SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT KRAVCHENKO, V.I. - KRAVCHENKO, V.M.

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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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The Wheeled Sprinkler Pipeline, Type KDT-25 SOV/99-59-7-3/9 pipe. The operating pipeline is comprised of 0 thin- walled pipes, each 12 m long. It is divided into two parts - right and left.- connected between themselves by a.water.pipe passing th----ough the driving vehicle. At a distance Of. 10, M f rom. each other, on the pipeline are mounted flanges-for attaching.sprinkling nipples. The water output of nipples depends.on the pressure in the net-and varies.from 1.8.to -0.2 lit/sec. One end of the operating pipeline, attached to.the auxiliary water conducting-pipe,-is-provided with a coupling sleeve. The short-jet.sprinkler KDT-25.can irrigate.from one position a stretch of.land 110~120 m broad-The dri- ving vehicle-consists.of.a frame, an.air-cooled power plant, a reversible.gear.and three driving.chains. On both sides of the vehicle are mounted supporting wheels, 80 cm in diameter. The driving wheels are 120 cm in diameter with rims 12 cm wide. Other advanced features of the sprinkler IMT-25 are: 1) Simplicity of.construc- tion; 2) Convenience of operation; 3) Light weight; Card 2/3 4) Absence of protruding parts, which is particularly The Wheeled Sprinkler Pipeline, Type KDT-25 SOV/99-59-7-3/9 important in those regions where strong winds blow Ctlzer- baydzhan); 5) Possibility of using-sprinkling nipples of different shapes, thus being able to regulate the water jet output. The wheeled sprinkler pipeline KDT-25 was tested in 1958 by the State Commission and recommended to be used on a large scale. There arc 4 tables, 2 diagrams and 2 photographs. ASSOClATION: AzNIIGiM (Azerbaydzhan Scientific Research Institute Of Water Engineering,and Land Reclarmtion) C ard 3/3 nAVCHENKO, VIL Examination of the work of the I-D-18 windmill with an inartia storage battery. Vast. AN Kazakh. USE 10 no.11:103-111 N 153. (MLRA 6:12) 1. Predstavlena daystvitelInym chlenom Akademii nauk Kazakhokoy SSR M.I.Goryayevym. (Windmills) (Electric motors) -KRAVCHENKO, V.I.; MIRZAKEYEV, 1[.M.; SOROKIN, M.G. '; Results of preliminary tests of the 1-D-18 wind power plant. Izv. AN Kazakh.SSR.Ser.energ. no.4/5:128-141 154. (MLRL 9:5) (Wind power) 1aAVCHEMr,O, V. 1. "Investigation of the Effect of '.lind Gusts on the Clperaticn of the Inertial Accumulator of Wind-Electric Power Unit 1-D-18." CLqnd Tech Sci, Power Engineering Inst, Acad Sci Uzbek SSR, 8 Jan 55. (PV, 26 Dee 54) Survey of Scientific and Technical Dissertations Defended at U35R Higher Educational Institutions (12) SO: Sum. No. 556, 24 Jun 55 SOV1124- 58-11-12847 Tianslation from: Referativnyy zhurnal, Mekhanika, 1958, Nr 11, p 139 (USSR) AUTHOR: Kravc I . .-_ T'.TLE: Some Data on Wind Structure (Nekotoryye dannye po strttktu,-e ~et-a) PEMODICAL: Izv. AN KazSSR. Se r. rg, , 19 56, Nr 11, pp 122 - 131 ABSTRACT: Several authors have attempted to characterize the structure ("gustiness") of the wind by means of "one-dimensional" character istics, i. e. , by means of a single number. A critical SUrVey i5 offered here of the many "one-dimensional" gustiness indices for the wind. For practical purposes, and more particularly for w,,nd-, energy calculations, "one-dimensional', characteristics are insuf - ficient, and it is indispensable that two-dimensional" gustiness characteristics, i. e. , distribation curves, be employed, In order to obtain distribution curves for gusts and their duration a number of experiments were set up, wherein the wind velocity was deter- mined by means of an ARME- I (electric anemograph). Analys'&- of the observational data revealed that the wind-velocity distribu tion for short time intervals obeys the normal law. The distr;bution Card 1,12 function of ihe duration At of pulsations having a single sign Some Data on Wind Structure ("lulls" - "peaks") assumes the form No - A t I(T N e SOV/124-58-11-12847 where (T and No are parameters. The duration of single-sign ishes with increasing mean wind velocity, while the amplitude increases. Thr relationships between the mean value of At and velocity V is described by the regression equation At mean = pulsations dimin- of said pulsations the mean wind 42. 9 - 1.417 L. S. Gandin Card 2/2 CHOKIN. Sh.Ch., otvatstvannyy redaktorl IKQR- 64" redaktor; MATZELO, S.Ya., redaktor; MIRZAKMY, K.H., redaktor; SEROY. V.I., rodairtor; VABLAVSKIY, N.A.. redaktor; ALFXROYA, P.Y., takhnicheskiy redaktor. [Use of wind power in alliculture of Kazakhstan; proceedings of a scientific and technical conference en thA use of wind power, held September 1955, at the Power Institute of the AC~46mv of BoienceL and MinistrT of Agriculture of Kazakhetanl Ispol zovanie energii vetra v Bel skom khosiaistva KazakhoWis; trudv nanchno-tekhnicheek*i konferenteii po vetroispollsovaniWO aostoiaveheisia v sentiabko 1955 gods v Institute energetiki Akademii nauk i Hinisterstva eel I skogo khozialetva Kazakhokol SSR. Alma-Ata, Izd-vo Akad.nauk Katakhekoi SSR. 1957, 204 p. (MLRA 10:5) lefiauchno-takhnicheska.ta konferentaira po vetroispollzovaniyu. Alma- Ata, 1955. (Kazakhsta*--Wind power) 8(6) SOV/112-59-5-8766 Translation from: Referativnyy zhurnal. Elektrotekhnika, 1959, Nr 5, p 48 (USSR) AUTHOR: Kravcheako-,.,V..;4.1.. TITLE: Design of an Inertial Accumulator for the I D- 18 Windmill Electric Station PERIODICAL: Tr. In-ta energ. Ali Kazaklisks)y SSR, 1958, Vol 1, pp 161-169 ABSTRACT; A method for designing the power of an inertial accumulator for the type ID-18 windmill with protective-sail regulation is presented. The inertial accumulator was investigated experimentally for its air-frictior. losses, with a Reynolds number Re - 2x lo6 - 13x lo6; the inertial -accumulator disk was enclosed in a rotating housing and showed 2. 7 times lower losses than those without the housing and Z-0 times lower lossei3 than those with stationary housing. An empirical formula is offered for determining the losses. Four schemes of accumulator -windmill connection are briefly considered. Bibliography: 4 items. M. 0. F. Card 1/1 KRAVCHENKO, V.I.; MIRZAYEYEV, K.M. Principal results of the study of wind currents in Kazakhstan. Trudy Inst. energ. AN Kazakh. SSR 2:95-100 '60. (MIRA 15:1) (Kazakhstan--Wind power) ACC NRI AP6029519 SOURCE CODE: UR/0432/66/000/004/0040/0042 AUTHOR-. Bayborodin, Yu. V. (Candidate of technical sciences); Kravchenko Kabanov, E. Karpenko, A. S.;_Kozin, A. V.; Petrenko ov Shaposhnik___, B. V. _ ORG : no ne TITLE: A Q factor modulator for a ruby a ser SOURCE: Mekhanizatsiya i av tomatizatsiya upravleniya, no. 4, 1966, 40-42 TOPIC TAGS:.- solid state laser, laser modulation, laser pulsation ABSTRACT: A Q factor,modulato that increases tli output pulse power of a ruby laser by 103 is described. The modulator is made up of an optical head and an electronic unit. The optical head consists of a rotating prism with total internal reflection that acts as one of the mirrors of the laser optical resonator; it is driven at angular speeds up to 26 x 103 rpm by a dc motor. The electronic unit consists of a ,er cir- square wave generator, a comparator circuit, two time delay networks, a trigg cuit, a dc motor, and a power supply. The modulator operates in the following manner:- at a given angular position of the prism with respect to the laser beam, light from a lamp is focused through a lens and illuminates a photosensitive diode. The output pulse of the photodiode is amplified and fed to the comparator. When the rotational speeds of the motor and the prism are equal, the comparator initiates a pulse that lightsthe laser pumping lamp and thus triggers the laser. At the same time, the I 43o41-66 ACC NRs AP6029519 0 motor is stopped and the laser is not triggered again until the motor builds up its speed until Lt is equal to that of the prism. The motor has an automatic disconnect relay which stops it in 5 to 7 seconds if a faulty condition occurs in the circuit. As a result of work with the modulator, optimum parameters for the optical resonator, rotation speed of the rtflector, and pumping power have been determined in order to obtain maximum output pulse power. Orig. art. has: 2 figures. [IV] SUB CODE: 20/ QMM DATE: none/ ORIG PLEF: 001/ OTH REF: 001 A TD P)Z fC Card I ", ~! A_U,1~111 4AX LJIQ-5~. (0)/r:EG(k)-2/r/t-WP(k)/F-','IP(b)/E7.'IA (m)_2/E.VA (h) SCM/ (e )/E . -ACC NR6 AP6002468 9 DE: UR/0386/65/002/011/0519/0521 4OURC CO 44 AUTHOR: BXoude, V. L Kravcheako, V. 1: Prokopyuk, N. FA2Lkln M. SY' a Z,4 too .. 1_ 0 ORG: Physics IngatUte .- Ac dc= of Sciences LkrMPq1iev (Institut fiziki Altademii P.auk UkrSSR) TITLE: Spectral composition of radiation from neodymium plpgs in a laser cavity SOURCE: Zhurnal akeparimental'noy i teoreticheskoy fiziki. Pis'Ma v redaktsiyu. Prilozheniye, v. 2, no. 11, 1965, 519-521, and insert between p. 520 and 521 TOPIC TAGS: laser, laser optics, solid state laser, laser resonator times as broad as the range of stimulated emission usually observed from a Nd3f doped glass laser (2Z Nd3+). A special "dispersion" resonator developed by the author (Author certificate 164325, 1 March 1963; IN: Byulletin' izobreteniy i tovarnykh znakov, no. 15, 1963; see also Adademiya nauk SSSR, Doklady, v. 163, no. 6, 1965, p. 1342-1343) in which a prism is placed between the laser rod and the adjustable end mirror was used. In the Fabry-Perot setup, several lines appeared near 9440 cm-1 at the threshold for laser action. The number of lines increased with the pLW power and at ~he peak PUMP power (6 times the threshold) the lines spanned the region be- tween 9390 and 9470 cm71 at interv9s betwen 3 and 5 cm7l. In the "dispersion" mode of operation, changes in the inclination of the mirror resulted in changes in the ABSTRACT: Laser action is reported on various lines throughout a spectral ran e fiv 1/2 L --~~'0155-166 ACC NN AP6002468 frequency of emission. At different inclinations of the mirror, laser action was attained on different I!nes in the range between 9090 and 9540 cm-1. The laser used had an inhomogeneouyjy broadened lumine3cence line at 1.06 jj-. A glass prism with an angular dispersion tii' I sec/X was utilized in the experiments. Laser,action throughout such a wide range wvj attributed to the fact that the "dispersion" mode of operation is responsible for'selective losses, making generation possible on lines which are not excited in the Fabry-Perot mode of operation. Orig. art. has: 2 figures. ICS] SUB CODE: 20~ SUBM DATE, 210et65/ ORIC REF: 002/ OTH REF: 002/ ATD PRESS: Card COUNT -Z~f TJl,:).J*l, ~-fi 0 RY AS,3. JJJ?. I NO-M, 19511 hi- AU T I 10,1 y Z . D a ta c, n v, ng Pu 0 A-D, S I --rt:q "T Tnlorm-~",toj not Lvir st, IS i~- nc- KRAVCHENKO, V. I. Cand Agr Sci - (diss) "Pistachio groves Z-fista-shniki7 of Badkhyz and their cultivation." Moscow, 1961. 20 Dp; (Moscow Order of Lenin Agricultural Academy imeni K. A. Timiryazev); 200 copies; price not given; (KL, 6-61sup, 232) KRAVCHEMOP V.I. Effect of storage length on the geraination of sown in open ground. Izv. All Turk. SSR. Ser. 83-87 161. 1. Badkhyzakiy gosudarstvennyy zapovednik. (PISTACHIO) (GERMINATION) pistachio coeds biol. nauk no-5: (MIRA 14:12) (SEEDS-STO-11GE) KRAVGHENKO, V.I. Regeneration of pistaeblo by sprouts in Badkbyz. Izv.AH Turk.SSR. Ser.biol.nauk no.3:79-81 162. (MIRA 15:9) 1. Badkhyzekiy goeudar5tvennyy zapovednik. (BADKHYZ-PISTACHIO) (REGENERATION (BOTANY)) KRAVCHENKOP V.I. Ql~titative relationship betwe..;n the aerial and underground organs in a 70-yoar-old whortleburry spruce forest. But. zhur. 48 no.4:566-570 Ap 163. (ML-A .16:5) 1. Leningradskiy nauchno-issledovateliskiy institut lesnogo khozya,ystva. * (Leningrad Province-Spruce) (Roots (1jotany)) (Forest ecj-lo.-y)' 0 - -- - - - - - - KRAVCHRIKO, Veniamin Ioelfovicho kand. sellkhoz. nauk [Pistachio and its cultivation] Fistashka i eo razvedenie. Moskva, Goslesbumizdatj 1963. 114 p. (MIRA 17:4) 19MCHEMO, V.I., kand. tekhn. nauk Rock pressure control in longwalls with a variable thickness of the direct roof. Ugoll Ukr. 10 no. 1:17-18 Ja 166. (MIRA 18:12) KRAVCHE74KO, Viktor Ivanovich; YUKHIR, Vladimir Tevgrafovich [Methods and procedures for fighting complicated under- ground fires] Metody i prienW likvidatsii slozhnykh podzemnykh pozharov. Moskva, Nedra, 1965. 102 p. (MIRA 18:12) Z". o f o o ot in, r o P4, S fiz- 2 it'.5lr,)-521. I tu 1 ~izlk-4 AN Ilk, 7r r t 7~~~ BROUDE, V.L.; KRAVCHENKOO V*I.j SWKIN, M-S- Time characteristics of lasers generating giant pulses. Prib. I tekh.eksp. 10 no.5s207-210 S-0 t65. (MIRA 1. Institut fiziki AN Ukr&SR, Kiyev. 191l) Submitted July 21, 1964. M VCHENYC, V. I. TechnoloF- ~y Forcing out coal in working highly-inclined gears cf the Don,-ts basin, Foskva, Ucletekhizdat., 1951. Yonthl List of Runsian Accessions. Librar-jr of Congress October 1952, UCLASSIFIED. MSCMINO, V.I., kqnd. tekhn. nnuk " - Effect of timbering on the benring pressure In atopes. Ugoll 33 no-3;16-19 Kr 153. (MIRA 11:3) (Kine timbering) (.Enrth pressure) MUVCHENKO, V. I., kand.tektm.nank Behavior of roof rocke at the Lenin mine. Ugol' 34 n0.2:28-33 7 159. (MIRA 12:4) 1. Luganskiy sovnarkhox. (Donets Basin-Coal mines and mining) (Subsidences (Earth movements)) ULYCHRIKO, V.I., kand.tekhn.nauk; SOKOIOOV' S.M., gorny7 insh. Preventing air bumps in the "Ionia" mine. Ugoll Ukr. 4 no.4:27-29 AV 160. (MM 1338) (Mining engineering) (Subsidences(larth M*sments)) ~'JRAVCHMO , kand.tekhn.muk; TISHKOV, P.A., gornyy lushe -- )'-V- 1, Maintenance costs and the distribution of lateral drifts. Ugoll Ukr. 4 no. 12: 33 D 160. (XnU l3tl2) (Coal mines and mining-Costs) POUAKOVp I.:.V.; SUFRANOVp N.K.;' KFAVC11'.11MO, V.I., kand.tclLlm.naik "Blaotin,; operations in mining" by E.O.','Lrideli. I'-,vieved by N.V. Poliakovv IT.K.Sliafrancrvp V.I.K%ravchenko, Ugoll 36 no.2:62-63 F 161. (MIRA 1l,- 2) 1. Glavnyy inzhener lco--~binata Rontovujoll (for Polyakov). 2. GlavW inzhencr kombinata Rostovshalchtostroy (for Shafranov). 3. 1:auchno- issledovatel'skiy i proyektnc-#kon-tru:ctor.'-.kiy u:;ollny,.r in-.titut, Is.Shakhty (for Kravehanko). (Blastinc) (Mindelit E.O.) KRAVCHENKO, V.I., kand.takho.nauk; GOLIDIN, A.Ye., inzh.; MITYAKIN, V.S., I ~ . tekhnik Automation circuits for mine drain systems. Ugoll.prom. no.1; 48-54 Ja-F 162. (KRA 15:3) 1. Shakhta No.10 im. Volodarskogo tresta "Sverdlovugal". (Mine drainage) (Automatio control) KHAVCBEITKOJ V.I., kand.tekhn.nrauk Determining the working load on the supports used in roof caving. Ugoll Ukr. 6 no.2:6-9 F 162. (MIRA 15:2) (Mine timbering) (Rock pressure) KHAVCHENhOp V.I.,, kand.tekhnouxuk; WoIYAOIKOV, V.F., inzh. Operat'Ing the "Donbass-2k" cutt r-loader in ant-racl'Te mines. Ugoll.~.rom. no.3:4-7 My-Je 162. (MURA 18:3) KRAVCHENKOP V.I., kand,tekhn.nauk Preventing caving of longwalls. Bezop.truda v prom. 6 no.6s3-5 je 162. (MM 15111) (Coal mines and mining-Safety measures) KRAVCIIENKO, V. I., kand. tekhn. nauk Effect of geological factors on the manifestation of rock pressure in the stopes. Ugoll Ukr. 6 no.100-11 0 162. (MIRA 15:10) (Donsta Basin-Roclc pressure) KRAVCHENKO V I , kand.tekhn.nalik ~t fires behind concrete supports of electric machinery Pre+ chamBers. Bezop.truda v prom. 7 no-3:7-8 Mr 163. (NMA 16:3) (Coal mines and mining--Accidents) 11. , k,irm . teklin. nw.,k, KUF~ I :'I, ~ ~ "'n . ~, . nzh. EI'mination of conTC.ex lardergmimid flre5 in !:cratS BaS;.n MjnF,' 5 . Bezop. v, pr~n. 8 ne.12tiO-l" 7 'N.. (M--KA. 18., 3) L 6515-66 UA W 11~EDIEWT 1) /EEC W - 2/T/E:WP W/SWA W - 2 (c qTB lip ACG NR: AP5027o36 4G SOURCE CODE: Ult/0120/65/000/005/0207/0210 AUTHORS: Broud., V. J1 KEayQji9ja1ko T 1.'-' Soskin) M. 5stj z'6 ORG: Institute of Plysics) AN UrSSR, Kiev (Inatitut fizikI AN UkrSSR) TITLE% Investigation of time characteristics in tho'generation of giant laser pulses 3OU11C L,* Fribory i teklinika eksperimenta, no, 5, 1965) 207-210 TOPIC TAG3z laser optics, laser modulation, ruby laser, laser measurement, giant pulse, Q spoiled laser 71 1~ ABSTRACT. An experiment for studying 6ho kinetics of giant laser pulse generation I b ,,, using a prism-shutter system is described. Its main purpose was to relate the ti;fie change in the quality of the optical cavity to the time sweep of the generated pulse. The equipment - consists of a beam-modulated laser (g-, ruby crystal), transmission system, measuring devices, and a circuit for oscillo- graph sweep trigger control. The optical cavity of the lauor consists of a plann card -1/2 UI)C.- 621-378-325 09w/ L 6515-66 AGO NHi AP5027o36 dielectric mirror and two 900 prisms, one of which can rotate at the rate of '20,000, rev/iain. This rotary mirror increases the efficiency of the angular rate of the beam bv a factor of two. The oscillographs can sweep a region of 10 nanosec to 2 Vsec. Typical threshold pumping versus "nonadjustable" angle 9 curves are obtained and are related to the. losses in the cavity Y, or 'Y The maxjxiLua error in the operation of the pulse generation-oscillograph sweep tying-in circuit is found to be 10". The moment of the pulse generation is determined optically) and its rolation to the angular position of the rotating mirror is measured to be on the order 2 nanosee. Crig. art. has: 4 figures. 041 SUB CODE: F,01 SUBM DATE: .2ljul64/ ORIG- REF: 001/ REF:.,'003/ ATP PRESS:'- t nw Card 2/2 KRAVCIIENKO)-, V. I. Variations in the ash composition of the needles of the spruce Picea abies (L.) Karst. depending on the density of stands. Bot.zhur. 50 no.7:977-979 J1 165. ( K-RA 18: 11) 1. Leningradskiy nauchno-iscledovat-ollskiy institut lesnogo khozyaystva. DAYBORODIN, Yu.V.; GAPAZHA, S.A. [Ifni-azha, S.A.); KRAVCHENKO, V.1. SPI2HOVAYA, fl.i. [Spizhova, N.I.] Operation of a ruby laaer with modulated Q-factor. Ukr. fiz. zhur. 10 no.4:455-457 Ap 165. 04IRA 18:5) A~COANT~m)AKW ___WH VaMW NR: AP50250A UR/0368/65/003)063'/O~25-/-0229*-4 621.375.9:535.89 !AUTHOR: lrnde, V. L.; Zaika, V. V.; Kravchenko, V. I.; Soskin, M. S. 1~laser with inclined-m-firors TITLE: The operation of a Mb SOURCE: Zhurnal prikladnoy spektroskopii, v. 3, no. 3, 1965, 225-229 TOPIC TAGS: ruby laser resonator mirror, mirror alignment ABSTRACT: The present work originated during a study of the kinetics of giant puled lasers with rotating prisms, where a considerable change in beam directionality was! !observed in comparison with the case of a fixed prism and parallel mirrors. The afield distribution on the near and far mirror regions of a ruby laser and the time-1 varying nature of the emission were studied as a function of the degree of misalign- ment of a plane resonator in the direction perpendicular to the crystal optical axisio Water-cooled polished ruby crystals 120 mm long and 12 mm in diameter were used. Thd pumping f lashlamp was placed under the crystal whose optical axis was vertical with !respect to the flashlamp and whose ruby ends were parallel within 4". Dielectric- coated plane mirroru were used with reflection coefficients from 99 to 30% at 6943 land an adjustmenC within 10". The resonator length was varied from 40 to 150 cm. Sard 1/2 L 2979-a ACCESSION NR: AP5025088 The experimental results indicate that: 1) the intensity distribution maximum is shifted in the direction of the remote edges of the mirror; 2) laser pulses from both ends of the resonator are displaced in the direction of mirror misalignment, 3) the intensity distribution in the remote region is uniform; 4) a correspondence exists between patterns for the near and remote regions for any inclination of mir- ror3; 5) a variation in the orientation of the longitudinal crystal axis within the resonator by an angle up to 30' does not significantly affect either the structure of the remote and near regions or the beam directionality; only a relatively small jump in the rise of pumping energy due to reflection losses at the crystal ends wasl observed; and 6) the amplitude and regularity of laser spikes in the case of inclined mirrors are greater than-in the case of parallel mirrors, provided pumping above threshold id identical in 'each case. The foregoing would seem to indicate that ,generation in a misaligned plane resonator is, in a certain sense, more oHered and iits.mode structure during the entire pulse better preserved than in the case under investigation. Orig. art.his! 3 figures. tyr. I ASSOCIATION: none SUBMITTED! 05Jan65 ENCL: 00 SUB CODE: M; OTHER: 009 RESS, 'No REF SOVI 005- ATD.P 65 1 k i ' 1: 1 1110 32669 s/196/61/000/012/027/029 E194/E155 AUTHORS; Gularyan, K.K., and Kravchenko V L. TITLE: Making parts of complicated outline by electric-spark machining with programme control PERIODICALi Referativnyy zhurnal, Elektrotekhnika i energetika, no.12, 1961, 41, abstract 12K 238. (Tr. Tsentr. n.-i. labor. elektr. obrabotki materialov. AN SSSR, no.2, 1960, 179-195) TEXT: The NII of the Goskomitet Soveta Ministrov po radioelektronike (State Committee of the Council of Ministers on Radioelectronics) has developed a method for electric-spark machining of parts of complicated outline in which the electrode consists of a thin wire 0.02-0.3 mm in diameter. Slots have been made of from 0.025 mm width and up to 70 mm deep and of lengths to suit the shape of the part. Consideration is given to the maintenance of accuracy and surface finish in equipment with programme control. The article gives a description, a schematic circuit diagram, block circuit diagram and external appearance of Card 1/2 32609 Making parts of complicated outline ... S/196/61/000/012/027/029 E194/E155 equipment type ~Ky n-2 (EKUP-2). Performance data are as followsi maximum power demand 0.4 kVA, smooth current control from 0 to 1 A. Capacitance switched in steps of 0.01 microfarads over the range o.01 - 0.42 microfarads. The tool electrode is a wire of 0.02-0.1 mm diameter; the output is 2 - 10 =3/min; the surface finish is standard grade 6 - grade 10; the maximum longitudinal travel is 50 mm; the maximum size of part machined is 150 x 50 x 50 mm; the volume of the container of working fluid 2 litres; the maximum weight of part machined 0.5 kg; and overall dimensions of the equipment 840 x 720 x 1100 mm. Information is also given about the use of special electrodes with slots in two mutually perpendicular directions for making precision all-metal grids of copper, nickel, vanadium, molybdenum and other metals with width of metal parts from 0.02 mm upwards. [Abstractor's notei Complete translation.] Card 2/2 ACCESSION I-TQ~ AT4012873 8/3060/63/000/000/0152/0160 Kravchenko, - V. L. AUTHOR. TITLE: A thyratron pulse generator for precision electric spark machining SOURCE: AN SSSR. Teentre no -is labs elektr, obrabodd metallov. Elaktroiskrovaya obrabotka. metallov. Moscow, 1963, 152-160 TOPIC TAGS: electric spark machining, thyratron pulse generator, hydrogen thyratron, electrical metal finishing, thyratron, pulse generator, copper machining, VK-11 alloy roachining, tracing ABSTRACT: The design criteria and test results of a novel, high-power and high- frequency generator to be used as the power source in an electric spark discharge machine are presented. The generator uses a high-power hydrogen thyratron as the pulse switch- ing device and tests on the mock-up model show that it is capable of increasing the rate of metal removal from the machined part about 30 times over the presently used RC-type generator. A simplified schematic diagram of the pulse generator is shown in Figure 1 of the Enclogure. A full-wave rectifter st9ps the 220-volt AC line voltage up to 2100 volts and rectifies it to charge the capacitor in parallel with the thyratron through an isolating choke arrangement. 7he thyratron is triggered by inserting a positive voltage PAU* on its Card 1/5 4. ACCESSION NR: AT4012873 grid from a specially designed trigger pulse generator whose adjustments allow the Mow- Ing variations in the trigger pulse characteristics: amplitude 200-700 volts, repetition frequency 19-330 kc, pulse width 1-5 sed. When the thyratron fires, the charged capacitor is short-circuited and delivers a current pulse through a step-dowa transformer to the machining electrode and spark gap which serves as the nonlinear load. The step-down out- put transformer Increases the current and decreues the voltage in the output pulse. The thyratron usuaUy operates in either the resonant driving mode, so that the output pulse frequency f is given by X LT )~ where L Is the total circuit inductance and C is the capacitance of the charging capacitor, or in the linear driving mode, when (2) 17 ff. C.,d 2/6 77-1 ACCESSION NR: AT4012873 and the charging voltage on the capacitor changes almost linearly with time. The resonant driving mode does not permit variations in pulse repetition frequency without changing the fadtors L and C. no limitiAg factors in the operation of the thyratron are the maximum power factor and the average durrent. When these quantities are kept constant, the re- petition frequency can be extended several orders of magnitude above the Umits, recom- mended by the manufacturers. A prf of 150 ko was achieved with thyratrons of the type TGII-700/25 and TGII-260/12 with the average current of I ampere, against a recom-- 11 mended prf of 500 cps, and TG -130/10 was safely operated at 330 kc. Using ordinary water as the lubricant, the metal removal rates achieved with the thyratron generator were 26-28 mm3/m1n. with a machined surface quality V 6- V 7 for ordinary tracing operation on copper and 12-13 mm3/min. at V 6- V 8 for VK-11 hard alloy and a machined area of 300-400 mm2. The corresponding copper electrode erosion was 16-20% and 26-50%. respectively. Tho rates for a surface-forming operation by a continuously moving ttmgsten wire electrode (0. 2 mm diameter) were'25 mz/min. at V 6- v 7 for copper and llmm2/min. at V 7- 78 for hard alloy, for'a total machined thickness of 20 mm. In both cases the lubricant was water, the prf was 50 kc, and the pulse width was I psee. A comparison of this performance with a standard RC-type generator shows that the metal removal rate for tracing operatio4s increased by 26-30 times and for sur- -6 times. In addition, the face f0 operations by continuous wire electrode by 4 rming Card 3/6 ACCESSION NR: AT4012873 machined surfaces are free of the usual carbon deposits, which eliminates the previously needed chemical cleaning operation. Orig. art. has: 7 figures, 1 table and 9 formulas. ASSOCIATION: Tsentr.. n. -L. lab. elektr. obrabodd metallov, AN SSSR (Central "AScientific Research IAboratory for Electriad Metal Finishing AN SSSR) SUBMITTED; 00 DATE ACQ: 13Feb" ENCL. 01 SUB CODE-.'MM,'EF. NO REP SOV.. 010 OTHER: 000 4/5 ACCESS10,14 KRI AT4012873 Fig. 1 - sbnplMod Schematic cliagram Of the PWse geAerator. Card 6/6 AccEssioN NR: AphoM43 S/(XL17/64/000/002/0020/0020 AUTHOR% Kravchenko, V. Lo TITLLt Puldo 1;onorabor for procision electric spark treatment SOURCE: Mashinoistroitel's no, 2. 3.964#.20 TOPIC TAGSt pulse generator, electric spark.. capacitor, high voltage source,, choke coil,, primary winding# tbyratron ABSTRACT: A pulse generator is described that supplies 50-300-volt pulses to a precision electric spark apperatud for oizo treatment of current conducting materials.' The capacitor CH (see Fig. I on the F=losure)ia charged by a constant current high-voltage source through a choke coil CC and primary winding of-the pulse transformer to the source-potential. The capacLtor discharges through the thyratron L and through the secondary winding of the transformers creating a low- voltage high-current, pulse. The freWwwy supplied per second varies between 16 000 and 80 000/sec,, with 1.5 to 8,~4 see pulse duration and an electrode supply I potential from 50-300 volteo Orig. airt, bast 3 figures. ASSOCI&ION: none L 41185-65 ACCESSION NR: --AF5O037Z9--- Pf;4-.'--.- JD. --"i/QZ86/6.5/000/OQL/0075/0075. AUTHOR: Semin, Go G. Kravchank~, V, L, TITLE: Hethod of electroerosion machining deep precision holes, Class 49, No. 167424 SOURCE: Byulle.ten' Lzobr eteniy i tovarnykh znakov, no. 1, 1965, 75 TOPIC Tj%CS:, electroarosion M.Achininge electric discharge machining, electric discharge.hole drillin.g..precision drilling_ ABSTRACT: This Author Certi f i.ca te, -introduces amethod for electra- erosion drilling deep precision holes in current-conducting materials with a tool-electrode.which oscillates perpendicularly to the direc- tion of the basic motion* In.orderto prevent the breakdown of the machined ar4jale or tool-electrode, the osci-Ilation is controlled by an autq-Mq.-t~-CNyqtem which maintains A.predetermined electrode~gap. Orig. art. has: fLgU.re,.,..'--- (AZI~ ASSOCIATION: none Cord 112! .311q-e 4~s KRAVCHENKO, V.I..; K11'"I'MIN, V.A, Technical and economic indices of the constniction of mooring structures at the Leninerad Commercial Seaport. Tranap. strc:L. 14 no.7!35-36 J1 164- (MIRA 18-1) 1. rlavnyv inzP. Sevzapnorgidrostrova (fcr Kravchenkc). 2. Nachallnik Nauchric-Issledovatel'skoY stants1i NO.3 Corg trans s trcya (for Kuzlmln). A V C `C rV i, BALOTSAV, Takov Hikoloyevich; BURA, Galinn Georgiyevna; DUBINKINA, Reiss Pavlovna; TZPATKO, Turiy Mikhaylovich; ISHCHENKO, Dmitriy Ivnno- vich: MZLINIK, Turiy Petrovich; STRYGIN, Alaknoy Illich. Prinirwili uchastiye., KOZHARA, 'V.L.;_ MRAVCHENKO, V.M.; TAKHTUTN, G.V.; SHCM- BAKOVA, K.F.. RODIONOV, S..P,-,'dtv.red.; ZAVIRTUOINA, V.N., red. izd-va: MIMOVA, M.I., tekhn.red. (Genesis of irou ores in the Krivoy Rog Basin] Genezis zheleznykh rud Krivorozhakogo basseina. Xiev, Izd-vo Akad.nauk USSR, 1959. 306 p. (MIRA 13:2) 1. Chlen-korrespondent AN USSR (for Rodionov). (Krivoy Rog Basin--Iron ores) __ MmElIKO, V. M. Varietiee of high-grade martite ores in the northern part of the Saksagan band in the Krivoy Rog. Sov-geol- 3 no-5-14-31 My 160. (MIBA 13:7) 1. Tuzhno-Takutskaya komplekenaya ekspeditoiya. (Krivoy Rog Basin--martite) KMVCHMD,_.Y. jj!~,,_!~gronom - Without the use of manual labor. Mekh. sill. hoBp. 14 no.21 9-10 F 163. (MIRA 16:4) 1. Kolkhoz im. Ianina, Maloviskovskogo rayons. Kirovogradskoy oblasti. Ukraine-Corn(Maize)) raine-Farm mechanization) M - - KRAVCHENKO.-V.M., Two gonetic types of the dense quartz-martita ores of the Saksagan' synallne of the Krivoy Rog Basin. Dop. AN URSH no.2:245-248 164. (MIRA 17:5) 1. Dnepropetrovskaya ekspeditsiya Ukrtinskogo nauchno-issledovatells- kogo gornorudnogo instituta. Prodstnvleno akndemikom All UkrSSR N.P, Samenanko [Semenanko, M.P.). MAUKIYAN, I.G.; AK114ENKO, N.M.; BELEVTSEVO U.N.; GEf',SHGYG, Yu.G.; GRECHISUNIKOV, N.P.; KALYAYEV., G.l.; KfuVICHE11KO V.t4 - KULISHOV M.P.; MAKSIMOVICH, V.11.; MELINIKO Piq,hF, ;i.'A.; SKURIDIN, S.A.; STIUGIV, A.I.; FEDORCHENKO, V.;.*;'FOf,ENXO') VOYU* floviowe and bibliography. Gool. rud. mustorozh. "? zio.3:113- 117 My-Je 165. (MIRA 18:7) KP.AVCHFIIKO, V.M., inzh. Manufacturing weldod housinRa for grinding machines. Svar.lrc,'-zv. no.11, 39 N 164. (MIRA 1-831) 1. Xhnrlkovskiy stankontroitelInyy zavod. t V W 0104? 'WIT of 1 "77 00 sea of **A 000 gov 004 law- 4 Istottim g' clKnka flisp(l. Statim of Low Tetnim.. K'aackuy), uteldlutd d414 an tvvievve4l. With ti-paramill "40 .-Itts. am fuund wbea the diffutnuv fit ittiol. Irnall) 1% It- dum 6%; eutectic system Wball It 14 vastrr OLASI 15"j, A 0. Alter, a - sc~. SCUU,40"CAL W90100111 CLAUVICATIONO U 9 AV 00 MI; F 41 01* 0 a as 0 a So** as OL W 0-0 .0 0 60 NO* see WOO 1190 too* .0 0 YMA Art S 10-4 a 0 a is a V 10. 0 0 0 Ahl 4p 0 w w V w a IF w w w V 9 0 w a w a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 411 0 a a 9 11 11S.1,11 ~A 2 t ill"Ifir I fax-1190. PA LU *04 4 T~ . 011 -- I--- I cx, of i so 41 w **A "s The bum"* twooffie-saW -ot 04 1 V. M. ku. Phyr. ChM. 6 date us The L Pa. .1 the OV41crilt 11twor hil l (11) l If .00 la me uessr, swis . fo . ( V 4*0 ) rAp tb&k-nq (Wi. and bengenc-lulitcDe-DAIVIstimicut (I 11 (AD,$ A" to we given. The culectic 1 51 f 3 m *40411 - or -#A1,0 . a ' * J Itx IV wilh a Imllfrll~ (79A:211.2). wW -0 .d Ul - W fm - t2 see, the fall* $/V f f O l w t 0. or . u o l uetw tal ; t 71.11. -44' fur 0/4, -33' 1- 8/8. -43* Gw 4M; --10' 70 ' a** for 1/0. A Ott" jar 3/7; -00* (Lw 2/S. &M . 101 1) 0 A7 11 ts In IV for the rumsm mi i , . . . c ex s emulkMent ru TOM -lino. Rathmaim wee, -ON 5 oes if A wee 'III lie 0 k "TALLUOGOCAL UT98ATWo CLAMoKavow wee 181440 -it off 444 aw 0 0 0 0 L- W-, Osseo Hum IL A 00 00 Go -a- -A L- U--Z;vam;;d-~0. J. 4 (U 5. Well C.A. Rftru of t = 7 1 0" 31P.- data all on ftAM J4 h am am dm ttwp. +&D -& *0 Cd the ow . U W O.t : A INIMY OY ome"m for be 0 a IOWA toI TOW* I -o's w--4 kW n ewm 7 ; : 00 -Xy -00.9 .1:2.3:70.4 *0 Spowift of 00M kawk &* lod -4 1 " P . H A Is 0 it a 12 1 -00 -00 400 too coo "so two to 0 9-1- dMI) to Coat mo 2 T f1w. go: 90010690009006*900*0 9 0 , 0. 0 0 is 0 0 0 0 0 0 qO*OOOO:::IOOqO *00*0060909900 0 0 9 90 * 0 0 to 1111-141-1111 * 0 1 0 oil is TV111111mli W Fig topliv n,*m n 16 a 29!v 11 U U m 4 b 0 a W a ti of A F, 9 L -1 1 A--".. L it k 1i R 1 1 4 1 .-I-A -1 .1 fA -114 10-ttfa 1, v A t a A i a -a 1- A W ...' 4.r '~N'jpj - -- _ ..tl 11hiffmiadynamilke takdatles at the eaftctk joists is 00 MU" "d W !M.ts V. M Krarchinko. J PAYS, CWM. R 132r3D(IWM. !~Wxptl. 00 (Un R.. I 06 dem on the temp.~C~. rVIGOOM ftw the bitkuy ity"ems benane-mplithalme (1). bruent-Inhwom (11). naphtha. 00 R; Irme-tolocia (111). 00 arlem (V). tokwake-aks-ityle2me (VD. bramem-4olmne. mphthmArm "). beftww4ohm-mme-krykw (M) art A"* 1* 4 Wilt" 0 It $Rd A 441111" 11M It"WO. W IMMO'K. 10 Ill. tATAFY #w the trapd. klata agme well with vskum of The enter- at* ralvd. by t1w rmtbod of Schrder arA ItUd, Imm tht equation Y. + It A 0 bel the = Yoh," of@ and P- qrt mp.: 1, 1,41. It. 14-; ff. 2AVJ, MI; HI. 1.911A. 111.7.0101. W, I)Jt=. 2.7.53; V. 1.743. AAM; Vt. 1.071. 41,& Ibir terimiry arkite"to mdam 14if *4"e. Ifte"I with thv equation W + dt, + F44 - I with Itok vvilues f.. a, b, r and d'rkrup. VII 0 1*07, 1.491, 2 Vill 0. 1*4 1.746, 6.(W7, 1.401; 111, 0". 0.0241, IWI. to a few cvmo dim"minrW cKvur. tmt they twvvf ankmat ,, mme t ban I I % to %ximpa. &M 3.7 'a M- V' a# IhO Outs"k Obtum- Cf. C. A - 34. 65131. It. luthma=0 Lx Elk- LAIvv- F Juip Ollsit" At to N&Twt E kit --4il 1-1 -4 0 W-i'--i- w A, it to it Cf All It a 4 0 a if be KID A I at 0 A , 1-041 19 a x I 0 04 0 0 A A I a 0 k V Al V 41 (4[ Al A 0 J GeV 4 1,"*" fmo empt""d toiM -Ovals Rzftetwe go Emit if V M. Kmvchenku. OAS byrstfWmAm- Witing --fing fly &k waPts, with an APP- u ith UFIVuj C4 SQ$ " by 4 emnle coraiderstim is fir"I 1 diroffibed. SOMW Ill cantien-I r in I h, k j on eo t aridus from the dtv cr.'j, C.11, and 11 to The tsill. Of h 900; s. j,jjKjj&r hr&t exc can tW effretra (sw1kilm, CtifinstmIT." i1 C. 11 A of so .410 491 .- ALLU116KAL LITE .6.A-T- C.Z-r - 4t0., I". $A'. U-1, T- u I AT it -0 00 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 010-0 0 0 fii 0 0 41, 0 o 0 0 o1 0941 000 s '90 '00 X*0 u 0 bto No* No* too 9 0 0 A 1, 4 1 9 Of OU1110"Al ON 21bambiovX)p jo n jo X1 st 0 11 MO 1 r . F , a K I .-t 91- 1_1 __2 06 -00 00, Ixtractim of ends beazent ftow compressed coke .00 008 ovengesbywoUg. (Ripefteutsundetsamiplantcon. -00 ditions.) V_M_Wy!+t:nko. Diall. aced. jes. tr. R. S. .1; 008 t Classe sci. ka. I . 1,16.7:L-17-20; d, C. A. 35, 4 INII.- -00 gee The beatene content of coke-oven gas was decreased froin .00 tot 25-30 C. per cu. rn. to a team to I C. per cu. in. by opera I Ion 44 tbt ges beat eschanxrrs wit b a max, rviiiiam-t of I 000 sisn. for I hr. 40 iniu. to 2 lirs. 35 suin. and vi the Nfl, beat cxchatzgen with the same rislatan" for 4 bre, Jo 000 naln. to 6 hr*. The de" of the corupresnion Is propto coo 0*,3 tionxitothecomplefewesolthesepa. I%t heat looms anA roe i the aruts. of the required NFla were calvd. froca the ob- smr4 temps. of the gas. The thickness of the film of Are* residues pptd, In the N11, best exchangm was det-1. Four referenevs. W. R. Itrun L# 00- 600 t ties I L A AM UNGKAL LITISAURE CLOUPICAtION 1500 slato t1w,S)OR W10 0 a.. M 411,31 *16 a- all 6 AV 10 A] to, I I I? OP of Of A X IN P9 a It 14 19 KUP I I a 1W a it V I It 00 9 'a a 3 -1 vi 0 4 4" 4io::::ioooeooooooooooooool;oooooeo9o*oooooooo 00 ooooooooooooooooooooo0400000096600600* j VM top 4 'ITO IMe 11 t VA LIZ -1-i7L- j1A-!eJA-10--"Ul 1*160 ooddl I *all 4041. V. )or it Od a be SWO' POl P. A so( coo ago il. coo woe too 0 Nee use '$$SABI 46442, ad a a IN A~ MIS all -A 0 0 0 00 Os 000 0 96-1 OF, Weir; 'at 4~4~4 A L-1.4 go A go st, o 13 i. li g: I , 0 Of J 00 Tholdifid7oodsook c9coolaum for am WSM WYVAM V. M. Krarchenho. Asia Pkimo. 21:t1dMA751"Som. jWS6(ItfM'--MW.%qWd iqud. wam caW. as the basla of puWW" date lot the binry sysiffIlSo Mall the ftwAke an abowu in a %fistormin. ct"ll. parim of *WL,. with obmvrd valwo for the bias" Sysit"m amoi " tht bitter a The coW. twwy walecdc Is at t'61.7osand 29.7. 62.x, H.C.P.A. ------ M!' -IL.AlK 109 CLAIWKAI" flov MAO *my 4e1 AV' 10 1 *000 00*0*0000900006 let:ooooeoeooooooeeeeooobo-1:eieooooooooooooooe*o Usti A Sol to -l*Ft-Cv &I-, a a I w a 0 a 4 3 7-7-1 :*040006006000000; so GO Go & 60 00 so 00 00 to be A a A I **A EL "#Wt Sao "O"ttsis OWN TbomrsedisaWs O'd-*'Wdke 41 "MWIA ff ITNOIII0 rbomme, v ) Is f, R j 00 . . , y used lari i 002 . lab. d avuw t*w 0 0 a am WA dde. d dw wledk poifts is ta- c =G = = b= . is tbil ir = 000 a apOibris an dwwu. 41~ := T$6 ics teeb. sykm aM mair be umd f- .00 ands".afthe6tier. TbtldknvM#,-IrslicPQibt3wv utoetk) f lb d b f u . t c owe o r Ompn. o =twxp~ - -61 &-MtAH 1 32 M 66% CJ4 200 O-Al t . r eV . ; . . * 000 76J 23S%.- *.MegCJL-Etft. #~MNNCGH4. -34.0 ' 7' R a** 096 [%CJL, -62. %. -- "C , -9SJ 6 7. 93J gQjz:E,lFh:ftlM3' Id 84%; 0% 7 J 8i * goo 00. . , - 8 , .5, ; - tM4VCJlr-RtPh, -WA'. 1.2, 96-90/0: 0-MVIC4119-0- 7' 29 7 62 8 6% C COO 00% . . .8. fvwlr*mNwc,l%, -63. . ; , i!f -90.8 , 01;", 1: oal. MeOC4H4rf-MrjC4HN-HfPb, g W-M oo D-M G. M. Kosdapuff goo too woo tL�_.84TALLOUICAL LfffRAIM CLASWICAtM slow 13"I I fIVIN 114PU WWjftV a " 1 stoom NXV Now six as-AA)i !!! 40" aft u5 AIF 0 n 0 4 ; ; In 4 a U AM I t a w 0 a I " to 9 'a a 2 9 so 0 4 0 1 0 0000 o 0 * o 009 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 e, 0 0 0 1 4 0 70 A 0 0606 0606 0 0 .4w 0 0 0 *;)a - 00 04 0000000 9 0 0 * a 0 4 At A- A I L I " a Ix 0 1111 POOCS184S AND FICIP11111-ts "M I and 7= Ada g of this system terry dctd by lhl-=. " be klftl, rFVO The sY,14cm ckwip kAly ~hp fiodbruArv IK"l t%VWO 64 %boo -Wt' - vM w4th th, WIM 2, ytltylk~ 41W CIRA 136 SIWA164 b-'k quaktuivriy dMi .09 q by the 1--i-A-Y Ulawy -Tum. tt.~ cut of the 9"em 0. go )to - 1 1. 000 00 '31 ow 'goo WO 0 to 9 A Ia. I L A IKIAL&V"KAL L(TIO&TWo CLAUIP Kby so 7 s ant %and* --'.W Is a a 4 3 8 1 AV 'D is; v d" 0 It a a It It 000000 , o Eno *0 "s : :100 so 00 00 go *0 : :: : : : : : : : 0 0 041- 00 * 0 * * * 0 A_ I ~ -A 1_41~ a 4 fit.. ~*p 01104:49181 4.0 SPIPOW1411.16 WiJA Octirit M. CUIArly, All III tile nuk a 00 a APPlied CA* ~.50 cossentrist (fit still allernittingly ancit (U.S.Srrk 1(194A)IIji -RuiWan); Alta PArifistrildiss, 12, larly-linewlY, l,.4yj:yvIk conitmi.. with the talue slo. (it 0* 1117-4r,(1047)(la A Wvry of The mellint ringsbut Pattrins.e.s. brusianthrefte 0 temps. I as a fussictioci (A the so, of C GIOnsts in 12 hoinal. and pyre", we termetl -condirmation iliouten." Such .00 0 A i mosiss swcs of normal aliphatic comFitis (C Its* I- C [I,.- isolucts have vii,itly diverKent I wWch thus is shown MA : I V'i C.11.7 C.Il'tUhil: C.111-101i: *016 (~ :: to be . %itnf-4v function uJOr of tile no. of the rings ctwi- C.11- RCOY41c. RCORI. ROAcj 1ACN. TIN11,; ittralicti. The ilifferctwe W twistvit the m Irs. of ricilthNs -0 111, RLO. Its), I cyclolwailln Wriest (cf.il)., " I Wits 44 lug Members of a given aroolatic "lictits" depirtills na the criopilitaffin ketuar (Ilriivs. C.11,.0, disiregat4ful the mode of condensaition of that sales: e.g.. .11 400 lowed members. thirwit slionq Amilaritin in the intreaw In the "thmular" wits naphthallette. VIsensulthyrne, 0 :0 a of 8; with increisting on. of C stotrim, the differetic" of Iblazolcipbensinthrene, ditstoto1cg1pherlanthrene; It is between various wirs decrease, th. covet of functiorustj 6-7 times greater (137-100") in the -lincar" wits naph- XIOUPS. Iucb as 04111 CON11" rece'linx still bectmil-tig -.00 p vely WCI"l'IWY Ill C01131M61491 Will) title siffeCt thalene, anthractnC, Ictractue; in the :: sale, p1wiliallwent, chryvue, pii:ci,e. W - IM-IIU*. rg =ng no. 14 Cit. poups. In all series, the Alope of Thu. tile circular veries, with U - W-30', Islands alwit 00 'Its ' curve dimInWirl-with inerseasing no. d C jitons* &#Ill triall. Itoot both the linear and the antular-lincer wits, lxAh tto become hocituntal; hence. the max. J for ali- .ith al ~ IOD-IW*. As between tile thrtv 4-ring "con. 00 PhAtic cumqpli. sillwars to lie at around 120-30'. Thus, denatilm Isumers" 3.4-benzaphenanthreric. chtyene. 00 iss Aftly"1#1 have I it( aptWost, I Is', and ON Increme Of $ 60 V" -. will be ism over 1'. The etiling And tetractrie, W has GPPfax, the 14HIC value - 1201- NO)". CO I (Ctsiffial to Clolk A %- dibinis 10 or most aliphatic Strics of cotillids. with 0 preiloml- In contrast thereto. the three 6-fills "i xnet Untly mol, t-Tystal [At tict should lie be t ween 130 matt 150". jaJI& e, dibentla,41anthrat"e, and fiensoffil- nApht=:7u (2) For purposlcii j4 el"histion Lif tile variation of I in all belonging to tile "ansulaf-linear" type, Plot, 121~1 I . , Its e the mum I (XV) within the limitis of c%ptl. war; JO 0 aromatic comp'lS., polycyclic comimls. am cl&W&4 using I! asiallied to the rommon presence its all 3 cosupds. 100 the comvpts of ivicyclic contletivAtiou suit coa-lemattion A given no. of Wells" cings condense a( the bessixidjanthracene skeleton. Likewi. the 6 t if 0 es. the smics Fing compils. tribeaz1a,c,41authraccoe anti dibenia. it I, actwiting tq itchutite pAtterns: linearly, as it ltrilpyrcult have v" close s (Z.14 and =16') due to the bt us .phthAlcue, anthracrite, tetracene, etc.; dr-1 common p"sence of the same skeleton. the nit;,Ic at con. P 0 900 1~t A*-ILA 111TALL4106KAs to 0 Q#t 111110 U -0 10 is Is a I a as, 00 000 000,400 0' 0, gs' 4 01 1 1W 0 a Is V 0 00000 - 0 006000*0*oeoooo 140001111001pillillf4*066000900*0 00 000060*0000000 0 0 * 4 0 s r s to itissatiu of the 2 addid - rings Zr 00 4 lu t a ,'he met. PoWble S 01 cotidett taken to 1k at about VWW. OU that 1141h, it is run' 00 cludetf that the highest thainnatable Member (the c-Pd. 09 to thing without decatupit.) in the linear mks is wMe up 11 , h l 7 d i ar- n t e angu . an 4 doitv, in tho r4rutar ovie* of 1 4 0 00 linear 9"Irs of at Most 7-8 tings. N. 11UM 90 00 Certain fundameatal cam" tskilas to ampolar il it P 0 t . artner k nechaulms in olodule 5YONW. H. It. 9 0 * kubber Producers' Rewarch Assm. Labe %k'tJwyn CAr- (14mlock) 66 I&I Ciew S J 41140 03 . - , m. , den City. Iferts, ling.) 85-W (IW7).-In such cases what polar inechanisin too- 00 repts cannot account for expd. results, and where radical 00 00 3nechanisros can explain the reaktious involved, F. PtQpow lied to the is a n Thi 40 s feasoni pp nonpolar Mechanism. g f If halides to oleaus (Markownikew's rule), Id 46 al n. o dmbk-bood shifts, Intra. and intennol. If trander. rise- o* 411 tioni foetween olefin iind Maltic type compt1j., jutroduc- 00 0 11011 CA lAvulent S. and vulcanitation-type reactkWks. Nael od ederkk C F 0 so r .. l 90 00 00 to 00 00 00 00 so 00 00 00 V. FA 2&-T?5 Jan 1947 Crystals - Measurements Melting Points - Datereftation "The'Melting Point-*of Organic Crystals," V. R-av6henko, Experimental Low Temperature Station, Rh kov, 10 pp "Aota Tbyaicoohlmloa~ UM" Vol XXII, No I The malting point is shown to be a definite function of the nuaber of carbon atma per molecule, in the case of 12 homologous series of normal aromatic compounds and two series of polymetbylene compounds. Tables and graphs reveal the functional relationship. 26T7 1. TM a" OYM ad aft ky*uatbmwl bum P-01-PT Zkv,' PFAW. Khoo. (). 4FIkit 'SMSIMM-00401-The symm%% diwu%~l to chick m-p0juill" knot COI. to Colin. Rusectic ysusu* tMt mWorts to the LLws of ideal sulas. can be cakd. in the PC of a causpunitats (a - 2.3.4.5... ) according to the sesterall"d agaituotte x4 + ajo, + + le, - I - 00 whM A 0 r 10-906 rJ14.661'.1's 10'" a 1"314.641"r. 10-w. raiisorsr".' beat .1 jusin.. and Tbetwmat"equathmmcreVandt.thecmms. of the compoews at Use eutectic point: S. the fint a4 tM mooed, sk. of hydrocatbous ap- pros. OWY an laws Cd ==&W may be cLkd. with i sawnicy M I 1 1- ealk-Ang puVoses. specific 04joationts an Ovft tor dw ten lAnary systems. ten thm. - ' system A" fftr-c~t system. The equatbon for the 6"' S in coll.-C'Mc + OoGUft'-%* + OAMSIM2.1"I - I - 0. The tutectic telrap. is IMM'K. TIK eutectil compn. In mole % kl: hexant SIM. brptAne 40.61, octane 3.62. noijanr 2.12, flecane 0. 140. R. W. Dunker Shic XAQ. Kko. Applied c1lacrams of O-Y -A tecoar systems wom de4d. (a t1se 3 hydrocarbons, with the (j he I lowme "WAlts, W" an In NOW a=c"t with theoretical adem d imtor* points It K . equations (am. 21. me. 209M). I decam-octen-es Ims 11 WO& do" Gatectle with too" of my 9 -1 mar the poev compooents to which crysta. of sclid solim. takes place; the cutcetk ties at 19.81 wt.-% 41 ,&W -61.6'. The decane-bepmue system Is S IstaMe alt The rulectle We ez- tevasely cle" to PWOMItle" 11161 wt. %, and -91.3 '. The otimse4irplam system almr-a eutectic typs with the Unalto of soM solos. of either com; 1t being my close to the sutwik pdot, wMch Iks at 13.6 wt. % onsets and -93.0$. The tenmy system hiss a triple tutectic at 2.81 wt. % demo. 13.35 wt. % octaw, w0 84.99 wt. % bep. tsus, and -93.3'. G. &I. x0solspod USM/Cheulstr7 - Systimis-, Binary Jul 49 Euteotics *BizaiY Systems Vhich Contain Benzene, Toluene Ith.71banzene, Naphthalene and Ortho-and Ava. 4lene," V. X. Zravchanlw, qj pp 'Zbur Prik ZhW Vol YYTT,.No 7 Results of experiwnte vith nine such binary""' systems abov them. all to be autectic, and reve&U only a =all margin of error In the exparimerntal. results as ccKpared with formular caloulations of ideal systme. ftluene-ethylbenzena., vith the lovest f=IbIlity, undw.-narmal freezing caiditions 66A9T13 tem/Chemistry Systems Binary Jul 49. (Cont45 Is vitrified, particularly close to Its eutectic Point- Silb-itted 17 Aug 48- 66P&9TI3 TJSSR/Chemistry Fuels J= 50 "Prognosis and Thermodynamic Calculation of tba Seven-COMPOnent System: Benzene-Toluene-Etb;yl- benzene-Orthoxylene-Metaxylene-Paraxylene-Naptba- lene," V. M. Kravchenko, K-ha v Inst of Agr Mechanization "Ukrainakiy Khimicheskiy Zhurnal" vol XV1, iro 1, pp 10-42 The phys- properties of hydrocarbons, i.e., my and latent beat of melting, int pressure and dipole moment, are inadequate for the explanation of the types of phase diagrams obtained experimntally. The prediction of uninvestigated systems by these properties is even more difficult. Therefore, the authors undertook, to study the shape ant dimensions of almost flat mols -- the ratio of the areas of their cross sections is,6P = 8"/S,. S andNS are calcd for mol. models of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, o-,m-, and p-xylenes and naphthalene; the eutectic types of a number of systems of these components are explained; the eutectic types of the still uninvestigated 3,4,5, 6 and 7 component systems of these hydrocarbons are also predicted. The prognosis of the type of - systems contg benzene, toluene, and naphtba lane with aromatic hydrocarbons other than the above are given. The eutectic junction points of (2) ~11 "o4 21 double, 35 triple, 35 quadruple, 21 f ive- component, 7 six-comPonent, and one 7-co=Poneat system (total of 120 systems) were calcd. Thirty of these systems were experimentally investigated and their caled coordinates of crystu (by ideal soln eqe) coincided remarkably well with exptl data (41 - 2ol,41 - 2%). A similar correspondence probs1il-y also exists in the remaining 90 systems. A type eq for calcg the eutectic point of a 7- component system is furnished. The method pro- posed by the authors for predicting and caleg polycomponent hydrocarbon syttems can be applied also to systems of other org substances. The (3) - 2-12VA significance of the invfstigated systems of aro- matic hydrocarbons (engine fuels and crude cheiLi- cals) lends to the all-rized eqs and compiled table of coordinates of eutectic junction points of 120 systems a great practical importance. ftlawary system W thlopbses, wft bootless, m zVong. olkylboolootto, ey"ouno. p Irldifte, sad dioxame. hi,tvi-bruku J, AipW#M 4ow. aill 11 ( 1"txNaCidnaklim); ZAS#I. I'voklaj KAI.. 13, 2M iv( (IRIAP) - u equWbda o( binary orsteluo a( cyclic COCUP42. wen investigated by thernud analysill. Supple. l1woled with vimal obverratim. hf.p... beatil of fu,,km. ohe ,Illmllr Ma"Wolo, 4W the fatemal pre"um of thik)pbrist am) the ;t"d TRM04low"t at the tieft,11W SysitillA air I&II41141M, (it the 7 oyslons luirrstigated amil. thittlificiov. 4 hAve dw- stit"Is of the futectio tyr , "lous lotills and dilliellut-111 of May In responsible i;thg rulecor typ". M. McMahon V. IL *W A. P. Etemmko Q- ON- CUM - U&ifi- IM- ", 613-- 610).-'-A continosation of pfevime work (cf. A.. 101. 1. 179). In ILO Aydem to a conatiawya """ of musiAl crywisho has it* n", at -111 and 78.1 mol-% of I Stmtufti 'fit I booth Compommsts explaim thom Outstation of VAW "u- tilam. 7h: Mow. '. " . 0 - an ths hqtadm boom, s4m weU with Kawd itad HiCedWs date (d. A.. 190, 1. 110) - Ths sysum I-Ce"t " a at -43-61 Now 203% of C-l"s. The actual cup= shm tin devisda" hvm tho usim aammed to be equal fcgk%WW fmm aLp. WW mat is. tag- the. the j; 9,babll tw-, do syst.. to the beat is iobsOk" -nw autscm in 0. above &Twwm. bo*t'3 imai ass. . of L This is ap 'Utee0c -60. MA I&S tiou of the tive at Gcorpos' aw. Lop i =14- 11 - 14r;jmo r. ZR also sted v to the d 6&W Outectic %be y dot -A. JU OA~u the thas IV-: us Of both -- incideb "ram diff- bY I the idea d *#A slaust co V"as from -,- tzti; Rod S&S Toot.-I$ devis at -26 as Mtect% to 001-i" the imt OCCUIr, "t,.tw dissmee The O"s 6a content jdw omm. to r .itb 'be The *7068.0 CAae. CION - tw~~ it to the 74 -as squidus ot at -57 dimpuffie of C44 Oomrf "tactic ted ,j,bwGfC4"GOr ttw*dw two data- 1" h the Caksawd iPR~- with utr 16~4 wAt t4 ;R" see" -,colna~- I of.m. 4imus" a" S1.5 VM4,,% ZARA. low Donny it)Gfooms tit sit membeted t)tf, mArctArs Kur"rulm, and A. 1'. fjpb,i q I i-S-: V R. 23, OW -j ~ I 1 1 V R Cill". Vir ph's- r,1 lie'll lawily w.frifill 111"J, "1. .4 1. ..... ;:',-IAAnr Sitra 1 ..11.1 dn. "., . 11 It Tom, A 12.11' 4nd :11 1) nint. v;, dubt4tir. Stwe %intil,tity fwf the 'n"11. expl.till. lite e%frum.'r ..Ii,l 'I I,r lVe'lamilic ~V~ IC1,14 give culevtic pfl:%-e 'ItAsrAltil With the 1,111-mi,ij: rilf- Iw 1.,intc rvl I'Ar %,Atlf- Iwn, rile 5', to "": ,do 1:1 It, me; twuleti-Ii- one ~41 11% 1:1 .,.1 .... -A7.0'. V15.5 lowl. -,*,', Iten", ide.tf di.igmmoi diff"ritti,. J!lfrfllAl ptrwirri, anti Steric factmi 4,f lite of a "Ven.temp"Ost swimeme. 0-sylsov, ft'811000. 1'. . tylafto. 04plitbakeo. Uric. Pmodyn'trak ilom"twfts- V- M. K149whe kv. ZA*#,. i is, Kkem. 24. _X016lik' jU 120 *.Map,. 2.3. 4, 5, fl, 7) lbat the ab"Ve Comptle. MY f(Jftn, 30 had bee" perviously studied. The tatedle Omp, and tXXVIIIII. -4 he refflAlfil"I on" are Calvd. for 111VI-I'l. I W .4 I.ItAIr didgmin and In lwtkvW Slat orvuirrtwv .4 A vulft-fir lw*nt an detd. by The m.11, 1', the beat of Immm% Q, (far dIj%* uxxwutl the lattrits ptessure. and the size isrut shalpe of the mob. concerned, (2) The phase djagmn #4 an a. rumooment "c"m is 14 the tutectic type if that is itim, thr can ft* all I (a- I)-omn1wment syvtttii% dritmi frivin the a-matpatirnt 4yotem. It can be jimlk-tvj tw the N'41 Vvlrfti* allmlitj will h4vt vulft'lle I"'Ints I'm -owls IV, (stria, ft is smuffivil 41141 all n"41I.X-tto IwIl.%r Stuletwout tally during cirviaa. but thAt ka'aill's 140 14 A I Tbeli the equation ti IN soly. isobar mAy he u-.1; At 1. V10/7) - (Ilrll -ith X ~ F"Ok tfacfkmt (it Wolute, por an I t X. 4- Xt t- + X. - j o -17' 'r 01101 1,1! K V, Y_.j 4 by $if.. 4 .4" St. 111flAlaml P* it. eviecticpoint. kesultaid leng1hycak-tis, Ate givrii f,w IN 120 systenn; studied, e.g. for the 7-emponeat syztern. I' -119-1101% X In mok % - 0,0216 lntphth2lent). IP,-svirml. 3.3tS (hentene), IM fimm I-. Ivirm). '111.111 (elhirlbr""Ite), M.1d) (folwor) Ow vVriloplial 11"ItIrl. 14 I..IvI'nWs air n-4 I.* 11IM411.111's 01. phaw ILw&um .4 flim almolummil my,twnm wf*rts a I. W&W tbAn 4. KRUIAMMO, V. M. Chemical Abet? Vol, 48 -No- 4 Fob. 25, 1954 General and Physical Chemistry plUse of the Idtz' Sol bill L for determinbaL xMtIY dissociated compoun 0, Krnvm icnko~"' Okiddv: - -VTOr -ere det AWL NaNk S.S.S.. 76, 9,S I y. , % 5 rv) tor triphen Imethnne 02:.5 with benzene (m. I - w.. thiophene t.. - 38.5~7-me%lty ?ne (in. -44.15% and _', xylene (m. -47.A*) over the entire concn. railge and wore.- 'compared with the. ideal suly. curve for the fit pir'!1nn of the I . of triphenyltncthine by solutes for-ming ideal sotru~' i~e system with tm-xylene Is very nearly ideal, (he 441rve belug just bclo%- the ideal curve from pure triphenylinethant to the eutrctic at approx. 176 (all cancrts. in ruole % of trl- pheny1methane), ra. approx. -50*. There is thus no evidence of con,pd. formation In thiq system. The curve for the systern with mesityli-ne 1.4 also just below the ldcal curve from 100 to C10%. Froin 60 to 40% the rurve 14, slightly S-shaved, and over the rest of the conen. range it I$, just above the ide-al curve down to the eutectic at approx 1% m. -46'. This suggests that a 1: 1 COMPd. is fanueA In this system whicit is almost completely dissocd. nod which; his a transition point at 80'. The system %ith thlophelle deviates more sharply from the Ideal from 100 to 65%, "0 63*, where the curve has a sharp break to a slight nuut.: (almost horizonltal)%at 55% and the curve Then goes down to the eutectic (m. -39*) well above the Ideal curve. Thh benzene system is similar initially, has a break at 05(k. m. MI the curve thea rising to a wel,.defined but rather broad max. of 77' for the 1: 1 cotupd.. and thrn droM to the, eutectic. m. 4% In the Int(er two systtms the e0 I I are moreelearly defined and sornewhat leis bight d6lq. Ail 1- ex-j 9"n KRAVCHENYO; V. 1'. Metallurgical Abstracts July 1954 Properties of Alloys Ideal Type of [Eluffibrium) Diagram of P Two-Coluponint 6) Simple Continuoui Solid Solution. V. MPINra,, h'-f,b, j 11VIYAL-11d. Nallk7m., 77.7r)"A. 79. (11. Im 44c).-illi Itimian). K. voinjim-4 tho exp-rimi-jit,illy oblaitwd 1-tikii. librimil diagralli-t willi Ille liql5i'lu, I-urvviv 11"111,11(it hy 11,13 I)f Slimier," equatim I III x - (,111 jT A -T'~; R (Of- ft. Zh'Ir.' I h!)4), 12, 272) fill- 9 binar.i. s.Y'11"lli (If Or--' klli" froill viltectiv. thn'ligh if, mlid ~'In. wilil the liqui-lui athimita -mir,tiJit hiw.mi,l ii:tdiva 1writot.tal fim-hitivul,il iylqi (if tivwid dw iillll)l,.4L Colitilmolli solill (Xi it It mt likill. "r Ilk I '~.) :linvilol hility ilk the (Ili[[ statt., aittl solid 11a% ill'-' it milk. It"t k"ll. Iletletl With I-imlImIlimil filvillm imi, Ir, hill 1`1111 U.itv ty1w% of ideal -I di:v_,rim of ....... witinivill Lotitiminiii .4,)Ii,t -In. ii a ,,i raigin lim, l-:,t;,,g th, t~v-, m.p. Ali ideal miktitittimial -hd i i;i Imawn-ti I i.i ery'm. I.( '13114ex forniml 1-Y ',ill, r--itt af,m.;. wn,, III- in.A. whii-ii cryit Olim-4 III- mell.-i at wim. t,wp. I ),jiv a f,.%% or:,alkl". 111;~Illlliv' tit 11mrvillik. 4 tit III.- IA.- 11 1 K. a1m) vion,idi-ri I It., r, hl imt Iwli,,-vii Ow thermodYnainiv Imtvim d mid Ivlllp~ .1, Wl I'll I, USSR/Chemistry - Nitro Compounds 21 Oct 51 "Limiting (Ideal) Type Diagrams of the Crystalliza- tion of Systems Forming Chemical Compounds," V. M. Krav,-henko, Donets Industrial Inst imeni N. S. Khmshvhe-.r "Dok Ak Nauk SSSR, " Vol No 6, pp, 885-W8 ~1elting point-compn diagrams were constructed for systems of naphthalene and each of the following compds: p-chlornitrobenzene, m-dimitrobenzene, 2,4-diaitrotoluene, 2,4,6-trinitrochlorbenzene, 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, and 2,4,6-trinitrocresol. A diagram was also plotted for aniline and allyl 217T6 lootblocyanate with the crystn, tenp and the coeft of viscosity along the ordinate and the comyn. as the abscissa. 91T26 Liquid-tooilid equilibria In syslomm of de"Ityclent with twit. and thtlimi-fing compountle V. W KrAs"ll'ok JIN-ft. 110 . lumA Pokkoly Ak.#J, Sirmll :1 (19:11).-NIthing didiffAIIIJI 141Pf? drift. 14W ..I decacyclene, Coatin, (1) (m. W') with naphlbultur Ill j, Phenanthrue (III). authracene (IV). and A. Ailmi-Ar iVl -" the to P. range frmn MO to 3lt7*; they pre!,ented file r'lln"I'An fr3tUrT (4 nOna$WX". In the Ill,"I StAlr, file ,vorin 1-11 haia a pulectir PAint Of 79.0", if I InAr "a, 1: the 1"fema, Vill. of I-IV. at '14*, 13 7; IN, At 24W. 10.1 nuAr c',1. 1. W,Wifiel with the brat, All fuiion. wrrr calv& froot file irts.l. 1'. of lWonninc crv.tti. ill diffrient M.It limicli"11% I vf 1, atilt Ih, flip rqtmfl~m of U 11. Shmier , N,P. 1:% .4 IX1M. In T - (1111 1') - (111-1 ~j R. h- I' - .11,~ All fellil, -t I 16.1ml vahl_ .4 t, m'. m Ill, 0 1; in IV, it S. ill V. Ill .5 IrA Im-If VIA,, c-, ,it he'll .4 lu~son All 1, 0.5 Ill 11 k-I imolp, I Iw will,11, ~W-l v S 's equAlmn is cotsfirmed by file lstipm,tv -4 Ih, 14M, I'lir 9.1-1611101101101' 1 / r. in fit, IV. Anil V. N'~ I 1-ft IRAVCHINKO, V.M*; PASTUXHOTA, I.S.; KIPBUROT, A.I., diyan" chlen. Indol in binary systems binuclaar compounds. Dop.AN URSR no.3:193-200 '52. (XLRA 6:9) 1. Akademlya wkuk Ukrayinalkoyl RSR (for Kiprianov). 2. Donetslkyy industrialt- nyy Instytut in. X.S.1hrushchova (for Kravchenko and P"tukhova). Ondol) Vullolop of banza '31 prolleftits of blalary systmi of 2,7-d(xuctI;yWaph- it, in wcre Stuilic-d. The Wmtry &y-iitm Nvith 2-methy1napInthalmr 0107'-j tilt formvLtjoa of sotid Which Is, explaineti 01% Om lvasii of the sitifflarity of tilt form 4tud dimcmi(m% of -~hc two Irlak, The other birtary sains. form eutmtic mMs. The ,data for the scly, of I In tilt various aromalic hydrmarLu)r.% were mied to catc. the heat of fu0in. which was 1,)tiivl N &N0 11 0v far I'ClIch f" n E'Ifibill-tr of the Iconjenstd ph2*63 io sysipml of tri, .:q methAAO wIth the hoinologs v w"I cyclobezeno), tljtt~il(. Kho Zh;sr, I.;, tUiry U~ Jell-'s were studIM. lik'11t,, with toIncoc, 1`11c,11" Fseudactimen.. mj~sitylenc, thirritc, cyclabcxaur. aill) lumle. 'I'he Prtsclict of tim comptexts 1.1 lfcp~,.(741(j witm, latur 41,mw, ttu-n'gly at As'. Ilie untainbsit iryitel"t cire of the outectic- type. -Deviationt from pro ettin of hiral. sibis, Nvot. Poi. for the AmIuaw"Polymeirlylelle vitrint (md neg. 1,,r tilt aromatic systtins. Thri difftrence. R at- tt,butcd to diffftic-nm ill 111C ptopertles of tilt! COWI)IAICTIts. V, Chemical Lb Vol. 48 Apr. 109 1954 General and Physical Chemistry 0 condonsea-P-9--i tb-OJUKLAW~G( trlk bettyinifthane with lbd-hataocy lophent And-homo.: o a of pyridlao. V--Nf-- 'ra hen 0. UA~aix. Xhim. Z Mr. 15, 195"tar Rus31n),--Tr C.A. 46, 5"U. 7860i, 47, 97 2 9947b.-The condtased-phase equilibria were studied f tLe systems PhX11-thlophtne (1). PhaCH- dint (11 . P14CH-2-picoline (111), PhiCH-3-picoline 03, and P 4C.11-2.4-luddinp (V). The thermal-artalpls technique wua uwd. The aooling rate for cryVn. was O-Z-0.3'permin. For I a 1:1 mol. complex wasobomPA .whkhwaisprcclablydiss4xcl.'atbOo. The eutectic of this' cmtf. at -39' contained 98.8 mot. 1, thlophtne Nol V 'compex was observed for It. A cutect(c was b;;~ at -46* c e 71-2- mot, 7v rb;Cf(- SYSIMS M, ly, Slid V art pro;lbl~ of the eutectic type, although no tutectle was obscrvtd, owing to glass fcmation rathtr than crysta. The deviation of the expd. data from the Ideal caled. sol curves it In U (of the order of 6%) And least for ;,. Th. Ut"..ff"ution used to calc. tht ideal curves lh cal./mol. I wtre PbjClI 5150 and pyridine 1975. The equation used. W83 that of Sliredcr (Gornyi Zhur. 12. 272(1800)) In X -: Itt/7") - (IlTa)]IR, where Th the abs. m.p. and T, the, ADS. cmtn. ternD. X Is the say. J-ph B. I i R *fib beniihi' hoirijol-, W Pone(O. Ukrairl. KAT. ZIOUP% IN. 4W- WANSGUT~--Minary sy~tenis of Phenarillirtne with various homolog!j of Cglij were e-vanid, thermally, with the following results: Phenantlitene-Cillo' forms a eutectIc with 11.7 mat. 5'0 plietimithrette. Up. -1.6'. both components rystallize train the tocit with O-r111-T- little supercooling. Phenanthrent-EtPh f 5 a 11tRiCe at 99,15% (mat.) UtPh, with min. at -04.-,*; EtPh super- cools very much in this system. Phenan thrryie -toluene Ohemical Abst- Sly" aeutectic at 99.46 mot.% toluene. Lp. -95.4'; toluene supercools seriously In this - t in. I'lienantim-ni-o- Vol- 48 No. 9 itylene form IL eutectic at 05 M01.11F.'e-Ile tic with f.p. -218'; may log 1954 xyltne supercools coasiderably In thi-, case. Phenan- cal C emistry thr-crie-m-itylene gives a eutectic at 97 in I c,7, M-itylene', General and Phyji Up. -50*. Phenanthrene-1,2,4-tritnethy.01. Detivnie gtvei a. eutectic at 3.8 mot. % plienanthrene, f.p. -45.7% with much supercooling of the latter component. 11henanthmne- I'3 A-trimtthylben tent gives a eutr0c at 07-2 mol. % me3ltyltne' f.P. -40.50, with Much Supercooling of mc-'itv- i lene. Phenanthrene and 1.2,4,5-tetramethylbenzene give a eutectle at 42.0 mot '% Phel'13111hrene, f.p. .5.1', with little supercooling. The lutectic form of the syirl"I corre. sponds to the theoretically ettlitcted one in couni'le"tio's "lot. d1menilons anti itcouletry of the component!i. G. M. K0,013pas- ;'r-u.A Chemical Abst. Vol- 48 No. 9 MV 109 1954 General and Physical Chemistry 0440 =aaftl 01 phenanthrene with lpdene ant; homo. p7clogis of p!:eAan., 'fInfl. In".. DrAets). -,krdix.' Kkim. Zkor. 19, The binary systems of pSenanthrvne an(i aromat'ic Aub.- stances am summarized Into 3 clasw3: tile solid saln. form occurs rarely, MIDI. comptlq. form with tritiltro hydro. carbons, whervas the eutectic form predominates. On the basil at available data for 6ther substances it is cipected that eutectic systems will farm with phenanthrtnc on the one hand and quinollne. isoquinoline, Indole, and call. marone. as well as with the majority of honiologs of bicyclic substances. Phenanthrene-Indene forms a eutectic at 139.1 mot % Indenct f.p. -12.3'. PPenanthrene-CIIIII forms a eiitectle at 87.3 mol. % Ciol-lj. LID. 51". Phenan- thrent-I-MeCisHy forms a eutectic at 4 mol. % phenan- threne, LID. -32.5". Phenanthrene-2-MeClelft farm% a eutectic at 10.4 Mal. % phenanthrene, LID. 31 ", but the low, area is rather diffuse, owing to formation of a Boll = %t the MeCIIIH, 31de of tile diagram. Phtnanthrent: 2,741CICIS114 forms a eutectic at .5.1 Mal. % ph=hrcn, LID. 58'. Pure phennthrene, tn. 99.3", on the a, tile above study Is shown to have the heat of fusion, that Is ppobably different from 44.50 cat./mote, assigned to it by ark.and4bffff=(C.A. 25, 6830), since the specimen cited lb" hem m. M-.11 G. M. Kosolal-94 -CiA. il Cr', i-I ~ 0 V. 2. ussii (600) 4. systems (chomistry) 7. Eq,illibrium of condenses phases or tripheny1methnne in systems with napthalene, 2 methynaptithalene and indene, Ukr. Ichim. zhur., 16, No. 1. 1952. 9. Monthly List of Russian Accessions, Library of Congress, April, _1953, Uncl. XRAVCHENXO, V.M.; PASTUXHOVA, I.S. Two-component solid solutions and eutectice in the (binary] systems given by indene, isoquinolius, naphthalene. and benzene. J.appl. Chem. USSR '52. 25, 313-321. (KLRA 50) (BA -AI My '53:415) KRAVCHENKO. Y.M.; PASTUKHOVA, I.S. ~~ Binary systems given by bicyclic molecules with conmrone. J. appl.Chem. USSR '52, Z5, 328-332. (MM 5:5) (BA -AI My '53:416) Chemical kboto ,,,'XqWibrI :n IIqtdd cryotAU [a _711O.M.4 of two-rIng COM-' Vol. 48 No. 9 p"Outg. I. T -,-onrnent so x-olu to and eutectic arrisfafheFf.. 11 dene, Isoquino ne, nophtholene may 10, 1954 Td' benxw,v.~ M. Kra% -chenko and S. 11-a-mikhom General and ]Physical Chemistry J. Appl. 60"), 11, Dina 6jeterns of two-ring molecules with cournarone. IN C.A. 47, 523rd. KRAVCHYMO. V.K.; YMMMIKO, A.P. Two-compoaant solid solutions among the trinucleate molecules fluorene, pheaanthrone, anthracene, an& carbazole. J.appl.Chem. USSR '52, 25, 662-668. (KLRA 5:7) (BA-Al Je 153:513) Chemical Abst. Vol. 48 No. 9 MaY 101 1954 General and Physical Chemiatry Two-commment solid Aolutions of three-ring moletules 'f-E-inthracene, and cubazole. n e hon and J. Appl. Ch,.. -cke C.A. ~42(1052 ng. trattslation). .47, KRAVM;NKO, V.M. Binary systems of fluorens. Zkrir. Priklad. KlAm. 25, 943-54 152. (C.& 47 no.19:9947 153) (MIRA 5: 10)