SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT YUKELSON, L.YA. - YUMATOVA, V.I.
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CIA-RDP86-00513R002203710016-9
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S
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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USSR UDC 577.11
SOROKIN, V. M., NIGIIATOV, Z., and YUKEL'SON L. Ya.,, Institute of Biochemistry,
Academy of Sciences Uzbek SSR, Tas'?TweAnb1!Oiw4m Ott"uw-Al.
"Fraccionation of Central Asian Cobra Venom on Ethylsulfonic, Sephadex and the
Biological Activity of the Resulting Fracti:ons"
Moscaz, Biokhimiya, No 1, 1972, pp 112-116
laja ox'an-a Eichwa'd) vellom was separated into
Abstract: Centril Asian cobra (%1 ~L
10 fractions vhen applied to ethylsulfonic Sephadex C-50. Fractions 4, 7, 8,
and 9 prrpved to be toxic. Pbospholipase A, cliolinesterape, hyaluronidase,
ATP-pyrophosphatase, and 5-nucleotidase activities were, detected in one or
two fractions each. The yields were highest for hyaluronidase (67 percent),
choUnesterase (52 percent), and 5-nucleotidase (47 percent). Hyaluroniduse
and cholinesterase were found to be.highly~homopeneous,
USSR MC 547.993s616,9.098098*126
MSWWCDZHA_YEVA, S. A. SOROXIM, Y. H.~, andAlA~%"i,4L, Institute of
Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences, Uzbek SSR.,
"Terminal Amino Acids of the Tox1its Of ce*ntr~Ll As ian Cr~bra Venom"
Uzbekskiy, Biologicheskiy Zhu=u-Q.1 jio 6 jig?i pp. 61-62
Abstracti It ha4s been determined that the venom of the Gentx-al Asian cobra
Raja oxiana contains two neuxotropia agents (toxin I and toxin II)
extracted from the venom. The xestata of detorminatioa~, of the terminal am-no
acids from the C-erds, of the molecules of both toxins im. as followst Ash-
AsI?-C00H. With respect to the terminal aii-tno~aoidsl toxin II of Central
Asian cobra, venom is most similar to the nourotoxin of the South African Cobra
NaJa nigric-ollis and to the cobra toxin o:r the Formosan 'cobra Naja naja
at2:a# which have an analogous sequence of amino-acid residues wid contain
leucine on the N-end. Toxin I differs from x-heso toxi", IV virtus of the
N-end arAno acid N&Une)i this is of pa=6,L2uL-ax intereSt t0e=Se Of its
louer effectIveriess,
I669i
USSR UDC 591.105.-577415:598-126
IUKELISON, L. Ya., AKHUNOV, A., SADYKOV,,E.., and SOROUN, V. M.
Fearso Properties of the ATP-Pyropbosphatase.and 51-Nucleotidase of the Venoms
Naia oxiana.E."
of Yipera lebetina turanica. and
Tashkent, Uzbekskiy Biologicheskiy Zhurnal, No 6, 1970, PP 8-11
Abstract: Venoms of Central Asian snakes contain various enzymes, including
the highly active ATP-pyrophosphatase and 51-nucleotidase. The objecT. of
this study was to determine the effects:of the pli, to erature, and duration
ZIP
of incubation on tho activity of.-theso two enzymes in Lho 1ronoms of Vipera
lebetina turanica and Jaja oxianx E. Dosiccatoi venom'samplils were Obt:~incd
from.the Herpetology Laboratory of the Uzbok,SSq, Acadtimy of Sciences. 'The
activity of the on-,ymes was determined accordi4to the amount of dissociated
inorgan-ic phosphates. -The incubation samples coi-itained 0.1 :al of a O.i~
venom solution, 0.1 ml of a 1.2" AT? solution or of a:1.5" A.-,P solution, and
0.8 ml of a buffer solution. Results irtilioate that tbio ATII- pyrophosphatases
of both venoms have an optinum. pH. of 8.4-9.0 and an, optimur, temperature of
37-38oC. The correspording values for the 51-nucleotidases are pii 8.4-3.5
and W-390C. The best incubation period.isil hour. ~Ioth ATF-pyrophospha-
tases are thermolabile. The 5'-nucleotidases are more resistant to hiah
temperatures.
:112 026 UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
.:,!:--T-.I,TL,E--l SOLATION' OF PHOSPHOLIPASE A FROM THE VENOM OF THE CENTRAL AS[AtJ
COBRA -U-
-"~.-:AUTHOR-(03)-SAKHIBOV, D.N., SOROKIN, V.M.j YUKELSONt, L.YA.
:~_COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
1970t 35(1)1 13-16
4'. DAT EPUBLISHEO ------- 70
-..,..SUBJ.ECT.AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
TOPIC TAGS--VENOM, ELECTROPHORESIS, CHROMATOGRAPHY, PROTEIN, ABSORPTION
SPECTRUM
'C, ONT ROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY 9
EEL/FRAME--1999/1159 STEP NO--UR/0218/'70/035/001/0013/0016
CIRC ACCESSION -NO--APfjl23136
1~1 -
illf 'A"S I
t
2/Z 026 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING OATE--23OCT70
~r_'.IRC ACCESSION NQ--AP0123136
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-M GP-0- ABSTRACT. -TWO FRACTIONS POSSESSING
PHOSPHOLIPASE A (1) ACTIVITY WERE ISOLAT,ED FROM THE VENOM OF NAJA OXIANA
(SNAKE) USING SEPHADEX G-75 GEL FILTRATION AND CHROMATOG. ON CM
CELLULOSE. ONE FRACTION WAS PURE (POLYACRYLAMIDE GEL ELECTROPHORESIS AT
PH 4.7l 7.11 8.6t AND 8.8) AND THE.MOL- WT. OF I IiAS 14-1*51000 (GEL
FILTRATION). ABSORPTION SPECTRA SHOWED A MAX. AT 280 IM MIJ; M EXTINCTION
~COEFF WAS 2.2-2.3 TIMES 10 PRIME4 AS:CALCD. FROM;THE ABSORPTION OF A
0.1PERCENT I SOLN. THE OTHEk I FRACTLON WAS. CONTAIMINATED WITH PROTEIN
AS EVOENT FROM POLYACRYLAMIOE GEL:,ELECTROPHORESLS, WHICH PROuuCED 2
BANDS. FACILITY: INST. SIOCHEMA TASHKENT USSR.-
F--c c _1 1~ r-r-n-
[7
USSR UDC 591 145.2
TURAKULOV, YA.. KH., SOROKER, V. Pi., Nism M.CWHAYEVAP S. k., and YUKEL'SON,
L. YA., Institute of Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences uzberc ssR, V9ERea-
"Toxins in the Venom of the Central Asian Cobra"
-Moscow, Biokhimiya, Vol 36, Vyp 6p Nov/Doe ?It pp 1282-1287
Abstracts Two toxic agents, tentitively ca, Ued toxin I and toxin 11, were
isolated from cobra venom by means of filtrationthrouj~h Sephadez G-?5 and
chro.-a-tography an C11-cellulose. Theirhomogeneity uas Osta~llshed by electro-
phoresis in starch and polyacrylamide gels, and their Molecular weight
estimated at 6000-05500. Intraperitoneal.and intravenoms injection* of the
compounds into mice revealed that the LD of toxin I is 0.56 and its LD
50 100
0-85 mg/kg body weight, while the ID 50 of to'xin is 0.13 and its LDIOO 0.17
mg/kg. All nonsurvivors dLie within 1 hr after injection. The highest non-
lethal doses for mice are 0.45 mg of,toxin I and,0.07 nig of toxin II per kg
body wieght. Toxin II is not only more poisonous# butJts concentration in
the venom is four times that of toxin I.. Absorption spectr& of the toxins
axe presented,
USSR MC 591-105077-15098-126
NIGMTOV, Z. N. SOROKIN, V. M. , and YUM'3T. of
Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences Uz,9M
"Phosphodiesterase of the Central AsianCobra Venom!'
Tashkent, Xhimiya Prirodnykh Soyed:Lneniy,,No 5, 1972, o 688
Abstracti The venom was chromatographed on C-50 sulfoothyl sephadex
column, ten fractions being collected. 'Fractions 7 and 8 showed the 5'-
nucleatidase activityl the ATF-pyriphosphatase activity was distributed
between fractions 6 and 71 and phoaphodiesterase was found only in fraction
6, coming out concurrently with cholinesterase. Fraction 6.was passed
through G-25 sephadex column, separating the phosphodlesterase from
cholinesterases
USSR UDC 591-105"577-15-593- 126
SOROKIM, V. M., NIGMATOV, Z~, and YUML 'S.ON, L.YA., Institute of Biochemistry,
~Acad. Se. UzSSR
"Characterization of the Cholinesterase of Middle Asian Cobra Venom"
Tashkerr'., Khimiya Prirodnykh Soyedineniy,, No 6, 1972, PP 783-789
Abstract: Blectrophoretically honlogeneous preparation of cholinesterase has
been obtained by chromatographing the venom,of ITAja axiana Eichwald on a sulfc-
ethylsephadex C-50 col7unn. The activity. of the isolated cholineste rase depends
on the concent LI - of incu"C"a-
-ration of the enzyme,. on time and on the temperature
tion as well as on the pH. Optimal conditions are: in6ul)-ation tire of the
enzyme with t-he substrate -- 20-30 min;. p1[ -- 8.0-8-5; tempe,rature -- 37-30-
Already at the concentration of 2,6(moles dilsopropyl TI.-Loroph'. s- hate stip-
P_"essez CoMpletely the activity of cobra venom cholinisterase. 11e venom cho-
linesterase hydrolyzes acetylcholine chloride and acet,Ylthiocholkne brornide,
but exhibits no effect on butyrylthlocholine:bronide, 11:. analogy to tnue cho-
linesterases. Cd"bra venon- prejrrations of the cholineste-,ase have no lethal
mlz neurotovins, This
activity and do not anplif~i the activity,ol this veno,
cholinesterase is themally stable.
USSR UDC: 8.7h
VOLIGIN, B. N. Y-L"'u'"' F, S. A.
"Optimizir-g Modular Pedtzr_dancy in a Circuit With a (quorum Element for
Equipment i4ith Two Types of Failures Unequal in Darmage~Valuel'
V sb. Osnovn. vopr. teo_-ii. i rr,-~t_,Lki nadezhnosti (Basic Problens in the
Lheory and Practice of 7:-2liabilit-0 --collection off works), 14oscow, "Sov.
radio", .1971, pp 151-5-10-57 (from. R.Zh-Kibernetika, No 1, Je-.q 72, Abstract.
No IV964)
Translation: The authcr proposes use of a standby circ-ait' whose failures
result in minimur. expected damage a s o pt in- _- redundancy with Tuorunn. ele-
ment assilming a GJ.,,en =iltiplicity for an equipment modii:.e wIth tvo t-ypes
of failures which are uncoual in danage,V&11&~ The cancent of an Qaviiva-
lent.redundancy rtodule _J_~ introduced, enabling quantitative analysisr with
a fair degree of generalit-y. '-r alrorithan is. described for digital com-
Duter determination ard co_-Dar`~son of reliability chaxacteristics of all
possible sc*-ar, tic dfa,:rr_azs of _red*undarcy. Graphs of re~;icns of dominati-on
-otimum c4rcu-'t uhen the
are presented for direct -4eter- ration of the oll
reliability characteris-.Ics of "be .1-nitial nodule and th,:~ relation betwec-n
damages from failures of each type P-"-e kalo,~m. Authors' abstract.
USSR
UDC:621.735
DVIORINA, L. A. , YIIY_I1W0_Ih'0~ ~ev 0 MOVENKOV S. A.3 lfis~itnte of Problems of
Material Science Academy of Sciences VrkrSSR
IlInteraction of Titanium Diboride with Titanitori Disilicide and Silicon at
High Temperatures"
Kiev, Poroshkovaya Metallurgiya,.No 4, 1972, pp 61-65-~
Abstract: This work presents a study of the high-temporatuTe interaction
of titanium diboride and disilicide, as wellIs titanium diboride with silicon
in a vacuum in the 900-1800'C temperature interval. The initial materials
used were titanium diboride and disilicide powders; the.. expori-ments were per-
formed in a vacuum resistance furnace with a graphite beating element.
Analysis of the data produced showed- that at high temperaturos, titanium
disi-licide and diboride interact without fornLing other pliases. However,
above 1100*C a clear tendency toward decreas-Ing silicon content is obsc:I-ved,
apparently resulting from its evaporation upon dissociution of the titanium
disilicide. Analysis of data on the high temperature interaction of titanium
diboride with silicon showed slight SOlIfOility Of SilicOrL in titanium diboride.
The high chemical stability of titanium diboride against silicon and titanium
disilicide apparently results from the high bond strengtE of the Nle-B and
B-B bonds. i
~~-:'112 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSINS DATE--11SEP70
--,T-ITLE--CALCULATION AND STUDY OF THE INFRARED ABSORPTION SPECTRUM OF
-U-
'AUTHOR--LESEDEV, R.S., CHUMAKOVA, R.P., YUKH Mj.,j..N.j YAKIMENKOv V.I.
-OF -INFO--USSR
COUNTRY
~~'SOURCE-IZV. VYSSH. UCHEB. ZAVED.-i FIZ. 1970, 13(1)v 29-33
VIBRATION, HYDROGEN 80NDINGt
,,-PROXY REEL/FRAME-1988/0172 STFP ~10--UR/0139/70/0131001/00~1-1/,1033
ACCESSION NC--AT0105248
~~7_12 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSIN~ DATE--IISEP70
C ERC ACCESSION ND--AT0105248
ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE IR SPECTRUM (400-3500 CM PRIME
-1) IF THOHYDANTOIN (1) WAS MEASURED; THE rRE-~UENCIES OF Nr)R%IAL
NEGATIVE L
VIBRATIONS WERE CALCO. ON THE BASIS (IF A MECH. MO,)EL ISYM. 4ITH RErAPD
TO THE RING PLANE, GIVING 18 SYMa .4 PRIME AND 9 ANTISYM. A DOUBLE PqTME
VIBRATIONS) AND COMPARED WITH THE EXPTL. ONES. THE FRFQUE-NCIES AND
ASSIGNMENTS TOGETHER WITH THE KINEMATIC COEFFS. OF I ARE, TABULATED. THE
FREQUENCIES OF ALL INTENSE LINES IN-THE SPECTRum nizz TARE COMPArABLE
VIT14 THE CALCD. ONES. THE BANDS AT 3231 AND 3118AM PRIME NEGATIVEI
NHIC14 WEPE -NOT. CALCD.. I ~i:RE- ASSIGNED TO THE INTRA OR INTERMOL.
INTERACTIONS. THE'EXTSTENCE OF AN INTERMOL* H BONO INCPEASES IN THE
SERIES 19 RHODANINEi AND HYDANTOIN. ON THE BASIS OP A CCMPARISON OF THE
DIELEC. 04-STS. EPSILON AND THE FREQUENCIES (IF CH SUL32 SCISSORING
VIBRATIONS OF--I (EPSILON' EQUALS 31's RRODAUINEAEPStLON-EQUALS 3.06)? AND
ZtTHin.2v 4tOXAZOLIDINEDInNE (EPSILON EQUALS 3.28), THP BAND AT 1412 Cm
PRIME NEGATIVELWAS ASSIGNED TO THE.,CKSU82 SYM. 6EFORMATION VIBRATIONS.
THE IR SPECTRU4 OF I CAN BE INTERPRETED BY CONSIDER!NG'A C SUBS
SYMMETRY TGGETHER WfTH A SLIGHT THE WHPLE-~AND,AN APPROX. C SUB2V
SYMMETRY TOGETHER WITH A SLIGHT EFFECT OF D-SUB5H:SYMMETRY FOR THE RING.
TITL&"THECRY GF TkE ACCELERATION OF-CHARGED PART icl. E: SW THE PLASMA'OF
-U-
OUTER SPACE
-KATSt V.YE., YUKHIMUKv A.K.'
AUTHOR-(02)
CGUNTRY LF INF&-.-USSR
-'.'.,._SCURCE' GEOMAGNETIZM I AERCNOMILAv. VOL.:-I0v:kd.l 2v 070? P. 328-331
OATE PUBLISHEC---70
SUBJECT AREAS--ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCESr PHYSICS
TOPIC TAGS-CHARGED PARTICLE# ACCELERATION# PLASMA, INSTABILITY1
~-_ATMOSPHERIC PHYSICS
MARKING--~--NG RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
STEP NO--UR/0203/'il)/010/002/0328/0331
P. ROXY REELIFRAME-1997/0151:.
CIRC ACCESSIC-N NO--AP0119147
UNCLAS SIFI ED
C
S Fn Re ode:
"A C St 'Pr i
INTERNAT..AEROSPACEIABST.
A70-23198 X. Ion-acoustic insiability of a lalma in a strong
electromagnetic field, (Ionnozyukova: nestfikist' p M.1 V Poli til'noi
efektrom.-gnitnoi khVili)._14. ji, Kotsgreako ft~Derzhavnii
Univffsitet, Kiev, MrWajinian SSAY and: Q U Akaderriiia
K.jgkhiM:
Nauk Ukrainskai RSR. Intiltui. Geofiziki, Kiev.- Ukaoirlian S49
15j, 'Jan. 19 0, ~, 11 '
Ukrains-1kii Fizichnij Zhurnal, V~4 ?1-173. In
7
Ukrainian.
'Analysit of ~3vailabfe I theoretical and 'experimental data
according to which aw4trong e6ktromagnetic wave car generate
ion-.-acaustic os6liations in a weak-collisicn- plasnui; and; iol-acouslic
instability can occur when transvzrse~ and, ion-acoustic tugves
propagate in the same direction, The.latter eesuit is extended to
inciude the case of arbitrary directions of wave propagation. It is
shown that the excitation of ion4coustic-:09cillationi by an
electromagnetic wave is ipsier to observe:in a magnetically confined
plasma or with the aid of a plasma Vveveguide.
OwFMIE
'197917
5 40, 1 M, 0 9 WM I M no MI a ME 72 11 UN 1 10 W 0 VMI MA IT. V_
USSR TJDC 621."2.2.,46.28
IKO, A.M.
SOPRYAKOV, V.I., YURM-YI-CHIL A.V., YANCHEN
*Structure Of Forward Branch Of Current-Voltage Characteristics Of S41icon
Diodes Irradiated By Gamma QaanW
-Rad' to. fiz. nomet.kriotallov. T. 3, Ch. 2 (Radiation f-bysics Of Non-
V sb. la
metallic Crystals. Vol 3, Part 2 Collaction Of Worka), Kiov, "Neuk.dumka,"
1971, pp 193-196 (from RZhPlektronika~Lyaye primeneniLa-v No 12, Dee 1971,
Abatract No 12B188)
Translationt The results are preeented of m*easuremente of the current-voltage
Ch ractaristics (CVO) of silicon semiconductor diodes irradiated by Garna quanta
CoM. The GVC was measured in, a current generator regino. The semiconductor
diodes were pre red from n-type T~; 15 ohm.cm, the 02 content of which
amounted to>10Y%m73 and < 2.10 =73. The p-n pnetion was formed by fusion
of Al; the junction area amounted to (1 - 2):. 10-2, sTg the2thickness of the
base equalled 20 - 150 micrometerse With fluies>5. 10 ce and a temperature
of 800 K at the forward branches of the CYCI in addition to an incressa of tho
diffusion resistance, therev*ro also located aections of ne4ative curvature,
which with an increase of the flux up to (1 2) 101, 401 were tranpeormed
1/2
USSR
SOPRYAKOV, V. I., et al., Radiats. fiz,. ne et.krLs
m i tallov. T. 3, Ch. 2
(Radiation Physics of Nonmetallic Crystals. Vol 3, P~ri: 2 - Collection Of
Works), Kiev, "Nauk.dunka," 1971, pp 193-196 (from RZli---Elektronika i yeve
primenen1ye, No 12, Dec 1971, Abstract~No 17B188)
into sections of negative resistance, and with increase of the flux into hystar-
ibis loops. A difference is noted in the behavior of:veziconductor diodes pre-
Q
pared from Si with different 0 2 contents:at temporaturcgi of 60 and 500C K. Thesa
peculiarities are connected with nonuniformity of distribution of the doping and
compensating impurities in tba initial p-n junction. PoTmation ot the hyaterisis
loope.was si=lated by a parallel,connection.of a semiconductor diode with
ordinary CVG and with the presence of a section of negative resistance.2 ill.5 ref.
USSR UDC 535,343-31
STYRIKOVICH, X. A., Academician, YUMIEVICH, G. V., VWBOV, A. A., and
VIGASDT, A. A., High-Temperature Institute, Academy of Sciences USSR, Moscow
fly
'Olecular Composition of High-Denalty Water Vapor and Some of Its Thermo-
dynamic Properties"
Moscow, Doklady Akademli Nauk SSSR, Vol 210, No 2, 1973, :PP 321-323
Abstracti Measurements previously performed by the autho:rs on the fraction
of monomeric molecules in superheated vapor showed that the dopxoe of disso-
ciation sharply changes as the vapor density increases and therefore it has
to be considered in an analysis of.the vapor properties * The present article
continues the study of the formation of associates in H
Lgh-density water
vapor and analyzes the effect of such co'mplexing on the enth-alpy and entropy
of water vapor. For this purpose a series of measurements wexe taken of the
fraction of monomeric molecules in vapor at pressures froin 27 to 180 ata and
a temperature of 3600 C. The size of the associate was found, and a comparl
son was made of tabular water-vapor.enthalpy and entropy cL--ta irith calculated
data.for a mixture of ideal monomeric and dimeric gases,, The results
1/2
'77
USSR
SMIKOVICH, M. A., et al., Doklady Akadenii Nauk SSSR, Vol 210, No 2, 19?3,
PP321-3Z3
indicate that the degree of association of water molecules in superheated
vapor found by spectral measuremerits.plays a.very important role in explain-
ing not only its thermodynamic potentials. but also a whole series of other
thermophysical properties.
2/2
48
R-F,
mom -M.RM
M
1/2 019 UNICLASST:FIED:~ PROCESSING DATE--IISEP70
_~TlTLE-INTERACTim OF H S.UB2 0, D SUB2 0: AND HDOW IT-11 THE SLJRF4CE OF A.N'
,~'._~'ALUMINOS ILI CATE- CATALYST -U-
:,:AUTH0R-~-IGNATYEVAs_ L.A., CHUKIN, GOD., YUKHNEVItH, GOV.
...........
~..CpUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
.,.SOURCE--ZH. PRIKL. SPEKTROSK. 1970t 12(2), 318-22
-11ATE PUBLISHED ------- 70
,..SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY
JOPIC TAGS--WATERI, DEUTERIUM OXIDE, ADSORPTION, ALUMINOM SILICATE, !R
~SPECTROSCDPV-,:~CATALYSTt HYDROGEN BONDING-
~_:'.C.CWTRCL MARKING-510 RESTRICTION'S
DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED
'."'PR0XY'. REEL /FRAME-- 199 9 /0238 STEP
'r, IRC -ACCESSION NO-1-AP0106894
UNC L A S S I F I F- 0
i1" 144 W ft rdl -fil
:*SJ3kf9iiGD0Z.01---tVn03 SU NV1411~',~,
IV 03gbOS30 3'd3M OhV SONOU H VIA' 03*UbCSGV 3d3M '5-10W 'd 3H I'd fill
*S33b93'J()0S-004/ LV 30V96nS 3HI-NO '-)NINI-VWgd "3lfAVISCWb3HI SVH '831VM
SlHi *03V,"~rG:i 3'S]iM I S:UNV 0 N33MI39 SONCIG NOlIVNIGH003 *3*1 "Ifili V A0,
6bGA -3*'Pi N1 G--J~;~IGSGV SVFi 'd-=lVM.**SN3N03 -I-lVWS IV IVHI 03MOHS V'di'336S 3t4i
',kaL)3S0'dl0-3cjS 'c1 AD SNVgk, AB *OWVX3 SVK (bH 9 ~aDj S93S!)3c0Ss .1v unn:)vA
63Ctin 419-,Z-3WJ~id W osav 3,)v=i~ins 'dS HIIM cons c zens -tva.vwwv9
IN3Db3dL'ZT) IS).I'qiV:) 3JLV3YllS0NlWjnlV NO DGH ONVOO Eons a o ztins.-
H :iL) -N0lltJbUSCV JiCl WSlN`VH:QW V 1:)!~ 6 1 Sid V-0-.59
1~699010dV--ON, NDISS303V ~lldlll-
CLa:jSll--.31V0 Srqlw3:)C-Zid 11 01jissx-loNn 610 Z/Zl
t774,,u 7
ORGAN=TIONAL AIM MTHODOLOGICAL WOU AT DCNETStAYA OBLAST HOSPITALS WITH
1WERENCS TO KEWCAL CARE FOR CHILDREN
tArticle. by R.A. Uklonskaya, candidate of khnq, -L.P-
last t to of Sac 'tP*'Y"
Gol'dahr-eyn.-WTT-vFrn-mr-mtific Research -Hnd and
FIC ~ZeMh Organization Imeni N.A. Semanhko, Moscow,. Donetakaya Oblatit
Children's Hoopit4l; Donotakays Oblast Central Clinical llospital; Pxscow,
Sovetskoye Z rAvoclchraneniye, Russian, No 2, 1972, submitted 28 Saptamber
11911, Pp 12- 6T
There are three oblast hospitals with distinct functions In Donatakaya
Cblaet. Oblast "capital itlea H.1. Kaliviua ill *the center for t1lerapeuv'ic
I and Consultative as well an organizational and mLthodolcgiral work related to
v.-dical cato for the adult population, the Oblast Children's Hospital taken
care of the urban child population. and the Oblast Central Clinical Hospital
Lek" care 'of the rural populitI.01%, ipciudirg children.,
Donatskayi Oblast in an Industrial area. , The urbarf, population in
I h he rural (76 and 24t, respectively). Theta are 257 therapeutic
tic institutions with 1,579 pediatricians taXIng.cara aVtbe
chtldcen~- Specialized care in- poly!4inicits rendered by. 39 ophthalmological,
42 a torhinolaryngologi cal. 12 ,surgical, 36 neurological dad paychtatr1c,, 31. . I .
Ist hr"*
rhour.atologicall and 13 endocrinologitzil offices, . The. bbl 21"IF;-have
9,950 beds far.children, incluaing 2.543.in 1.9 children's therapeutic hospitals.
The Oblast Children's Hospital has a capatity of 500 13eds and a Puly-
- -lattor r x e
clinic that. can see 500 patients per day. the mrvlees si pe .intric
districts of the city and. at the same time, offers consultations; the
structure of the Oblast C1,11dren's fi",pitni includas An orranizarional and
--thadologital officift, laboratories ~vith department$ for t1iritcal, biochemical,
itni bacteriological examinations, x
-t", L&bcrsta=-4
1 threc-phyi1otheraiy ~cpurt='aru A" three fc;r th~i'ap-Cle
physical culture, a pathoan4toialcal departmant with a pAthohiscological labo-
ratoy.
Ther* Art ten. specialized departments in the 6ospital: three thorapeutic
(160 beds), Me Infectious (120). two surgical (120) including a department
- 13 -
USSR UDC 547-26'118
MIZRAKH, L. I., YAKOVELSVp YUKRNOI YE. M.'p and IMONOV V. 1.
"Phospborus-containing Derivatives of Isothiurones, IL Cleavage of
Dioxaphospholane and Dioxapbosphorenano Rings by1hio:%mide"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshcbey KhImn, Vol 42(104), lio 8,~1972,~ pp 1700-1705
--dioxaphospholane by
Abstracti Thiocarbamide (TCA) will react,with 1,3,2
opening the ring in the following mannert
0 "ift
+ fiN-C -NH, 1 'POClfZCHZS-C'+
0 H
P Wit
P S 0 R
(1) ROCHj 111) R- Cf-(.j:'-(I(l) h=CtCtfZ-.
The R exerts a signifimrit influence on the ease of alkylation, in the order
Oc2H5 -~> CHY 4-~!ethyl-1,3,2-dioxaphospholaiies and 2-(formamidentio)-
CICH2 -
ethyl esters of phosphorous acid react with IVA in.an analagous manner.
Seven compounds were prepared by TCk reactions. These were characterized
by elemental composition and IR, UVI and 14HR spectra.
23
USSR UDO 621.892:546.77122:621.793
KURILOV? G. V. LTOVLP_1xO V. P., YUIURNO T P SR?TY_URIKHDqA,
JBARSKIY, I. M. Phy tee-hr-I'651 Institute of
Z. N., and LYU sico
Low Temperatures of the AcadeAy of Sciences UlkrSSR, Char1kov
"Method for Investigation of Solid Lubrication Coats on
Y1032 ~Base"
Moscow, zavodskaya Laboratloriyal-Vol. 39, No 1~ 1973., pp 48-50
Abstract: A method was developed for the investigation of solid
lubrication coats on 11
-OS2 base (All-Union SCiOrLtifiO Research
of 4
Instit-ute U-he Petroletm Indu,-,tr',, , TIM NF -212, -213,
;~md -2"10) on -4Lriction under atmooohcrie conditions mid
in deeT) vacu=. at- low (-90-196 10 and r6om toivoemture:~i. The
gaseous Droducts separating an friction were _inalyzed on the
IbSK11-3A mass-spectrometer located'in-the vacutim chamber. The
USSR
XURIIANt G. V.t et al.) Zavodskaya Laboxutoriya Vol 39P No Is 1973, PP 11&50
longevity of VIIII '-,'TP -212 coat was found to remain unch2nged
in aeep vacuum at room and 10VI tOMDera4u
(,- res and. its friction
process is accompanied by separation of the swe masses as at
.+25 OC. On friction o-C the VNII NP -212 coat with carbamide
resin, close mass-spectrograms at lowand roo.-~i. temi)eratures
resulted. Two figures, one table, six bibliographic,re-ferences.
32
USSR UDC 547.2611-18
MIZRAKH L. I., BABUSHFUNA, T. A., YAKOVLEV. V. G., KOMITA,
M.,.STAROSTINA, L. N., and YANOCHKIIIAA,'~G.-A.
.'Thosphorus-Containing Derivatives of Isothiuronium.' M. Alkylation of
-Thiourea with Diethyl Chlorophosphate end the Diethyl Ester of 2-3-romoethyl-
phosphonic Acid"
64
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 43, No 11, Nov ?3, pp 230 -2367
Abstract: It was established that "he metaphosphate of S-etErYlisothiuronium
n
formed -apo the reaction of diethyl ch.1-orophosp'hate with thlourea. A stud- of
the reaction of 0, O-diethyl 2-bromethylpho5phonate with thiouren, showed that
in this reaction, as di stingu -4 shed from that wi-th:"alpha-halo'pios~honi-ile.9
-0-lizralch et al, Zh. Obshch. Khim., Vol 41J. 2654, 1971), which proceeded in the
opposite order, alkylation of thiourea -with the, haloalkyl group took place
initially, while participation of the ester grpiip of the alkylation occurred
only.under more severe conditions. On further heating of the:product tO)2
P(O)CH Cff SC(NH9), Br- that formed initially, EtBr e'volved and the product
2 2-
02P(OLt), CH2Cj1Z-jC(111 2 was obtained
r112)
F17
Ar
PROCESSING DATE--020CT70
i 3 OIL UNCLASSIFIE
TITLE-UtNITRATION OF SULFU41C ACID IN'THE PRODUCTION OF AMMONIUM SULFATE
AUTlfQR-(05)-ZLATIN, L.YF.v TRONOINAv Gvl.v ARTAMONCIV, YU.P., SHETFYIN,
-4. L. ,YUKHNOVETS, YU.0.
C OUN T R Y48~, ~0-17SSR
SbURCE--K(lKS KHIM. 1970. -7
(3), 45
DATE PUBL ISHED ------- 70
SUBJ E CT AREAS-CHEMISTRY
TAGS-INDUSTRIAL. MODUCTION, Al"IMONIUM SULFATEs NITROBENZENE, COKE,
TOPIC
GAS%, UREA, SULFURIC ACID, UENITRATLON
CUNTROL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
06CUMENT CL.ASS--UNCLASSIFIED
PRUXY REELIFRAME--1990/1386 STEP N4)--UR/0068/70J'000/003/0045/0047
CIPC ACCESSION NO-AP0109455
UNCLASSIFIED
.2/3 011 UNCLASSIFIED PRdCESSlVG DATE--020CT70
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0109455
AdSTRACT/EXTRACT--(Ul GP-O- ABSTRACT. WHEN THE SPENT H SUB2 SO SUB4.
TAKEN FROM PHINO SU82 PRODUCTION FOR (NH SU94) SUS2 SO SU84 MANJF. 1N
COKE-CHEM. PLANTS, IS CONTAMINATEC WITH N OXIDES, E-1 CONT.441NATES T.'-_:
C0KE GAS AND THE USE OF THIS GAS FOR NH SU83 SYNTHESIS IS PREVENTE-C,~
THE N OXIDES IN THE 'COKE GAS FOR THIS, SYNTHESIS SHOULD BE Si"I'LL:ER YHAN
8 CM PRIME3-M PRIME3, AND THE GAS CANNOT:13E USED IF IT CONTAINS LA_'GER
THAN OR EQUAL TO 10-12 CM PRIME 3 dXIDES-14 PRIME3. LAB. DENITRATION OF
THE ACID WITH UREA REDUCED THE N OXIDES HARPLY BY TH~E REACTIJIN: 2HN3
SUB2 PLUS (NH SUB2) SUB2 CO YIELUS 3H SUB2 0 PLUS CO S UBZ PLUS 2N Sljr~2.
SPENT H Slj,32
.,IN PHNO SUdZ PLANTS, THIS REACTION 14AS SLOW. SINCE THE
SO SUB4, OF 72PERCENT STRENGTHr CONTAINED OTHER KNO1414 COMPDS., SYll,.TH-'_::lfi.C
SOLNS. WERE PREPD. TO DET. THE EFFECT OF EACH~OF THESE 0 ,'I DENITRATIGN.
DURING A 17 HR PERIOD AND IN 72.4-2.6PERCENT H SU82 SO SUB-'tf TXE
DENITRATION WAS SATISFACTORY IN THE PRESENCE OF TH~E H SUA12 $0 SU34, HNc
iSUB39 AND THE N OXIDES. THE PHNO SUB2 CONTENT WAS 043PERCENT 3F THE*
SURZ SO SU84 AND THE PROCESS WAS. COMPLETE EVEN AT 101HER HIND SU93 AND
T tiF H SUB2 SO-SUB4 CONCNS. ltl~ THE, PHNG SU52 PLANTir THE SPE'NT H SUB2 SO
A
SUB4 AND THE UREA WERE INTRODUCED SIMULTANEOUSLY AND COMPRESSED AER
vi-I E
USED FOR-MIXINGa THE FORCED, AIR ALSO REMOVED 1HE N ~FORvia) FROM,
SUB2 SO SUB4 TREATMENT, THUS ACCELERATINGTHE REACTION. sr N
FROM THE DENITRATED ACID DID NOT-INCREASE1 THE N OXICIES IR THE COME GAS.
THE UR'EA WHICH 010 NOT R,EACT VITH THE OXIDES BUT ENTERED THE MOTHER
I
410UOR WITH THE ACID WAS BENEFICIAL, SINCE:IT IMPROVED THE PARY C
SIZE CGMPN. OF TkE INN SUB4) SUB2,SO SUD4.-
UNCLASSIFIED
89
UNCLASSIFIED -
- ........ - I - .
USSR U1)C 532
YUKILNOVSKIY, I. R VYSOCTiVNSKIY,, V. S. GOLOVKO, 1M. F.
"Study of Group Expansion for Binary Distribution Functions of Systems of
Particles With Electrostatic Interaction. 1. Third Virial Coefficient"
In-t teor. fiz. Ail USSR. Preprint. ITF-72-1R (Institute of Theoretical Phy-
-72-IP
sics. Academy of Sciences UkrSSR Preprint, ITF Kiev, 1972, 29 pp,
ill., 8 kop. (from RZh-Fizika, No 1, Jan 73,,Abstract No lYe87)
Translation: The curves of the binary distribution function of three-variety
ion-dipole systems were obtained in the approximation of the third virial
coefficient. The density of the dipole particles correispondq to their concen-
tration in the liquid. It is shoun that the effect of.higher virial coeffi-
cients intensifies with a decrease in the ion concentra.tion,and the value of
the first approximation of the 1~inijry function r1aes iinhatur.-OAv. ft :Is also
shown-that one must replacc the paIr Interaction poteneia] by the active force
potential under infinite dilution to account ior the dij)o1e subsystem in. the
region of small ion concentrationi, The lon oubsystam itt small concontrat'lon.'i
"111ould be takon Into account: by expansioxi~ or the distribtitlon function,3 in
powers of the plasma parameter.
MM&
USSR uDc: 621.396.967.oo4
AVERIYANOV, V. Ya., BAYRASHEVSKIY, A. M GEORGIYANOV, K. V., LUPY-OEII A-_N-
Yuq24 I- V.
Marine Radar Stations and Their~Use (Handbook). Vol. 3"
ye stantsiij ikh primenen re. ('O;~ravocbnoye
Sudoyyye radiclokatsionn,,,-
rukovodstvo). T. 3 (cf. English above),, renirigred,"ltudostroyeniye", 1970,
265 PP, ill. 1 r. 1 k. (from RZh-Radlotekhnika, No 1,:,Jan "(I, Abstract No
1G 73 K)
[No abstract3
USSR UDC 621,375.421
KABANOV, D. A Y
"Correction of a High-Frequency Traveling-Elave Tunnel-D'.ode Amplifier"
Kiev, I--vestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedeniy, Radiaelektronika, Vol XIV, i%;0 6,
1971, pp 663-669
Abstract: A resonance tunnel-diode traveling wave amplifier is analyzed theo-
retically and experimentally. Thepossibility of eNpanding its pass band and
carrying over the results of correcting an..aperiodic traveling wave amplifier
(G. F. Yukhtanov, et al., Radioizmeritellnaya Tekhnika, tlio 1, 100, 1969; D. A.
Kabanov, et al. , Radioizneritel'naya. Teklinika, No 2, 8, 1970) to the high-
frequency range is demonstrated. An expression is obtained for the-, optimal
correction parameter of the amplifier,,and eyperimental zosults are prer-ented
for co#arison with the theoretical analysis,
The normalized amplitude-frequency characteristicsof the amplifier are
lotted, and some results of calculatinr
P _,. the basic parameters ~f the amplifier
...as a function of a number of values of 6, a.and p when m,= IC , s = 0 and r =
0.7 are tabulated. These data lead,to the conclusions that 1) when 6 0 and
1/2
YAMNOV, 1). A., et al., Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnyj~hZavedeniy, Radioelektronika,
Vol XIV, No 6, 1971, pp 663-669
the detuning Lx Ix - xresonance I > 0the characteristics K(x) decrease mono-
tonically; 2) increasing the resonance frequency x causes a decrease in
resonance
K(x resonance ) and x0with simultaneous expansion of the,~pass band Ax; 3) detuning.
of the circuits (x i X with const leads,to an increase in the
c resonance
scattering A inthe characteristic K(x); 4) the coefficient 8 depends weakly on
0
r and since the capacitance CWZ const; and 5) the C'Glefficient x and the
0
scattering A0 decrease on introduction of~the diode capacitance C.
2/2
OEM
USSR UM 621.~76.234
KIREYEV, P.S., KHOLOPKIN, A.I., KOL'TSOV, a. I*
I "IIT
"On The Nature Of The Quick Action Of GadrAum Telluride Detectors'
604
Radiotekhnika i oloktronika. Vol XVII, No 3, 116 r 1972, 11P -608
Abstractt The cadmium telluride p-n junction detectors used in this study had
a working area of 0.1 cm?-, a thickness of 200 micrometer, a capacitance measur-
ed at 600 kH% of 5 pf with a back bian or 220, v, and, a tack current With thin
voltage of 0.1 microamp. The thickness of tho region of the opace charge,
assessed from the voltfarad charaoteriatic, hod a magnitude of' approximately
10 micrometer. The output oignal,waa taken from a load reeistanco of 75 ohm,
and the time constant o~ the circuit did not oxcood~0.6 hanonon. With tho uae
of an ampliftor, the time constant increnood to 4.6 nanoijeo. Tho complex
structure of the output signal is interpreted an the rooAlt of a colloction of
charges from the space charge region, giving a current pAlso with a duration of
approximately 10 nanosee, and from tho bane with a pulee duration of 150-100
nanosso. Tho drift collection of charges from the base In aec~irod as a result
of redistribution of the field with a sufficiently high 16vel ;,f generation of
the charge carriers. 2 fig. 9 rof.-Receivediby oditors, 4: Doc 1970.
ME,
USSR UDC.' &11.382.;001.5
YLAIMBA L 1. Ye. D KDWEV, P. S.
Ron the CapAcitance-Voltap Char 6teriatios f ?N'Junotions jA Cadmium Telluride"
a .0
Moscow, Radiotekhrika i Elektronika, Vol.15, No 12. D e '70, pp 2623-2625
Abstract: The authors study the capacitauce-voltage characteristics of FN
juz)ctionz in cadmium telluride of F-type conductivity ul,th a resistivity of
lot) -108 xL - cm. It was found that the capacitance falls,sharply with an increase
in reverse bias from 0 to 10 V. However, there is-very little change in capacit-
ance~wjth a further increase in voltage. It was found -#Iat ca,pacitance is in-
varsely proportional to the cube root of the voltage in.the 1-~10 V range.; The
weak ohange in capacitance with bias voltage in''excess, cir .10 V is attributed to
iqmat..ionization of deep ecceptor~ levels..
d
~USSR U-DO -S'-, 1. 315.593:53.5. 215.6
KIREYEV, S. , IFEDOROIITS-~K-17:, A. M. , POLISAN, A. A. ,U,.' 0% Ye. D.
Ef 1-
ot mz7-~nc~tcalectric Zect in P-Type Cadmium TellUride':
Elektron. te-'ZniJka. Nauchno-tel:br- s*i-,-. (Eleccronic Technz)Logy. i cien L I
Technical Collection), 1970, Series 14, No 1, pp 72-74 (from
i yeye primeneniye, No 8, August 1970,Abstract Nc 8B2G4),-
Translation: The photomagnecoelectric effect is investigated in p-type catim-fuln
telluride. Complete conformity of the results obtained 4ith theory is ----stab-
.1ished. The spectral characteristics of the effect are presented and tile
diffusion.length and life time of.minority .:carriers is determiaed. SuRmlary.
USSR Ii-M 632 95
YUMM. N. N., FIIATOV, L. N., SHCHERBATYEH, Yu. I., MOL CREWCO, A. I., and
SHVMLEP1WTI G. S.
"Preparation of Technical Chloro-Isopropylphenyl Carbamate in Crystalline Form"
V sb. Khim. sredstva zashchity rast. (Chemical Proteation of Plants --
collection of -works), No 2,, Moscow, 1972) ~pP* 31-35 (fxom Mh-Xhiniya, No 22,
25 Nov 73,, Abstract No 22N570 by A. F. Grapov)
Translation: In running the reaction of m-ClC6H4N'CO ~rlth absolute iso-PrOH in
the absence of solvents, it is easy to obtain chloro-isopropylphenyl carbazate
in the form of a malt from which it can be processed quite efficiently in a
drum crystallizer to obtain a crystalline product. EXairr a 68 m a
pl. . I of bsolute
iso-PrOll at 50-650 is added a drop at a time to 100 ml of 9971 m-CIC61101CO, kept
for 30 min at 60-70% and the excess iso-PrOH dir)tilled off at 900/150-200
The inelt with a melting point 2 45 to 500 is then pla:!od in the crystallizer.
Yield of chloroisopropylphenyl carbanate 98-2%1, meltlng point 35-5-36-50. The
laboratory model of the crystallizer consists of a hol'.417-cylinder (150 mm high
and 50 mm in diameter) cooled by water. Mite of cryatttUization 10 to 11
kg/irg/hoUre
USSR
Zj=N, N. n., FUMENKOl I. V., IVANOVA, H. S.0 BEIEZIM, A. P., SHALINA,
"Synthesis of N-3,4-Dichlorophenyl-N,I-hydroz~una!'
V sb. Khim, eredstva zashchity rast. (Chemical Plant Protective Agents
collection of works ), No 2, Moscow, 1972#~pp'59-65 (fron Kh-ralwyat No 19,
Oct 73, Abstract No 19N546)
Translations Experimental results axe reported of tha first atage in the
spthesis of lynurone - synthesis of H-3.4-d!Lchlo:roplieftyl-N'-hydroxyurea
~I _7. The relationship between -the yi6ld:of I md the type of solvents
has been investigated. lWimum yield of I haz,l:;en achieved using the solvent
systez,chlorobenzene-mothanol-water 2t2tlo It has.been shown~that I is
capable of reacting in two directions during its carbamo Iylation wiib- 3,4-
dichlo:roDhenylisocyanate. M is passed through a solatlon of 8.61 g h~xIro-
xylaaine'sulfate in 60 ml water at 200 until PH of 7.4 i~ reachedp HeOH is
added$ the reaction mixt=-e cooled to 0-3D, 18'.8 g of :),k-dichloraphenyliso-
cyanate in 121 ml ClPh is added, the.mixture,is left si-aZding for 13 min.,
evaporated and filtered# yielding 20.6 g of 91k%,&.
54 -
USSR UDC 632-95
Y
MN, N. 11. Mitor
TJKH
"Short Handbook on Poisonous Chemicals'
Yloscow, Kratkiy spravochnik po yadokhimikatam (cf.. English above), IlKolos",
1973, 223 pp, ill- 75 k (from RZh-Khimiya, Ho 10, Y4T 73i Abstract No 1011524 K
by T. A, Belyayeva)
Translationi Based on scientific data and nany yearis of industrial experience
the handbook gives recommendations on using poisonous chemical3 insecticides,
fungicides, herbicides, and other preparations approved for ut3e in agricul-
ture by the ministries of public health and agriculturo of tho USSR. T~e
handbook includes the following sectionst. classification and principles
of application of chemicals for plant protection; chenimls for controlling
harmful insects, ticks, rodents, ete.1 physica.1 and chemical properties of
agents for pest control; recommendations on using Insectoacaricidal chemicals)
chemicals for controlling plant diseases; physical ani chemical properties
of fungicides; recoamendations on using chemicals against plant diseases;
Heed control chemicals and defoliantzl physical arxi c.herxLeal properties of
herbicides; sensitivity of the.principal forms of weeds to herbicides uzed in
recomirended dosages on crop fieldal. recommendations oa using herbicides;
1/2
USSR UDC 632.9-5
&NQ,AN6- & AOREM A, YE. i., !.~EVIUXOV 11. N., SKADZUBOVA, A. V.,
SMTRATOVA, G. V., YURROVAN A. C., RUIRGAN017, L. B.,
NOVIKOVA, R. G., and OBUFHOVA, V. ~I.
"Phenylmercury and HexyLmercta-,,"
V ab. Khim. oredstva zashchity rast# (CHemical AgemtG fo;r Flint Protection -
collection of Works), vuP 1, Moscow 1970, pp 145-150 ("from F.7,b-KhImiya, no 11,
Jun 72, Abstract no UN426)
Tmaslationi Seed disinfectent dunts hexylworQury Et)fi;C).j 18-22~1;,
haxachlorobon-mmat nuld up to 2G'-,~~'
-hexachlorocycl ohn,:D lie) cxll phoi~yluercln:y
a and 10,22-1
(1% EtHg hexachlorobenmene) are offici&Lly author1red in th:~
Soviet Union 'Lox use ag-Ainst the eame plant dizmases aa those controlled by
9=osan. About half tfia EtH7C31 expended when- gmnopan In use!d is axpondled
when pheny1me-rcury and hexylpscorcury are inied. Phenyl.memury ezn to used
against fusarlum ifilt and helminthooporionis. The new (U.,linfectanto show
promi-c-a as ageats for controlling dwarf wheat Infectionus: Lnd whoat karriel
smut.. Ulm most proalsing siV:nal dyips for.ttio.ld -etc(' grdn are M-,cdaaino
C# mothylana bluo, acid blue-black and:dip ed 2C.
1/1
USSR U00 632-95
alr-
sn- w-mv, I., and SHALIMt 11. A.
"Detection of Impurities In Coirnercial Diuron and Theirz Chviacteri-ation"
V sb. Nhim. Si-edst-va. za--hchity =St. (Chemical Plant Prottactants -- collection
of works), vYP 1, Mosco~jj 19,?0, pp 301-~04 (from Mb-I[binlya, Ho 13, 110 jul 72,
Abstract 1,
10 13N535 by 0. A. Ko-~01,:,Rova)
Translationt The princilkil impurities of co=,eric!L1 cLluxoa are ro3ins (0.15-
4.2elj~), the hydrochlorides of 1,1,e21Pd (1) (0-3-0.6j,,), 1~,e (11),
2 2
C6H3MiCONjiMe (III~ and traces of 3,1;-C12 C6H3XH2 (17). ~~ The -xe for,,P.--,!
In the phoagenation stage and in ;Bolut.1611 "ith 3P4--C1 M NCO enter into C0.1-
1. ~ A 3
densation with Mlezn, where they deposited on the eiluron suspansion. I is
obtained in the condemation stage a~s a result of ihcomplota blovr-off 11-10I
(gas). II is forned from the Me 141, and R 11. cont.-J,ned in the xetlta-ed VCl.
-3
2 :0
The 1=sence of III Is due to the impurity M e r% 'r~ cblllrz~3rich-l t"r"21TH. IV
apparently is a product of the reaction of 304-ci a
or moisture. 2CO31V~ 0 ~rlth small amount,
510
USSR IjDC 63~-95
14- MOL01 -0v, A. V M, LE. lu-niyr-, vj~' YBI. A., DAZANDVA, S. S.,
LEDO .1 CPJSHII!Af IT3. A. t and PRESITYAKVIA, S. 1:1.
"Propanid A Highly Effective Herbicide for Weed Control In Rice Paddle~sll
V sb. Xhim, sredstva zashchity xast. (Chemida-I Plaj:t Pivtectwitt's -- collection
of Iforks YYP It 1' Geow, 1970, PP 156-163 (from N",h-Kitimlya, No 13, 10 Jul ?2,
Abstract No 13N514 by. 0. A. Korotkova)
Tmnslationt As a result oR a study of Prolw13A Yield depol:d(.11ce on the
solvents ivaatant molar ratios and oryftallizatior, cotrlitiorw,, it IG
C I i i I I E+ c c z H
suggested that propwiidi be obtained by acylation Ol- MI-CI2.6 3 2
in a patroleum solvent miediuim at a 3f4-CI C It 1111, and.rDIvent ratio of 180-5.
6.3 0
The reaction is conduc,ted for 12-15 hys with stl=Ing tuid at 11W-1610 , d'Ls-
tilling the aqueous azeotrope at 90-95 at thO begJjuilng of the process, alid
135 - at the e~ld. The unxeacted. zU~Ing waterizila are, ncycled. The m'-Tatant
0
Propanid has a purity of
56.5-99.5 Porcen't, Malting point 89-91 yield
Q-yo percent.
60
.... .......
USSR
UDC: 536-46
~1- MAKS11M, E. I., IMMANOV, A. G., and KDZICVj V. S.? 1,joScov,
"Formation of a Seri-i-Liquefied Layer During the Combustion of Condensed Systems
With Solid Non-agglomerating Admixtures in a Field of Mass Forces"
Novosibirsk, Fizika Gareniya i Vzryva, Vol 9, No 4, Jul-Aug 73, PP 496-501
Abstract: The authors conduct an experimental study to explain the regularities
..associated ii-ith the pseudo-liquefied layer and its effect an combustion. This
study is based on an earlier work by V. I. Yukavid et al., Fizika GorenJp i
Vzryval Vol 9, No 21 19'13f whore the authors.ob.5ervWd that the raUa of coin ou -.;t--;ori
of amioniurn perchlorato with a refraeLary metal admixture (ULanium) increases as
the overload in increased chorn.the overload is set up by~centrifugal acceleration.
On the basis of theiusults of that study, a mechanism is propoc.Ld for the cori-
bustion of the compo*ition under the effect of maso forces. In the current z5tudy,
inert refractory particles were used in the form of altuninum oxide. The test was
conducted on a centrifuge. The combustion rate was meazure~l by photoregistration.
The overload vector in all of the tests was directed alongithe, norinal to the com-
bustion surface, in the front propagation direction, The specimans were in the foni
'h. These had been press-
of cylindrical tablets 0.8 cm in diameter and 2.,4-2,5 cm h_J&
ed to the point of maximal density* The results.show that the motion of the com-
1/2
USSR
YUKHVID, V. I., et al Fizika Goreniya i Vzryva, Vol 9t No 4, Jul-Aug 73, pp
t
496-501
bustion front is uniform and that the effect of mas.- forces is complex ii-i neturea
A fall in the rate of conbustion follows the combustion rate increase segment.
These results can be explained by the properties of the,pseudo-liquefied layer
and the effect that they have on the cambustion,process.~
~2/2
36
MOM= 1
I. i M,
7
UM
UDG: 662.612.3
YUAAVID. V. 1.1 lumimov, E. I., I-MRZHANOV, A. G., IMAYRI11, B. I.,
and KOZLOV, V. S.
"Combustion Rechanism of Condensed Systems ',1ith Solid Admixtures
in a Mass Force Field"
Novosibirsk, Fizika foreniya i vzr_vvq, No 2, 1973, pr, 235-240
Abstract: This paper presents the results of experiments to study
the rarely examined case of the combustion of systems i. rith non-
agglomerating admixtures. The experiments were conducted in a
mss force field on compositions of ammoniiui perchlorate and tita-
nium. The assumption of non-agglomeration is bt~sed on the fact
that the melting point of Ti is, at~ 17000, MUch hieher than that of
the perchlorate, at 11000 C. A diagram of the oentlrifuge in which
the experiments were conducted is given together with a descrip-
tion of the experimental method. The rate of combustion was mea-
Bured by film photogralphy. The reader is -referred 11"o an earlier
paper (B. B. ~3erkov, et al, FGV, 1968, !k 4) for 'It more detailed
deacription of the apparatus and methodology. The combustion r_at~~
uas measured as a function of accelerations in the interval o.L
36
to 1200 g at room temperature. A model of:ths combtistioa process is devised
to explain the experimental rawlts~.
38
..:Las ers. /bias erip;.
LT a
-001-5
SSR 621.3 .020.
B.UAROY, YEE.N., BIK91-OV, Y.D., GUM, V.P.,,x WUNAJ"r,
"Buffer Gee Influenca On A Law Oparatiag On 1101 Vapare 'WAth optical Rimping"
1~64
Radiotekhnilka i elektronika, Vol IM, No 3, liar :L9P, i PP 556--,
Abetract: A theoretical and exparimont-al study L3 made of tho oparation of a
., m' ita rooonator with
rubidilin larzer -in the process *f pneration, with fillinr
nitrogen and =xturaa of nitrogen-ar8oix. The eere conducted an a
nod-*I of a rubidium laser, the constmotion cf which ia uralogeus to that des-
cribed by Ye. 17. BrAzarov and V*?.: Gabin i cloktronil-_a, ic,)69, ~A,
6, 10143)' However, in a giNen the magnitudo or the coupling of th,-~ rubid-
ium laser with the load can be selected within oartain limlta with the eid of a
matching plaU in the cut-put mavegulee. The' raeamt0l' of 049 MCdCl WtW CO_M1,-Ct-
ad to a vacuum-ptimping ansambly which nuide it po.,w1b1ti to avacuato it to a
pressure of 10-5 , I . It io chown that i' -it
tar and to fill it with various Vx< is
a concentration of iubidi= otams conaidorably o=aading the thr66hold, the
Unitin- short-term atability of the rubidium 1wiar a,:iaa riot dapond on the para-
a-store of tiin L-aff6r _rzixtulre. Tho thehoretio-s! cind e~qjorir-nntnl utudi conductod
nhowa tho poooibility of creoting a rublditm laijor with a ainvIl teapartizuro
caoufficloat of t1w, J~roqiwnuyj it Urget power of gontirolJon, nod a hiph Wi rt-ter
atability. The outhorn thank B.MiGlebov for halp It., jjr'flv~i I'A tilt Uto Oxporlmr.-rit mid
V.F.Zolin ana for d1counvion of rewultvi.7 fig.12 Dee 70.
C- o f me
Z
f nn;_ ~D ll~;~ zc--',- -j Q 52-73
S-;-- ie nc n~d TQchn-,
7,
St on'. ~;T--IZ
-'re %:
y
standards az;d ato--i c clocks. The Dros-pects for Of these d,~-., c, a n,
ion e
considercd. Tineir re6ions of a-pp-licat ar indicatad. R-a s -ar-6.
IMNIMROMMKINIUMMI
012 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSINU DArE--090CT70
T-ITLE-GERETIC PROBLEMS IN THE STUDY OF SYSTEMIC CONGENITAL URT110PAEDIC
DISEASES -U-
M.V.t MEYERSONt YE*iM.,v INECHVUL0,00VA, U.L., YL)KINAF
r
COU.NTRY OF INFG-USSR
TRAVMATOLOGIYA I PROTEZIRUVANIYE, 19TO, NR 4t allP 8-14
;-.-~DATE PUBLISHED--70
~~-,SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES
PIC TAGS-BUINE OISEASE, HEREDITARY DISEASEt LESWIN, 01AGNOSTIC 14EGICINE
C Oil TROL MAIRKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
:DQCUAEt4T CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED
PROXY REEL/FRAME-1990/0593 STEP NCj--UR)'9115Y70/k)t)0/004/0008/0014
CDRIC ACCESSION NO-AP0103803
2/2 012 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70
CIRC ACCESSION NJ--AP0106808
-:.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT.~ THE JNHERITED SYSTEMIC BONE
B'IS'EASES.BELONG TO HEREULTARY AFFECTIONS Of THE CONNECTIVE TISSUE WITH
MARKED SKELETAL AND EXTRASKELETAL LESLONSt AND CONSTITUTE A LARGE GROUP
OF DISEASES 'WITH A WIDE RANGE. OF CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS. A NUMEiF-.q OF
CLINICAL SIMILAR SYSTEMIC BONE DISEASES.ARE THERESULT OF MUrATIONS IN
VARIOUS LI)CUSES AND REPRESENT GEINOCOP:IES, THE CUFURELATION ANO
-Llt%ICO ROENTGENOLOGIC, LABORATURY AND
INTERDEPENDENCE BETWEEN THE C
GENETIC METHGOS OF INVESTIGATION IN HEREDITARY SYSTEMIC BONE DISEASES IS
~DISCUSSED. THE GENIC MUTATIONS ARE CONSIDERFD AS THE CAUSE OF
DEVELOPMENT OF SPORADIC CASES OFITHESE.DISEA$ES, AND THE IMPORTANCE IS
STRESSED,CF-THE KINDRED AND STUDY OF ISOLATES IN THE ELUCIDATION OF THE
RECESSIVE.FUND OF HEREDITARY MUY.A4J.L.ITY.,.-: THE RQLP. OF DIAGNOSIS,.OF
J41CROSIGNS. AND THE EFFACED FORMS' OF DISEA~SESAN, lliE STUDY OF THE
PENETRABILITY AND eXPRESSIVITY;DF GENtS AS I DISCUSSED. FACILITY:
JSENTRALINOGO INSTITUTA TRAVMATOLOGII! I ORTOPED111
UNCLASSIFIED
will mmommum
7NOV70
1'/ 2 031 UNCLASSIFIED POCES!",fiNG, 0ATE--2.
ItAV INTERACTION WITH THE
ONS OF COSMI C
'TTTLE- MODELING OF NUCLEAk RE4(;TIL
MATERIAL OF STONY METEORITES -U-
'_~,AUTli0R-(05)-LAVRUKHlNAt A.Kal REVINAt.L.,D.q~MALYSHeYt V.11o, YUKINAt L-Y-t
SATAROVA, L.Mo
-COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
_
:s
OURCE--GEOKHIMIYA 1970, (5), 531-9
:_~~aATE PUBL I SHED------ 70
SUBJECT AREAS--NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNGLOGY~, ATHOSPHEREC SCIENCES,
ASTRONOMYtASTROPHYSICS, PHYSICS
ISOYOPEr
!...~_,TGPI.C. TAGS--METEORITEt COSMIC RAYv NUCL EAR REACT I ON s BERYLLIUM
OXYGEN ISOTOPE
IRON ISOTOPEr
.7tONTROL MARKI~NG-NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLAS~--UNCLASSIFIEO
PROXY REELIFRANiE--3007/0911 STEP NO--iJR)100071'eO/C)(,'O/Ooii/.0531/01339
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0136343
UNCLASSIFIED
'my wFir w -11111ril P
212 031 UNCLASSI FIED 1-111~01-ESi)ING DATE--27NOV70
ACCESSION N)--AP0136343
ABSTRACT/GXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A POSSIBLE LISE OF THE SEMI
EMPIRICAL EQUATIONS OF RUDSTAM (1966) A NO SGHWA'RTZ-fl~ OESCHG'ER 1967
FOR CALCG. THE CROSS S"ECTION OF ISOTOPE, FOR MAT 1 ili,l:: I NV AR G E T S 0 F
C O,~-l P L I C A T E 0 C HE'M . C 0 M PN I R I ~ A 0 1 A T F 0 BY P-ROTONS WITH E, EQUALS 660
AND 19-2 GEVi WAS INVESTIGATED. THE CROSS SECTION'N FOR REACTION OF THE
1 Rif -1 E, PRY MEI 6 0 NU'L~::l AND:BY ~'Rf'ME56 FF(PT PN)
PRIIKE7 BE FG IIATION FROM TI & f~ ~
PRIME55 FE REACTIONS WERE EVALUATED, THE' HATERIAl ' OF THE ZAISAN LAKE
AND KUNZSHAK STONY METEORIJES WAS IRRADIATED BY PROTO'NS WITH ENERGIES OF
660 MEV.AND 19.2 GEVj RESP. THE DIFFERENT FRACTION OF ELEMENTS WERE
ISOLATED RADIOCHEM. THE MEASURED RAOIOACTl:VITIE::S,WERE: COMPARED WITH
CALCD, VALUES, SATISFACTORY AGREEMENT S WERE. 0850. FOR "110ST ISOTOPES.
IN GENERAL THE AGREEMENT WAS BETTER At E EQUALS 66:0 MEV TH4N AT 3 EQUALS
19.2 GEV. FHIS WAS POSSIBLE CAUSEO BY AN'A:PP-;-:ARAPiCE OF THE MECHANISM OF
NUCLEI SPALLATION IN THE E 15 CONGRUENT. TO 10 GE%f REGION WHICH WAS QUAL.
DIFFERENT THAN THE CASCADE MECHANISM, ' THE DATA OEITAINI-110 ~AN BE USED FOR
MODELING OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF RATES OF-RATFS OF COS1110GENIC ISOTOPE
FOR4ATION IN COSMIC BODIES WHtCH IS. NECESSARY FOR -QUAL. INVESTIGATIONS
~OF THE EFFECT OF COSMIC RAYS ON THE STONY M ETEOR I TE S, SURFACE LAYERS OF
THE. MOO.Nt AND ASTEROIDS. TACILJTY.6 V* 1. ~VERNADSKII INST,
ANAL. CHEM.i MOSCOWr USSR.~
"CLASSIFIED
ll
U
777- 7
USSR UDC 616-12-073-75
K.
WS, Z. I., VITENSHTE)NAS, G. A., PRANEVICHYUS, A. I.,
YANUSUTWICH S
and YUKNELIS, L. V., Chair of Hospital Therapy., Kaunas Me.dical Inst!Gi~-
Method for Continuous Recording of an Amplified EKG"'
Moscow, Meditsinskaya Tekhnik.a, No 5. Sep/Oct 70, pp 54-55
Abstract: A description is given of a method for direct rocording of an amplified
EKG by means of an electrocardiograph designed at the Kawias Medical Institute.
The amplification is affected by application-of the feedback principle. The
diagnostic advantager. of an amplified EKG were ostablished on the basis of an
exaaination of 400 persons, including those in gocd health as -well as those witb
hypertension, chronic coronary insufficiency resulting from atherosclerosis, and
indistinct heart rhy-thm. Comparative analysis of conventional and amplificd elec-
trocardiograms showed that the new method for roccrding_the EKG permits additional
Ji2formation to be obtained in,the.dia a,,rumbqr,.or heart disoases,
USSR UDC 621.375.82
YUKOV2 Y A.
"Elementary Processes in Active Medium of Pbotodissociation Iodine Laser"
V sb. Kvant. elektronika (Quantum Electronics -- Collection of Works), No
2(14), Moscow, "Sov. Radio," 1973, pp 53-58 (English~summary) (from R7-h-
Fizika, No 10, Oct 73, Abstract No 10D879 from author,s abstract)
Translation: The article considers elementary processes in the active medium
of a phatodissoC4ation -iodine laser which affitct its oacillation spectrum.
An evaluation is given of the transition cross-section.4 between hyperfine
components inside the ground 2F3/2 and excited 2p states of the iodine
1/2
atom during collisions with various particles of the active mediunt. It is
V, state under
shown that mixing of the hyperfine components Df the 2P . .
typical conditions takes place very rapidly.4uxing collisionn with any
pa,-,-ticles, while mixing of the sublevels of till! 2P1/2 state is due chiefly
to collisions with icdine atoms in the ground state. Broadening of the
amplifying transition line is discussed. Bibliography vith nine titles.
I i LREITH
-, W-1=101
USSR mc,621-375-82
VINOGRADOV, A. V., and YUKOV,__YE. A.
"Effect of Two-Photon Processes on X-Ray Spe6truvi o:f LiLser Plasma"
V sb. Kvant. elektronika (quantum Electronics -- Collection of 'Vorks), No
2(14), Moscow, "Sov. Radio," 1973, PP 105-167 (English, summary) (from RZh-
Fi%ika, No 10, Oct 73, Abstract No 10D894 from authors' abstract)
Translationt It Is shown that as a result of Raman scattering of laser radia-
tion and stimulatod tuo-photon radiatimadditional lines appear,in the X-
ray spectrum of a laser pla-r4i -- s~tellites,of forbidd.on tr-ansitions which
5
at a flux density of 10 r~ 1011L1011 _w/sq, cm. ale compaxable in intensity to
allofied lines. Measurement of the ratio of the intenolty of the laser
satellites to the intensity of the allowed lines can be used. to determine
the intensity of the light field and tho-electrondensity in the plasma.
Bibliography with nine titles#
UNCLASSUPIED PROCESSING DATE--040EC70
T:lTi.E--CHEMICAL CHANGES IN POLYvVlNYL FLUORIDE, INDUC1110 BY~ IRRADIATION -U-
:."':.4UTH0R-(03)-USMANOVi KH.U., YULCHIWAYEV, A.Ae'v LATYPUYt T.V.
COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE--UZB. KHIM. ZH* 1970t 14(2)p 63-6.
.,..:DATE'PUBL ISHEO ------- 70
,~-_SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY, MATERIALSv.NUCLEAR SCIENCE:ANO TECHNOLOGY
TOPIC TAGS--FLUORINATED 09GANIC C0MP0UN,37':PO(.-YMER, (;AMMA RADIATION"
LYMEk CRO~SSL t NK ING,
RADIATION POLYMERIZATION, RADIATION: EFFECTo PO
DEGRADATION1 CONJUGATE :BbND ~SYSTEWI COBAL TI SO TIOP E
~CONTROL WARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
DOCUMENT CLASS--U.NCLASSIFIED
REEL/FRAME--3008/0918 STEP NO--IJIR/0291/7Q/011-/002/0063/0066
CIRC ACCESSION NG--AP0137946
UNCLASSIFIED
j!j Ilill
Z/2 051 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING 0ATE--040EC70
C'IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0137946
'ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, POLY(VINYL fift)OREDE) OBTAINED BY
RADIATION POLYMN. IN BULK WAS IRaADIATED W TH PR[ME60 C~O GAM'AA RAYS AT
~10 PRIME3 M;4 IN A WIDE RANGE OF IRRADN. R.4,7TES *AND: OOSES'. POLYMER D. AND
ITS
F CONTENT WERE DETD. IN THE COURSE:Of IRRADN. ~14T ALL RATES AND
DOSES OF IRRADN. THE F CONTENT DECREASE WAS PROPORTIONAL TO THE OVERALL
DOSE BECAUSE OF HF EVOLUTION. THE D. OF POLYMER DC-CREkSf:D 13ECAUSE (IF
LOOSENING THE POLYMER MASS BY THE GAS EVOLVED.. AT'*LOW DOSES EVOLUTION
OF GAS WAS ACCOMPANIED BY POLYMER DEGRADATION WHEPVAS AT HIGH DOSES
..CROSSLINKING WAS ALSO OBSD. IR ANAL.:REY"EALED FD~IMATION OF CONJUGATED
-~--DOUBLE BONDS. IRRADIATED POLYMER~WAS EASILY OXIDIZED BY 0.
~FXILIT:Y: GOSUNIVI IM#'LENINAt'jASHKENT
UNCLASSrF
112 057 UNCLASSIFIEW
PROCESSING DATE--230CT70
TITLE--GRAFTING OF METHYL METHACRYLATE.ON POLY(VINYL FLUORIDE) UNUER THE
INFLUEi A,
NCE OF GAMMA RADIATION --;U-
AU'THOR-103)-LATYPOV, T., YULCHIBAYEV# A.Ast USMAN OV,f KH.U.
_~':-CQIUNTRY OF INFO--USSR
SOURCE -UZB. KHIM. ZH. 1970, 14(l), 53-6
~'D AT EPUBLISHEO ------- 70
SUBJECT AAEAS--Cfl[?,',lSTRZY, MATERIALS, NUCLEAR SCI= 0
AND TECHNOL GY
T
C TAGS
OPH ---GRAFT PULY'l-ERIZATION, METHYL iMETHACkYLATE, r-l-iJOIRINATED (!,Q~GANIC
COMPOUND, GAMMA RAGIATIGNp RADIAT13N EFFECTt COP-3(.Y~iE-Rj THERMOME-C-liANICAL
WOPERTY
~'CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
~,~_:~DOCUMENT CLASS--UPICLASSIFIED
~.~-.PRGXY PEEL/FRAME--1999/1840 'TEP 40---UR/02911-l',3/01,4fCOL/0053/0056
C119C ACCESSION NO--AP01Z3629
UNCLASSIFIED
2/2- b5t UNCLASSIFIED PAOCESSING DATE-2-30C-170
ACCESSION NO-AP0123629
:ABSTPACT/EX,rPACT--%'U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. JHE IRRADN. OF A POLY(METHYL
METHACRYLATE) ill)-H SUB2 C:CHF (It) GAIMMA RAYS IN VACUW-Ji GAVE
GRAFT COPOLYMERS CONTG. LESS THAN OR EQUAL TC 74.2 11 UNITS. THE
CONVERSION RATE OF It IS CONSIDERABLY GREATER IN THE PRESENCE OF I THAN
THE 11 HOMOPOLYMN. RATE UNDER THE SAME:CONDITIONS. THE GRAFT
COPOLYMERS HAVE GREATER SWELLING IN ACETONEv HCON4E sur-12, OR DIOXANE A"ID
ARE ESP. SOL. Im PliME AT ROOM TEMP. GRt,FTING DECREASES THE MELT FLOW
INOEX OF It 4ND- IT CHANGES THE SHAPE OF -I:TS THERf.413MECH.. - CURVES.
TASHKENT. GOSUNIV. t,'USSR.
--:-FACILITY: IM. :LEN 1NA TASHKENI
w
UNCLASSI F IED-
ELECMCAL EN(il-NEERING
Circuit Elements
USSR UDC 621.31.5.1(23NO
YuLlclftyrw S
"Study of the Electric Strength of the Inaulation of ifigh-Voltage Overhead
Electric Power TransrLission Idnes in the (lase of Commutation Surges under 'Houn-
tainous Conditions"
Dushambe, Izvestiva AkaOemii MauL Tadzhikskoy SSR, Otdeleniye Fiziko-Matenati-
cheskikh i Geologo-Khi;-,)icheskikh .1.1auk,, No3(41), 1971, pp 28-31
Abstract: study was made of the electxic strength of Ion,-, air gaps and in-
sulator chains characteristic of 110-500 kilovolt overhead electric power
transmission lines under the effect of commutation surrLs on.a high-voltage
woLn-Itain test network at an altitude of 3,AOO.,meters a-bove sea level. Under
high-altitude conditions (P 512 m, 11g) there is a'significant reduction
mean
ofthe 50 percent discharge voltages both of the air gaps and the insulator
chains by comparison with lowland conditions, The magnitude of the standard
a is appreciably less: a = 2%. Considering the natural variations in the
meteorological conditions, it Is recommended that cr = 4.0% be ui,,ed for inuula-
tor chains and 3.0'.1' for air gaps [a is the stnidard for the cIL-pondence oil' the
discharge probability oil tjj(~ e(fe-ctive voltnge iimplinidu chOructerizing Oic
MOOSUrE. of steeplieso of 'ClIc! function YI(t) tl-,~e probabililty of arcover for a
q
USSR
YUL'CHIYEV, A., Izvestiva Akadem-ii Nauk Tadzhikskoy SSR, Otdeleniye Fiziko-
Matematicheskikh i Geologo-Khi-adcheskikh Nauk, No 3(41) 1971, pp 23-31
defined amplitude of the effective voltage (U Voltage,oscillograms and
.7 m
graphs are presented slio%Ang the functions U50% f(S) for a rod-pla.ne gap,
a wire-stanchion gap and an insulator chain unaer the effect of an oscillatory
damping voltage pulse of positive polarity under the mentioned high altitude
conditions. Photographs of the arcover of the insulator ch4,ins show tliat the
discharge basically develops in the air and partially *'along,the surface of tile
insulator chains. This is reason for practical independence of the dischage
voltages of the chains with respect. to typa~ or. Insula.tor.
AZIMOV, S. A., !4YAL',-,-O'vS.'K IY, V. M. ,NIONUTD-11,101~,
ABDULLAYEV, A. M. , BEYSEMLWEV, R.. U, , GAVRILDI, Ye. V. TALIP"'V, D. A.
MUILLA.ZHONOV, E. Zh. , TILL!IYEV, T. , MiKHMIAINOV, Z11. ~ UMEROV, R.
ULL11AMA, F. A., KIIEN, E. , YULDASHMIYEV, T. S.', Institilte of '."r-Clear
Physics of the Ac6deny of SdT iEeg't~,~b~
"Study,of -the Characteristic*s of H Iigh-Energy Int(';.-ractions of Pions and
Nucleons"
Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Ilauk SSSR, Seriya Fizicheskaya, Vol. 36,
No. 8, Aug 72, pp 1626-1631
Abstract: Experinental data obtained at the KIIM7Be1' FiL"gh-Altitude
Station of the Physicotechnical. Institute of the -Acadeiry of Sciences
Uzbek SSR are reDorted. The station i's.3200 ri above sea level. The
setup contains three series of aide-ga-p spparl~ cb.--_~,ers,jwith effective
%. FI-
arcar, of 2 ir?- placed above and belo,,r the tay-~:~et. The Corenkov s',_ctro-
rctu.3 vith Lotpl Pnd mi~ irni,/,,'%'UOn With (if
'). Up to thal Iii-f--ral"t i-
10 11.1" ~tCrC 115(ld 't0 II;,_IIr3,LIVC the prim-liy cnerq;y 'I -t me
ex-ocrim--ntal data o1btaincd over. 630 ~;.O-,U,s of opq~~atjon of thk! dkevif~e 11PIve
W4 th a high-voltage. pt.1se beln- sup-plic--:1 to the electrodes of
been processed,,
r,,-, charibers.5,'howers with. an ererg, of > 2V~ Gev --onerated in the tartret
ti,le swi L
weie selected for analysis. 7he follqving ratio -vras ob-113-ined for the n=ber
1/2
7777
USSR t
AZIMOV, S. A., et al., lzveStiya Akademii Nauk SSSR SIeriya Fizicheskaya,
V01 36, no 8, Aug 72, Pp 1626-1631
of primary charged 11 and neutral N particles: It' IN 0 3;
c n c n
%,34% a' all nuclear
this shows that the proportion of'charged particles is ,
active particles, thus making it possible to study pion-nuclear collisions
-iterr
by comparing the characteristics of the ii, action of char-ed and neutral
primary.particle's. A weak functional dependence betireen tbe inelasticity
coefficient and -he atomic number Of the target nucleus and a strong
functional dependence between this coefficient and tbe nature of the
primary particles were obtained for interaction,s of badron with EO > 200
Gev. is almost a logarithmic function of E0. The average multipli-
i h neutrons in par ffin is identical
city in the interaction of pions wit
fect was ob-
within the experimental limit.. A cons.idtwable azimuthal ef~
served for the angular distribution of s-acondary particles. The azimuthal
effect has its greatest valu.e for~showera with n. ar a multipli-
city close to average.
212
UDC 539-lTl-017
ABDULIAYEV, A. X., .8-7-DW., S. A*, BEMMAW,.A.
MILLIMANEW.. E. ZH., 14YALKOIISKIYI V.-.M.,, TA,LIPOV, T4 A., 21LIAi~~, T.,
K=, E., and
R. MnARTMNAYIM".
"Study of Characterlstics of Inelihstic Intemations of Co.Smic-Ray Particles
In the 1011 to 1012 -ev Energy Fange'
Moscow., Tzvesti)a Akademit Yauk SSSR, Seriya TFizicheskaya, Vol 35, No 10,
Oct 71, pp 2o65-2o68
Abstract: Experiments that 6vre perfonmd at the hiph-altitude test station
(3,20D m. ) at Y=-Bel' in Uzbekistan are described. The -purpose of the exper-
iments vas to Irrrestigate the augle of arrival and the erie,rgy characteristics
of interactions of pions and nucleons with1ight and heavy nuclei at 2 x 1011
to 2 x 1032 ev and the xnechanism of generatin muons at energies above 2 x 1012
ev..' Equipmeiat consisted of spark h b ra; lDcated above and below the target
c
(paraffin vax, carbon, and iron).. a Ee;~nkov spectrometer of f`ull absorption,
and an ionizatio- calori=eter- This co-oDlex:method of =asuremy-xnts was found
Convenient for use in various modes of operation. A detailed description of
Various parts of the installation and their.disposition Ls given in the paper.
1/3
123
jSSH
ABTLAYE
V11 A. 1.1-1.2 et al.~ Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Fizicheskaya,
V01 35, No 10, Oct 71, pp 2o65-2o63
Joint operation of ionizing calorimters and spark chambers is normally
difficult because of the need for high voltage on the calorimeter electrodes,
combindd with the time lag of the input pulse from the spark chambers, amount-
ingto over 20 microseconds. This difficulty'ras avoided in the Dresent.
experiments by storing pulses in roemory cells, with the.vubsequent input of
a high-voltage pulse of about 120 kv~ Operation vas control-led by a master-
pulse, prior to which all parts of the equipment were ke-nt incrDerative.
Results of 200 hours of the joint operation of a Ye:i~er_kov_ sDectrometer
and ionizing calorimeter, vith graphite used as the target, have been pro~-
cessed so far. For gn I sis, showers with energy above 1.5 x 10 11 ev were
selected, 130 of them having been observed'L The ratio of charged to neutral
nucleons were determinqd and, from it, the,fraction of charged pions of the
total nucleus-active stream of particles. The inelastic.~t.oefficiont for the
formation of 5To-r_-sons was comuuted from th! experiments related to the
interaction of neutral particles with nuclelof graphite.
-It in concluded that the combination of ionizing calorimter with
&renkov spectrom4ter of full absorption for the simultaneous deterrAnation
of energy of prixmry particles made it possible to determine the fraction of
2/3
USSR
ABULIAYEV A M. et al., Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya Fizicheskaya,
-2o68
V01.35, Iqo 10, W-t 71, pp 2065
since a.Cerenkov spectrometer
energy Pupplied by the ionizing particles
~meazures only the energy.emitted by -relativistic particles. It vus found that
or the man energy of primary particles of 350 Gev the energy part lost on
f
nuclear fissions in the spectrometeri with.CC14 as the light emitter, 1131#
0.25,
cso.- 1862 -w END -
3/3
P,
7.9"IMP91
Lwi~
rflc.~
Acc. Nr- Abstracting S~prvice: Ref. Code:
CHEMICALABST... 0
110862b Possible S~Mthesls of 4omenc mithylcycldhexyl
Chlorides and turbinidies. from the corresponding ~';rnethylcyc. -
lo
hexanols under the infi6enc~ of,pholsphorq's pepti alidep and
hydrohalic acids. laundil, Y Y
.41dashc_-,A. ~ L; Reu
70;7 ~Pe
Zh.UYg.AhtM.19 'fi~
J) li rn
action of PC15 on cis 2-m0hyleyd6hekanol (cis rave a ' ixt.
of products contg. I-chl6ro-l-m'et~yky~lohikane, ,the cis and
trans isomers of 1-chlbro-26-meth3',k~yclohexane, M), and- a-
chloroethy1cyclopentane;4M)_ gave with ipa, n and
Monly. cis-lortraiii.;I~i~al6g"4ithP.Btiyavediff~rentprt)duct
distribution, including 1-niethykyclohex-I-enes. or &an$-
?-Met~ylcyclohexanots ~ or'-, 4-rne Ithjk~.cldhekanols ~~ $,rave. ~ only
isomeric methylcycloheiyl -halides ima ~no C*clope~lane derivs.
The reactions of 4-rnetb.W~yclohe*~~66ji proceed S040TO'with
lnve~slon f co i The ~aWciri of cbncd.' ACI or: HBr
0 nfiguratoii.,
on the above methyleyclohekanots gave'complex xnIxts. from
which cis- and lrans-2-methylcycl6bexyl. chlorides weiric sepd. by
gas chromatog. CPIR
REEL/FRMIE
198308,31
fit ".0-T IN MIMI 711MIRM HIM) MPT -MMOMIJIMPOETAI
_E "IN ~11, I
7
- 60 -
- -,. -- ,! ~ - i 7, m-m-,
,
......
USSO UDC 612.VL4+t')'a2.1l
SRUi:PQV, ran. and XULDksizEv, 1. 'Yu.. Tadzhlk State Aiedlca.". InaLitute i=ni
:Abuali
fe at of Adaptation on Composition of Periphera.1 Blood ajij,'ats :In hi,-h-Altitude
A 0.
Condit ns"
Tas"on.. Dokla Akadaiii Nauk TadzhiVskoy 35?,~
L pp
Abstraat. A ztudy war, ando of change's in conpos;ltion of porip'~-Ioral blood occurring
at altitudes. total of' lAwhitd 'nale rats, ue-idjl- 109-1`0 g
in rats A.
each, wove dividad into 14 groupz; of 10 ani=ls oac.i. Testtit; irara coriduatei L'I the
Anzobskiy Pass (3,379 m abovo sea! lavel). Kooi sam,11,1ai~ worf, 1, IU,
15, 20. 25. )0, 40. 50, 60, 70, 80, and 90 days 'iftor the aniznl~; were brought. to
Q
ritain site. A group of 20 rats of tho saaa wolgilt varo u,~ed as contrals in
.the mou:
-the city of Dushanbe (0-20 r, above saa love!). Tho arythrov~ytc cluat sliuwod a
-4t rise at the outset, reaching a maxii-ilLr, by the 15th aay, mid thori staoili d
7544.0+74.0 thousand per =3. As for.ratic-alocyttes, a s -;-,,,t deer as was
v I ." h 0 e
a
ted initially. followc-,d by a rise, reachinZ a;znxxinum by tlhe 101th day. This
r'0
value exceeded the control OY a Afactor of
the valley (Dushanbe). The most.abrupt shifts wore si'lown 4n tht~ n.1,u-iorical
1/2
USSR
SHARIPOV, F. Kh., et, al, Doklady Akademil. Nauk:Tadzh-I ~~koy 33-
1t. 'a. Vol 13, No 6, 1970
60
pp 0 -63
composition of monveytes: even by the third d ~-Y after tho mcnantairt a5cent t~ai5
Index rose 2.5 times to 7.7tO.24~, as compared with in controls. A maxi-
MUM. was reached by the 10th day of tho experitrcat; Bi67-0.1~~. ol-cuedinj, conLrol
levels almost threefo5A. These shifts agreewith literatu~-a data.
2/2
MIR J&-gR
USSR UDC 621.316.001.24
FAZYLOV, IM. F., YULDASHEV KH.
"Formula for the Derivative Losses in Elect,ric Power System Networks"
V. sb. Razvitiye i optimiz. rezbii~ov end%btilstem (Development and optimization
of the Operating Conditions of Power Systenti collection of works), vyp. 2,
Tashkent, Fan Press, 1970, pp 66-89 (from R~h_Elektrotekhnika i Energetika, No 4,
Apr 71, Abstract No 4 Ye220)
Translation: A system of equations is deriv,ad for deteruining the derivatives
of the total losses in power systems with respect to thei power of each regulated
powei plant. The determination of the derivatives of this system is connected
with calculation difficulties and can be used.i as the standard, calculation for
estimating approximate methods. Five simplified formulas are proposed for esti-
mating the derivative losses. The machine.time (the Ural-2 computer) required
to determine the derivative losses in the,power systerr~w~ith 35 units and with
10 Participating in the economical load distribution of the plants by these
formulas is about 30 seconds. By the nume.ricall differentiation method it is on
the order of 3 hours. There is I illustration, 3 tablesland a 2-entry biblio-
graphy.
LISISR UDC 57i-15-04 + 577-153
RAMMOV, Ii. M., AIZIXOV, E. I., and YUIDASIEV,. P. ICII., Onier of the labor
Red Banner Institute of the
"The Effect of Growth Regulators on tho, Activity of Upase~ 1111
Tashkent Khimiya Prirodnykh Soyedlneniyj RD 1, 1972, PP IOG-103
Abstracts Fatty acids can either inhibit or stillulmt6 the cotton Seeci
lipases, depending on their concenti-iLiion. At a given conecnfration so,,,x-
plants may be stinulated, while,other would bea InbibitLd.. Th5.s nay be due
to different lipa-ses being specific to these plcmts, o'r to the diffe-nences
in concentrattion s7ecificity governing the?, Iii-hibitory 'or stinxlatlnE zones.
Compax~-Ing a series of acid homologs, 4 t. was, deternined that the stiriulatin;
ff
activity decreases in th- orders phenylbmty-ric, valeric. J-phenylvalcric,
-(3-methyl-4-hydmxy)-plieiiylbutyric mcidz, , The. inhibitory aotivity docrezizes
n
the followin- crdert Vatyrict valezid,, -phenylbutyric, -O-methyl-4-
4)Phenylbuty-rics and -phenylvalezlo acids.
es,
USSR UDC 547.26111.8
IL ITIA, N. A., YULDASHEVA TRUTNEVA, nP P.
I"Reactions of Diallcylarlidoallcylphosphorous Acids V'ith A ldehydes,
and, Ketones"
Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey nimli, Vol 41, No 1971,
_Pp 2173-2177
Abstract: The title reactions werestudied in-an effort to
iscertaln the existence of two tautomeric forms- the phosphonate
(I) and the hydroxyohosphite (II) forms of dialkylamidoalic-
Yl-
phosphorous acids. In the pronence of sodi= all,=ide catalyst,
-N,I,,T-cliall-ylamidoallcyliohosDhorous acids (III) reacted exothermally
and rapidly with aronatic aldohydes,.aromatic and ali-ohatic 1..-etones
to rive N, N -dia 1'.7. 1 (r)~, -hydroxy) a lkyl (a ryl) pho sphonamiae s which
vere identified by their IR spectra. -A,high reaction rate indi-
..cated a Dossible ionic mechanism involving an attack on the
electroDiiilic carbonyl carbon by the.riucleophilic phosphorus atora
with formation of an intermediate compound which reacts with a
second (III) molecule 11-o ;dive the final.product.~ In the absence
of a catalyst, aromatic aldehydes and.1ketones re'et very
112
49
UMR
!o1 Ll, No 10,
ILt Im, 11. A.. at al, Zhurnal Obshchey ;'chin
1971, Pp 2173-2177
vigorously with (III), probably in (II) form, to give an inter-
mediate co'-nmound with a negatively charged ox7gen atom. This
oxygen atom attacl,s P atom and simultaneously an amin-anion is
eliminated from P atom and attacks Ce atom to form. an intermediate
cyclic cation i-fhich rearranges to crystalline allcyl amino-
alkylaryl-phosphonates, which differences in IR spectra,
comDared with those of the Droducts of'catalyzed reactions. ff-lie
products of the (III) reaction with aliDhatic aldehydes were not
identified. The e,,_1Dcv:biental -oroceauxes are outlined and
_V21 oio UNCLASSYFIED1 PROC ESS ENG
ITLE--REFLECTioN EFFECT IN DERIVATIVES OF
T'ETRAMETHYLTETMAHYDROTH IOPYkANP 4PONE, -U-.
WTHOR-(041-AP.6UZLlVq 60A.v YULUASHEVA, Lks!t ARSHINOVI%? R-P.t
~WNTRY OF
INFO--USSR
~IOURCE-11V- AKAD. NAUK SSSRt SER. 1~47
Kli I M. Ot 13) 526-9
)ATEIPUBLISHED ------- 70
DATE--230CT70
IOLOV4t O*De
-).'UBjECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY
rpprc~ TAGS--ORGANIC SULFUR COMPOUND, HETEROCYCL IC OXYGEN COMPOUND, DIPOLE
~14OMENT, SULFUR OXIDE# SULFONE, MULECULAR: SITRUCTURE
iONTROL .4ARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS
.)OC.U.MENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO
~.RIOXY REEL/FRAME--2000/0738 STEIP NO--UR/00621701000/003/0526/0529
.-I,RC.. ACCESSION NO--AP0124408
UNCLASSIFIED
2n 010 UNCLASSIFIE0- PROCESSING DATE--23CICT70
~o-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0124408-
'ABS TRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE EXPTL. 04POLE MOMENT VALUE FOR
2121646$TETR.AMETHYLTETRAHYORO,4,PYRONE IS 1.49 D, SULFOXIDE 1.58 Ot
SULFONE 2.45 Ov TETRAHYDROTHIS,4,PYRONE 1.51 Ot AND ITS SULFONE 2.41 0.
1F ROM THESE DATA IT WAS CONCLUDED THAT ALLTHESE COMPDS. HAVE THE
PREFERRED CHAIN CONFORMATION. INTRODUCTION OF.~GEM:,ME GROUPS IN THE 3
POSITION RELATIVE TO THE CO GROUP:CAUSES BUT SLIGHT DEFORMATION OF rHE
RINGo FACILITY: KHIM. INST. IM~v. SUTLEROVAtr KAZAN, GOS. LINIV.
I M. ULYANOVA LENINAt KAZAN# USSR.
UNCLASSIFIEO
1/2 022 UNCL~AS~~IF'JFO~~ I
PROCESSING DATE--230CT7(
T ITLE--DI POLE MOMENT AND CONFORMkTION bF- :
3,5 , DI 8ENZYL I DENEJ ETRAHYDRO r4lif THI OPYRAN, 4# ONE ANO ITS ltltDIOXIDE -U-
AUTHOR-- (00-ARBULOV B.A., Y.ULoA,5,HEVA#:L-K-# ARSHLNOVAr R.P.v BALABANOVAI
RY OF lNFO--USSR
C OUNT
SOURCE--IZV. AKAD* NAUK SSSRt SER. KHIM* 1.9701 (2)0: 448-50
Y
DERIVATIVE,
PK0XY REEL/FRAME--1997/084-r STEP NO--Uq/0062/70/000/002/0448/04'iO
CIRC'ACCESSION NU--AP0119748
UNCLASSIFIED
-2/2 022 UNCLASSIFIED' PPOCESSING t)ATE--?-30CT7(
CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0119748
:,ABSTRACTI=-XTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. CONDENSATION OF
lETRAHYDROj4l4iTHI0PYRANi4#ONE WITH BZH GAVE THE.309DIBENZYLIDENE
DERIV., M. 1150-10EGREES, DIPOLE MOMENT 2.5 D. THE DIPOLE MOMENT OF [TS
SULFONEI Ms 198-90EGREESP WAS 3.55:D. TJIUSr BOTH ARE IN THE "ENVELOPE"
CONFORMATION, A CONCLUSION SUPPORTED BY 1R, SPECTRA. FACILITY:
XHIM. fNST. IM. BUTLEROVAP KAZAN* CjOS~ UNIV. IM's UL,vAN0VA,LENINA,
KAZAN; USSR*
UN'CL ASS I F [0
-615.7/9
USSR UDC 577.1.
Y Yu. K.
UL
"HIstochemical Analysis of Enzymic Changes Occurring in Rat Liver in Acute
Alcohol Intoxication"
Tr. Mosk. o-va ispyt. prirody (Works of Moscow Society of Naturalists), 191'l,
'27, pp 70-77 (English summary) (from RZh-Biologichesk~ya Khimiya, No 20, 2-5,
Oct,71, Abstract No 20F1676 from summary)
Translation: A 50-percent solution of ethyl alcohol (10 ml. abs. a1c. per kg)
was administered by gastric probe to male rats after starvation for 16-18
hours, and the activity of a number of liyar anzymes wail determined by histo-
chemical methods 30 minutes to six days later. It was -Lwtablisffied that in the
first few hours after intoxication there was a decline in succinic dehydro-
genase activity, and somewhaz later in1actic and glutamic dehydrogenase as
well as alpha-glycerophosph ate dehydrogen~Lse. activity; there was a rise in
alkaline phosphatase activity. These changes reached a maximum by the end
of the first day and then normalized gradually in the course.of 4-5 days.
The author considers the lowering of the oxidative enzyme activity of the
liver one of the essential factors in the development of the pathological
process resulting from acute alcoholic intoxication of the organism.
69
Ref Code: UR 0297
Ace* Ift"s *Z APO 029499
Y '.'-,*OIJRCE;
~~PRIMAR Antibiotikii 197 Vol 15 _N-'r 1, pptj- -'.2 1
A STUDY OF THE CREAIICA.L COJSITION AND ANTITUMOR ACTIVITY
OF PROTAMINES, ISOLATED MAI, STURGEON, W L
'Yerm SiIaZev
'i67kidova, N. Pasternak, NiA,-11KMsqva, I.V.
nkol L.K.;Shenderbvich V.A~ i*'
Yevseye
Central Post Graduate Medical Institute, Moscow State University
Triprotamines in the form of stflfales:~ were isolated froni the milt of iridivWual
sturpon stocks. The amino acid composition of hiprotamines -was determined and their
antitumor activity was studied. It was shown that protamin('~' from. Ac. guldenstadti
and Ac. stellatus inhibited tumor growth by 60--80 per centl whille prolamine from
Ac. nudiventris was practically inactive.
REEL/FRAHE
L
USSR uDc 662.7
KRIMiKO, A. A., and R-LINtm. X
"obtaining Fuels and Chemical Produnts from Mixtures of Coal and Oil"
Moscow# KhImiya Tverdogo Toplivaj No 6. 1973P pp 73--~
Abstracts A theoretical scheme h" been developed for obtaiAing commerclal
products from distillates with a boiling point to 320 degreers from the liqLdd-
phase hydrogenation product of a mixture oi',,' coal azd ollo. Th6 scheme Includes
the isolation of ';6-C. phenols froz the frzxtion with a boiling point to Z',*
degrees, hydrofining distillates with a boiling point to 320 degrees, refozn-
ing gasolines and hydrocracking of distillates witki a boning point of 180-
3W degrees. When refining the hydrogenation product it Is possible to
obtain the following compouadat 3.4% phenolop 81.2% gasoline,.13.5% hydro--
carbon gases C . 0
I-C41 0#3 percent &=o niap 0 .5 percent hyda- ogen aulfide end
1'0% water, Data are tabulated charscterizing.the hydrogenation product from
a lil nIxturo of cool and oil, the results af hydrofizing distillate with a
boUlng point to 320 de-greest the characterlstics; of the Mv mterial, and
racyole for hydrocrackingt the results of c&talytic reforitin of hydrofined
9
~_lj 2 009 UNCLASSIFIED ROCESSING DA'fE---090('T70
;.~T-ITLE-DEALKYLATLON OF P TERT ALKYLPHENOLS IN THE PRFESENCE (jF SULFURIC
-AUTHOR-(03)-VCjLEPSHTEIN, A.B., YULIN, M.K..,~VOSRUSHKINA, I.N.
,,.:C~OUNTRY OF-INFO--USSR
_`SOURCE-NEFTEKH[MIYA 1.970, 10(l)s 70-82-
~~.DATEPUBLISHED-----70
SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY
14OPIL TAGS-DEALKYLATibN, ALKYLPHENOL, SULFURIC AC10i ISOBUTENE, PROPANE,
_--~S TY R E N EBENZENE DERIVATIVE
..,,CNTROL MA RKING-NO RESTRICTIONS
PoLUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIC-D
:PRQXY REEL/FRAME-1992/1884 SYI:P NO--UR/U2O4f7O/OLC)YOOL/0076irOO82
C I R-C AC LE SS I GN NO--- AP 0 112 d 64
.2/2 009 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70
ACCESSIGN NO-AP0112864
ABSTSAACT/EXTRACT-fU) GP-0- AB STRACT. IHE TITLE PHE%-JLS WERE HEATI-o WITH
,--0.5 14T. PERLEIN 60 MIN AT '00-204DEGREES.
IT CGNLD. H SU62 SO Sq84
-4,TERT,BUIYLPHENOL (I) AT 130-60DEGREES FORMS PHENOL ANO
Z,4t0ltTERT,bUTYLPHEN0Lt ANDt AT.180-204DEGREESt ESOBUTYLENE AND PHENOL.
P,TEkT,OCTYLPHENOL (111 AT 190DEGREES-FORMS 39.4 WT. PERCENT
DILSOBUTYLENE, 33.0 PHENOL, 5.2*1, AND ;19.4 11. AN EQUIMOLAR timr. OF
PHENOL A."41) 11 AT 190DEGREES GAVE 29t 15.7, 26.81 AND 23.OPERCENT, RESP.
-2,PHENYL,2, (4,HYDROXYPHENYLIPROPANE 1111) AT 204GEGREES GAVE 2,9
ALPHA#METHYLSTYRENEr 27.9 PHENOL, 32.1:ltlt3~TRIMETHYL~s3*PHEWLINIDANI
37..1PERCENT III. 2v2tBlS(4,,HYDROXYPHENYL)PROP.ANE (IV) AT 204DEGREES
.--GAVE 53.5PERCENT PHENOL; THE REST WAS.~UNIDENUFIED. THE RELATIVE
:DEGREES OF DEALKYLATION.AT 190DEGREES-ARE:: I:T 307; 117 80.6; Illt 42.9;
IV, .72.0. FACIL11Y:~ -GORYUCH-. 1-$KOP~, 1405COwt USSR.'
iMl mi-
"LASS IF I t-L) ~)~,(JCEIJSIING L)A'[[----20NCjV70
2 024
T I TLE--TH -Y '01 YNIA IN- CST '-'C HO 1) LUMB)',R
E Y C R C i-E F Cut-f- SIS .(il- THE
REG I C N G i~ TFE SPINE -IJ-
A UTHOR- (0,4 G..i., YI-LIZARCIV t N I VARSHAVICHIK., F.P., FJ11.YZlYEV,
1-Y
KH. F-. -
CiCUNT RY OF 'UN' F0- U S S R
uUR K L I t, 11. 1970 VCL 48, NR Ov PP .116-119
'C E - HE S KA YA r, 0 1 T S VNA
S
.SEDATE PULL ISt~EG--70
--BICLGGICAL AND MERMAL SCIENCES
-Su8jECT AREAS
TOP I C AG S-- i, Q'N'C DISFASE, PAIN, MEDICAL EXAM INAT IJJ .4., DIAGNOSTIC 11HL)IGINE
fidCT 10*
NTRG-L -%G RES
I E,~4 T -UNCLASSIFIED
QGCW C LA S S
-PRjAY KEEL/H~AML--3002/18bl STEP N01--UR/ 049 7 /70/048 /006/ Oil 6/0119
jt(-CESS I CN Nj~--rA PO 12') 1
IRC ~11 I
212 024 UNCLASIS IF I EIJ PROCES511liG DATE-20NOM
C I R C A C C E- SZS I C- N Ni;--AP01/92~4L
A,5STI~ACTIEX fRAGT--([j) i, 6'i T IZA C T THE M"ITRGVERSIAL DIPP.110-,IS OF
'sGV1rET AN) R2REIGiN AUTW 'mi~ il~i T~iE ORIGIlNi C, F COGGYGEAL PALN TE~>T IFY TO
S r I
T 1-1 E F A C T I F. AT I T I S LL I NADEQUAT ELY STUD !ED t-1 TF-Ril TUFF SOUPCES GIVE
NO DATA 't-JIN I'Ht RE L,tT I CIN 0,L Lf-:CGYGGL)YP,:IA,:'v,1T:r1 0.STi:0Ci-ibNf)kOSIS OF TIHE
LUIRNaAk OF 1-1hF I N. 15 13 P ERC N; I') 'A i T OF I 14 P A T I C'",N I S
Ur.,UER CdS;:;~VATICiN -WjYNLA WAS OF A 0IFF'Ef-tEINC CHARACT -.R
AL P,~ I 'i C~j" '-~ IN-D
THAN THAT OLSCR16pi) li`i M&i~ '11JURCE S. ~, T I!W' S C 6 C Y' G E
ri I Tr THELU-'-'t~~LSACRAL REGION; 11' ~WS AsSJGIATEi:Y ~i[TH MOVEME-'-T'S AiNlt)
NOT ICAb LY INT 'N'SIFIE-1; L,'~i (;~~--DUCT IWN' OF .5 Y~MP S I
T a im I r-: 5TRETCHUIG THE
I C L,4 1,1 F;
T-AU~`iKS IN SINGLI: PU:~PuSE Exiv-WIAF 1 '' THE PATH--NTIST THE AUTP.01