pyatkov, S. P- Raspopi 'n and V -M. Shaklein Surface Phenomena in Lead.Precipitation From Chloride Melts 6115 59 - USSR YEREAENKO, V. V., Fizicheskaya khimiya poverkhnd:5tnykh yavleniy v rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova dumka" Press, 1971 PART TWO. Methods of Studying Surface Phenomena and Measuring the Characteristics,of Sur.Lace Layers Yu. No Ivashchenko. Generalized Ap oach to Constructing Pr the Theory of Statistical blethods: for :14easuring S haract rise` urface-Layer C e ics;'~ 118 .-j"': 1. A., Andreyeva L. S o Bryukhanova -and Do Shchultin. Measuring the- Surface, Tenslon ~of liard.:;Metals in the Presence of Metal Melts'by thb~~Zero7 Creep blethod 1214. Nesmikh and -So B. Yakobashvili V. F. Kh6runov,~.V. 5 No. No Sinitsa. Ufiit.-for Mbasuring the'Surface Tension of Aefractory_;Mat6rials 1.29 I. ~I. -Chesa and:Tovbin M, V.: Stati.6har~,~ Position of a ;. them ftt,er.~.Air Inter face Spheroidal Particle.. ~on L31 , So Ye. Vaysburd and Go 14, of Adsorption on the Surface :of a Melt by Radio- active Indicator blethod. %17/13 USSR MUMENKO, V. N., Fizicheskaya khimiy'A poverkhhostnykh yavleniy rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova dumka" Press, 19710, ~.v ~D.- I.'Shepotlko, P. P. Ryazants.ev and.L., M. Shcherbakov. Unit for Mleasuring:the Contact Ingle,s, dt H,~ h 19 -Pressures PART THREE. 'Surface Properties of Melts Y. F, Ukhov 0. A. Yesin N. A. Vatolin:,and:E. L, P Dubinin. Surface roperties,:of Pd-Base Alloys B F Burylevand'V V. Vasil!yev~... IS.ur..face.' Tehsiion .~an d Rare;j Barth' I~lement- sotherms in Sc-, S Ba6e Liquid Alloy Yu.~N. Ivashchenko:,and V. N.,Yereihenko. G. P. Khilya, ee Study of the Temperature Dependence Ot:Fr' Surface Enargy and.Density:of,CU-,Ge Liquid Alloys V. F. Yely-utin, V, I. Kostikov and Ya. Levin', Stir- face Tension and Density,:of Si-Base Melts, 60-ft 136 138 1.44 149 USSR UREMENKO, V. N. F-Lzicheskaya khimiya~ poverkhnostlunykh yavleniy v rasplavakh,* Kiev, ~ "Naukova dtit*all 'Presp, 1971. R, V. Lebedev, P. P. Pugachevich and S *-- N. Zadum]lcin. Surface Tension in Melts of Alkali M6t:als and Their Solutions .'RO V. Lebedev and P. P..Pugachevicha Density in a Na-K Liquid System L. M.'Shergi I Popell and B. VV: Tsarevski S*~ Y Temperature Dependence of~DehSiti.Ps an~ Surface Tension of,~FerNi-Si P.- S.M senyuk, Yu. N. Ivashchenk6:dhd Vw N. art ..Yeremenko'. Free Surtface.Energy of Certain Molten Transition Metals F. N. Tavadze, D. V. Khantadze' andj Tsertsvadze. Density and Surface,Tension of Fe-Co; Melts V. N. Desyatnik, Yu. T. Melnik6v;)'I' .-F, Nichk6v and S. P. Raspopin. -Uranium Cations.Effect,,6n Sur- face Tension of MolteniK ~md.* U Chlorides ~G _X. Moiaeyev and G. K. Stepanor~ : Suxiface Tdn*sion,of Molten Alkali, Metal,,, Carbonates 157 16o 1.61 166 169 172 175 JI_ 5R YEREPENK0, V. N. Fizicheskaya khimiya-po-Y'erkhnostnykh yavleniy 1971. v rasplavakh, Ki v, "Naukova dW*a" Presa, e E V. Krinochkin, X. T. Kurochkin and- P V.,. Umrik,hin. Surface Tensionand Density:of Oxide ReIts of -the CaO_AI 1203-SiO2 System 1~9 Si Be Yakobashvili and V. I.,Zhvkay6v. Surface-Tension r rifl,gal -and Density of Slag Mlelts:Used fo CeAt Pipe-Casting ' ~ ' 183 A me . K. 'Petrov and . Novokhatskiyi.:A kov4lenko, I. A ' on Surface G. S. Yershov.- Eff ect. of Gases Tension of Oxide Melt 1,86 Pe N. Perchatkin. Physical Properti6s and Frothing Of Open-Hearth Slags 189 PART FOUR.Interphase Phenomena on-:the Solid-Melt Boundary Yu. V. Goryunov, V. D. DolzhL%ova and Be D. SUMMI Evaluation of the. Decrease in Free Surface Energy in a Spreading Met.al.Melt O-Ve,r'a Hard 10115 Surface 194 .61 USSR YFMNENKO, V. N. Fizicheskaya khimiya poverklijiobtnykh yavleniy, splavakh, Kiev, "Naukova dumka" P ess ,1971.' v ra r ~V. P6 Yelyutin, V. I. Kostikov and It A'*~ Pehlkov. Wetting of Graphite With Liquid V ~- Nb and Plo 197 YUO V . Naydich, G. A. Kole'snichdnko,!L**i:1* Felldgun M. S. Druy and Ye..M. Chistyakov.r Contact Interaction of Metal. Melts,: W~-*th, the Suiff ace of Bor Hexagonal and Cubic on:Nitride; 200 V. Nj~ 6 ko N. D. LeBaik :T.,S.'..PeStUn.and )T. R Yeremen t ics of SpreAding Ryabov. Study of the Kine . - Aluminum 0ver Iron 203 G. V. SamsonoV, A. D. Panasyuk.and G.-X K6zina, 4ebting Refractory Carbides With Molten Metalsi and, Alloys 206 V, S, Zhurdvlev and Yu. V Naydich.~Vetting of:Aluminum Oxide Ceramics and Leucosapphire Vith.Cu-Ti -and Au-Ti blelts~'- e08 F. N. Tavadze, D. V. Khantadze, G. V! Tsag6reyshvili and E.: G. Onikashvili. Wettabllity.of Crystalline B oren With Liquid Metals 11115 USSR YEREMENKOs V. N. Fizicheskaya khimiya poverkhn(istnylch yavleniy V rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova duzkall Press, 1971 V I. Ishimov, V. V. Khlynov and:,O. A., Yesin. Kinetics of - Vietting Hard Oxides With .14161tet 1,16tals 213 ~I. D. I'Ykachinskiyland V., Yb,* Manevich~:: Attab'lity of -~:Glass Ceramics With Alumifium~11~1; q 218 .:Yu. V .,~Naydich, Yu. N. Semenorg: ~I 4 ka., LaVrInenko" and ~B :M Yemel-t yanov.:~- Xetallization~ an& Aggrega- of ~-Piam nd:.P040r -With jidh66i6o~-ACV-iVe -,tion o Metal~Molts ;1 220 Le--L~ Kut'juin.:: Effect of 'the. ~Ci ~..ystaj -:S~rudture: of ts !ori, ~~T P4r -Refractor Y heir'-W ibLbi t Y, W i V'a ~I Ot . 224 Rogdv. and S~t.~ato. -of ~:Liquid- -P. A. Savintsev,'.. :Cr stal Boundarieo;iri Con~t~a '6 Mo_tiri~ of y Oertain Metal Systems 225 T. P. V~J- Boricov. Mark it T. B. Timofe'yeva.an o a, '; Bb~osilicate Sintering Powders of-'Lead Glasses 227 't -D 14 9: ag, lig USSR YEREI-EN'KO V. N. Fizicheskaya khibiya poverkhnostnykh yavlenk/ v rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova.:dumka", Press, 1971. S. Ye. blanlkovetskaya and E. L. Bokser. Yu. P. Nikitin , Interaction of Hdrd Ferrous:-Oxide,With Boro- silicate blelts.. 231 V. V. Khlynov, Tu. V. Sorokin and: V. -191 Gornovoy. Nonmetallic': Iriclusions Kinetics of Wetting . 'With Slag at thelvl~tal Boundary 234 Yu. V. Naydich and G. M. Nevodnik:.:I::Kinetics of Liquid Copper Spreading- Over Me tal": Surfaces 238 VO I. Shvetsov, Yu. P. Vasin and ..P.~~-V.~ Chernogorov. Role of Surface Phenom6na:bn the i4etal-Mold Boundary in the Formation of No'nme'tallid Inclusions in Steel:0astings 241 M. A. Sherstobi-tov and P. V. Gubchevskiy. Wetting Primary Graphite With Converter Pil Iron 243 -5 1-~ PoPel'- V, G. Babkin, B. V. Tsarevskiyand Penetration Rates bf Oxid6. Melts ii~ Porous Materials With Various!8urface Treatments 246 A. Ya. Khrapov and N. I. Shvidkov. Kinetics of wetting Ineltisions 13/15 and IL%gnesium Cast iron Smale With S~mthe Itic Slag 249 2~, -t -777, USSR YERENEINK0$ V. N. Fizicheskaya khimiya..poverkhnostnykh yavlertiy v rasplavakh, Kiev, "Naukova dumlka~". Press, 1971. V. N. Batygin, 1. 1. Motelkin.and.14. A. Pavlova. Pressure Soldering Nonm tallized Ceramics e With Metals 253 PART FIVE. Interphase Phenomena at the Boundary of No Melts K .K .Strelov. Predicting the Distribution of Condensed Phases in Refractory Materials 257 A. A. Deryabin, S. I. Popell, 11. A. Saydulin and P1. V. Tarkhanov. Interpbase Ten-sion,of Ferrochrome With Oxides and Phasd Adhesion 261 D. Ya. Povolotskiy, V. Ye.. Roshchin and V. I. Dudorov, D1echanism of the Effect.of Interphase Tension on. the Removal -Rate of Nonmetallic Inclusions From Steel. 265 L. 1. Pronskoy, M. I. Beyiinovp A. N. Surguchev, A. P,, Ogurtsov and V. A. Talat. Study of, 5urface PlIenomena Rpl,,.1.tive to metal 11ouring Under 14/1 i d S la 269 ------L IFFMI uDc 669-28-051 YERE LISTMICM, V. YE.$ OPALOVSKIYj, A. A.,, and. FEDOROV, V., 'YE. -.WNKO.--V Cil "Physicochemical Investigation of the System Molybdenum-Sulfur V sb. Khallkogenidy (Chalcogenides--collection,of works),,' Vyp 2, Kiev, IsNaukova DwAa",Ji 1970, PP 92-97 (from RM-Metallurgiya,:No 11, Nolf 70, Abstract No lIG181) Translation: A physicochemical investigation is conducted of the system Mo-S by the methods of thermoisraphy, radiography, metallograj~hy, dilatometry, and retistometry. It is established that-in the region of.concentration up 'to .26 vt. % S, a two-phase fiel(I-of crystallization of Mo + M02SI with a 15400 iempe.rature of the "solidus" lina,js realized, 2 ill., ~2 tables. 8, Krivonosciva TJ USSR UDC 621-791-011t543.~621046.72 ISSNIX, N. D., and NATANZON, YA. V., Institute of Problens Wf. Material Science, Academy of Sciences UkrSSR', and .113yabov, V. R., Institute of.Electric Welding imeni N. 0. Paton Academy. of Sciences "Interaction of Aluminum With Iron Suitable for.Welding Conditions" Kiev, Avtomaticheskaya Svarka, No 4, APr 71, pp, 14-16 Abstracti A general-purpose model for welding of dissimilar metals, developed by the Institute of Metallurgy imeniA, A. Baykov, proposes two stagess formation of contact between the adjacent surfaces and formation of a stivng metallic bond between the metals being joined.. The authors undertook sojviiig of the.problem of welding steel with'aluminum. alloys considering the inter- action of iron andmolten aluminum. :In this study the first step was spr3ading of molten aluminum on the iron surfacel the second step,:involved formation of termetallic phases at the iron-alumiinwt interface; in the a substrate of in.. third step there oc-urxed dissolution of these phases in.the neit of al-uninun.. Kinetics of molten aluminum wetting on the iron surface was 51tudied and the ratio of growth rates and dissolution of boundary phases wasidetermined, In all cases for the dissolution of ironinmolten aluninua a. substrate of intermetaXUdes was observed composed for O(FeAl )- ands n(Fe Al )-phase.3. ign with al 2int% without the It was concluded that it is impossible to weld Ufa formation of intermetallic substrates. USSR UDC 621.721.541.121 and VELIWOVA, T. YA. Institate of Pro- blems.of-Material Sciencey Academy'Of Sciences Ukrain:ian SSR Phase Equilibria in the Molybdenum-Titanium Carbide-Titanium Region ofthe Ternary System Molybdenum-Titanium!-Carbon. Communication 211 Kiev, Poroshkovaya Mletallurgiya, No'9, Sep 70, pp 57-61 made of Laetallogra~phy and x-ray pha~,e Onalysis of Kostract; Use has been hardened alloys to study phase equilibria at 1400'C in the Mo-Ti-C system. the direction of conoids in the two-phaz~e (6+3) region It is shown that which is formed by cLfbic carbide and metallic 'solid. solul;ions is parallel to the quasi-binary 14o-TiC section of the Mlo-Ti-C terna-rlr S~rsterli over a wide range of compositions oi- carbide and~metallic phases and does not depend on temperature (from the aolidus sizrfacc)~. The distribiition coefficient in the 4t0 two-phaae.regicn:'at the solidua surface (K--34�8) -3jum Oontantfj~ alo 'Aon of 20 at.% has within 20 to 58 at.% of titat ng the sectJ 1/2 Titani= .USSR U1) C669.295.5'232 rm:~tNKO 't. and T. D. Klev "PhaGC Diagram of tile Titanium-Iridium Sy6 te Moscow Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Retally~ no 6, Nov-L)~_-c 70, pp l9d-203 -ormu atiov~s over Gle Abstract: he experimental homogencous alloys (47 t entire range of concentratioaa) waro made, froo tit and pure iridium powder. The alloys were studied by uietallograpliy, -x-ray ditfrac- tion,and differential ther,7.,~l aiialysc:s. 1(easurements we-ce CIdu of tile teMperatures of the beginning of melting as well .13 of ti-.c poase micro- hardness of tile alloys. Tile ojbLair..ed data were u.,jed as, a bakiia for ploLLillg the phase diagram of the Ti4r systum shr),,iing: solidus : ti!j-,pera tures, single- phase alloys, two-phase alloys, a-phase trans f orwatioas~ On qi1enchins, and thermal analysis. It has beea shown that tile phase wit"), a CsGl-like struc- ture which was revealed in alloys with 30-~40 at.%- Ir and was, found to be stable down to room temDeraLurei.is a li-Lgh-Lemperature-niodification of a i1r-base phase stabilized with an. excess,coatent of titanium. ~.USSR UUC: 621,791.856.3.011 Teldim, imen" Ye 0. RABKIN, D. X., and J~YABOV, V. R.-,.Institute. Pf Electric W Patoa',-Academy of Sqiences Ukrainian SSR; YERIZ NKG V. 'N.,~ LESNIK, -1. D. and-PESTUN, T. S.-j Institute of ProbleTO-ot Material -Science, Academy of Sciences Ukrainian SSR rface Phenomena in Welding Aluminum Directly to Arnico Iran" Kiev, Avtomaticheskaya Svarka, No 11, Nov 70, pp 20-23 Abstract: The behavior of liquid aluminum with respect to,solid iron is 6f great theoretical interest for a number of metallurgical processes. This study conceras the effect of temperature-time conditions ori the spreadiu.- of al=ittunt over iron and the intermetallide pitases VO-3ta Fc2A1 5, E'~A13- analyzed in vacutim,(1_3*10- it 1111 '~ Lmaximum 7"he.kinetics of spreading was (x :temperatures of the experiment) using filmiijg and teluscop,.ic leiki phouograpliy for, recording the process. Use was. mada,of AV-UOO (99.99~:Al) wid arifict) iron. Conzidered were the possible mechanism forcontatt~' nteraction of liquid aluminum with iron and the conditioni for pro*ducing welded joints of 1/2 USSR UDC 621,762.5..001 YERDENKO. V. N. Process of UqL~id Phase Sintering "Surface Phenomena and Their Role in the i and Soaking of Porous Bodies With Liquid Meta Is" Sovrem. probl. poToshk. metallurgii (ModernProbletas of Powder Metallurgy d. 1~ress',: 1970, pp,101-121, (Translated 'collection of works], Kiev, Nauk. umka from Refe-rativnyy Zhurnal-Metallurgiya, No. 13, 1971, Abstract'No.1 G423 by the author). Translation: The processes occurring during Sintering in the presence of the liquid phase are analyzed, The re ul:rities knvolvg.-d in'the change 9 of capillary forces for particles of various form.are studied. A theoretical analysis is presented of thezonditions of qontaneous pene- tratiort of the solid by a liquid, the kinetics of the Process, and also solution of a number of technologica! problems on the basis of the replarities. produced. 14 figurcs; 3 tables;',36 biblidi. refs. 44 !SR N 4-JIYAN011 W. I., and PAIA101017,0, 11. M., Latititute for Problems of satex ial 5 -ences Ukrainian SSR cience, Acade.-,Z, of Sci its tr=vare of Polytherzal and isothermal Sections of the System Titanniur-,-Copper-- Silver; Remort 2" Kievil Poroshkovaya MetlallurgiYa, 7-0 5, MaY 70, PP 73-78 Xostract: Therwall and x-ray phase anallyses were conducted of the structure of iase diagram of the titaro-um -- copper-- th-ree polythex7ral sections of the p. silver s-~-ntem: at 5 aer., Ar,, at 60.aep Ag, and.the radial vection TiAg (Eta) -_ Cu. -ctions and liquidus skirface, isotherrr-11 Based on the structure of the paly-thermal st, sections were plotted of the titanium -- cop~),_-r -- silver rystcm at 1300, 10.005, "0 and WC. ule Scher-c of processes occur. r-iig in the titaniwi -- con er -- silver ternax-j system and its binax-j syste-d is gi:,ren. Dnt,- on the sti-acture a.~id s=p- -phace properties of the titanium -- copper and tita-ni= -- zilver systems are saLted in a table. Me phase diaggram of the copper -- silver system is related pre- t,- the ol-gole eutectic type with l'auted solubility of the ccr.-Irments in the solid cc~_-_za o-P :7.onovar- t and nonvariant equilibria ~ r the titanium, ian 1.0 copper silver sy.5tc:a is presented. lbw% tewperatums of w=,ruri=t convers -ions def sp_ CPA 2Cu. (~~eta) 'were. 'ined more precisely, and it was shawn that the ph~i lorms 2/2 'PR 'C~SSlhG DATE-18SEP70 72 ::0 25 UNCLASSt:PIED 0 ~-T'I-TL&--;-UPPM LIMIT OF THE HOMOMEITY-REGION OF ITI, MQ) AND C SUBI -MINUS Y, . crit,ir n, rni I IT T nm I- -"PROXY REEL/FRAME-1984/0149 STEP NO--UR/0363/70/0061(101/11006/,OOLO CIAC ACCESSION Nf)--AP0051045 IJ Nfl' L-A S.S IF IF D 25 U,14CLASS? FiED "PROCESSING' DATE-18SEP70 0 LJRC~ ACCESSIONI NO--AP0054945 -~~ABS.TR ACT /EXTR AC-T-- (U) GP-0- A3STRACT. THE UPPE~k LIM11 OF. flip tlf)MOGENUI-lly REGION OF irlt MO) C SUB1 MINUS X SOLID Sf-IL-NS- IN TH E I I C s Y S r E m Wh -s DETD. AILOYS WEPE INVESTIGATED,. Ti E COMPNS. OF WH I CLH F:,'-LL INFO THF COEXISTENCE REGION OF GRAPHITE AND THE CARBIDE PHASES AND IN THE 40C ON OF rHE PHASE DIAGRAM, 1HE ALLOYS TO BE ~U$O.SUB64 MR410 TIC SECTW STUDIED WEREE PREP0. 9Y.-ARIC MELTING- IN A PROTECTIVE AR ATM. ANC, dEfkE ~-ANNEALED IN VACUO IN GP,-.iPHITE CONTAINERS. THE INITIAL MATERIALS wEl),,E -99.7PERCENT MO POWDER, TIC (CONT6. 18.7PERCENT.COMB.lr4Eo C AND 0.4Pf-:RcENT :FREE,C)i ANO SPECTRALLY PURE GRAPHITE* VRAY PHASE,:141CROSCOPIC, ANJ- ETHODS WERE USED. THE -CHEl4* A-NAL. M PHASE COMPN. OF THE ALLOYS AT THE ~--,~-,,,SURFACE OF THE SOLY. OF C IN CARBIDE PHASES OF THE 1-10,TltC SYSTEM WAS ~-.I.NVESZLGATI.ED. BY EXTRAPOL4TING.THE, CON-CN.::0EPENDENCE OF THE LATTICE ig~,-~,-PAAAMET-ERS. OF..THE CUBIC SOLID SOLNS. '(T:LjMO.). C,,SLI811 MINIUSX TO OPERCENT E VA L U FE f0 A J H E, L AT T I C E PAiWA.ETERs: aPi 'rHE CU8.jC Al PHA-MINUS MOC -`.SUBl'-.JMINUSX,-WA,S KX AT, 40 A%~' PERUMC? 'AND -!44~243 A(X AT.38 AT, 'P EPCENTC UNCLASSIFUED 026 F ED; :_ .1 UNCLASO'i PRt~ESSINGG DATE--18SEP70 _TlTLE--LQW TEMPERATURE MODIFICATION*DF THEILOWER MOLYBDENUA CARBIDE -U- -AUTHOR-04)-YEREMEN V.N.t VELIKAN.Ii-VAI T4YA.t LISTOVNICKIY, V.YE., ibb4TRY OF INFO--USSR '~SOURCE-IZV. AKAD., NA UK SSSRf NEC MATER4 1970f, 6 1) 11-14 ------- 70 DATE PUBLISHED :,SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS D (IN CRYSTAL IJQPI~C TA GS--MOLYBDENUM COMPOUND* CARBIDE.- X RAY IFFR:ACTT _:____._STRUCTURE, THERMAL EF~ECTt ELEC'rRIC RESIS'rIVITY, IRFRMOIGRAPHIC ANALYSIS .-c_c-%TP ,OL MARK I firj--NO ICTIONS :00CUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REELIFRAME-1984/0151 STEP NJ--UR/0363/70/006/001/0011/0014 -CIRC--,kf-' -ESS-TOI~l_~iO-_-A_POO-5.4-'?47- C - - -------- LA :D -7:7.7 -71 026 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--lFSEP70 C-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0054947 :ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THERMOGRAPHIC AND X RAY 'OjFFRACTI'3iN METHODS 4ERE USED. DURING X PAY DIFFRACTInN INIVESrIGATION, OF MO-C 4LLOYS, CAST AND ANiNlEALED IS GREATCR THAN 1200DEGREE'a (WITH C CONTENT 12.538 AT. PERCENT AT IS LESS THAiN 1634-DEGREES hi"ID UP TO 50 AT- ~PERCENT C AT LOWER TEMPS.), ONLY THE PSEUCOHEXAGONAL LATTICE 'WAS OBSD. FOR THE MO SUBC-BASED ?fl,"iSEi WITH T14E PARAMETERS: ItLPHA EQUALS 2,9931 C EQUALS 4.739 KXv AINO C-A EQUALS t.58 IAT 31 AT. PERCENT C); AND ALPHA EQUALS 3-015t C EQUALS 4.739 KX, AND C--A EQUALS 1.5T (Ar 33.75 AT 'PERCENTC). A PHASE TRANSITION WAS OBSO.-AT 1170 PLUS OR MINUS 1.30EGRIr-GS N THE LOWER MO CAR81DE MO SUBZ Cy ACCOMPANIED BY EXOTHERMAL EFFECT .-,(DUqING COOLING) WITH A SIGNIFI.CANT.. TEMP.; HYSTERE$TS. A DECREASE IN THE SYMMETRY OF THE CRYST. LATTIC-E;r- -I.E. RHOMBOHEDRAL DTSTORTIO!'J, OF THE ORTHORHOMBir, no suB2 c STRUCTURE, IS OBSD.~ THE MO'CARBIE)ES STUDIED HAD 'ESP. EXPTS. WERE PERFORMED JHE COMPNS,, OF IMOC SUB0.48 AND MOC SU80.51, 1, Mr RELATIVE TO THE MEASUREMENT OF SP. ELECo RESISTIVIYY Or -IC SUBO.48 AS DEPENDENT (IN THE QUENCHING TEMP. WITHIN THE TRANSITION TEMP. RANGE. THE -TIV,ITY OF THE ALLOY QUENCHED FROM -GP Es ELEC. RESIS 140ODt -EE- DOES NOT DIFFER FAGM TH WIT14 DECREASED QUENCHING E ELEC. RESISTIVITY OF THE CAST ALLOY* TEMP..THE ELEC. RESISTIVITY DECREASES TO 050DEGREES, WHERE UPON IT UNCHANGED. THE DEPENDENCE OF THE P VALUE~ON THE QUENCHING TEMP. -OF THE.SAMPLE CAN BE ASSOCIDO WITH-THE CHANGE- IN -11:5 CRYST. STRUCTURE. .:AN--AODNL. THERMAL EFFECT WAS t)BSD* :AT 1.634DEGREE-S..' UNCILASS--rF-TED- , ~Lu' 112: 024 UNCLASSIFIED PkOCESSING DATE-20NOV70 _.l't-TLE--i4ELHAN I SMS GF EAdIUM THERMAL CCNCUCTIVITY -U-.: ,1-1~'AtiTH.C~-(r,3)-K~ll