SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT KLIMOVA, L.K. - KLISENKO, M.A.

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CIA-RDP86-00513R001401410002-8
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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USSR UDC YEVMYEV, V. N.,. KOTLYAR, G. A., KEM40VA, L. X., MIZYUKOVA, I. G., ani FEMUN-KIN, V. Ye., All-Union Institute of H~r&iene and Toxicoloqy of Pesticides, Polymers, and Plastics "-A Methodof Obtaining Trivalent. Cobalt Compounds with Diethanolamine" USSR Author's Certificate NO 356322 published 23 Jan 73 (f'i-om Mli-Miriya, Ho 22,, 25 Nov 73, Abstract No 22N569 by T. Ya. Ogibina.) Translation: Compounds with the formula Co[Ifil(C2H40):2"H(C2H4o)'(C2UL()H)I (1) and active as pesticides are obtained by splitting (with an alkaline agent) binuclear complexes containing bi- and trivalent Co in the ratio of 1:1 like C021i3(C2H401i)21M(C2k~12X (II) or %(NK(C~0~40)212X ('I') (X - Cl)' Ex=Ple' 10 ml of water and 0.1 mole of an NaO141 eolution in 20 jnl of water are added to 0.01 mole of II hydroxide. The mixture is filtered and tim filtrate evaporated over CaC12 and 10 davs later I, C8Hj8X2O4Co-qE20 is isolati,fid, y1eld 60%. 1 is obtained with a yield of 72% by splitting iii-.4i2o under the sane conditions. USSR UDC 621.5s669-71 LIM HTS EV, A. I., IVASHKO, K. V ard L' Kaybyshev "Microstructural Changes In Particles of APS-1, 2, Ind)_'~sl~riall i.luninum Powders During Annealing" Kiev, Poreshkovaya Mletallurgiyal No 11, Nov 70, pp 10-15 Atstracti A study is made of microstructural changes which take place ill Individual nodulized particles of Industrial aluniiaiwn poklers after anneal- ing at 550, 600, and 700 C with a holding -time of I hr. AF-1-1, 2, 3 irdust- rial aluminum poFders )iith aluainum ox-ide contents of 7, 11-8 iuld 15;"', ree- pectively, were used. It is zho-,m that during arinaalling a,,-" the powr,?ers in air and argon mdia the nodulized particless isplit arul InLexzial rorozlty ystals r appears. In addition to oxidation, the growth of nzoU crj a -Allo 3 takes place in alurtinum poi-der during heating4n air at 600 and 6�'C.- During heating In argon med-Itut oxidation occurs due to the interaction of the moisture of the hydroxide phase with alwLinum. The re*ultant rnodifi- cation of alumir= oxide renaij,_s in a dUspersed state, The, process ci, d-s- integration of modulized particles is d-oteriLtned. by the internal sources of degazsing# which a.-re fragnients of hydroxide boundaries making up the conglo- merate of nodulized particles. '1/1 38 ~~1/3 017 UNCLASSIFIED R C ~Sl~ P 0 NG DATE--lbOCT7 ',jITLE--STRUCTURAL FEATURES OF SILICON SLNGLE CRYSTALS i;rRONGALY DOPE[I,WITH -U- ARSENIC. .,AUTHOR-(.04)-GRISHINA, S.P., KLIMOVA, N.M.2 OSYENSKIY, V.8., bllLVIDSKIYI~ M*Gil Loo OF INFO--USSR -7SOURCE--IZV. AKA0. NAUK SSSR, NEORG. MATER. 1970t 6(2) 193-5 PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICSI, MATERIALS .-JOPIC TAGS--SILICON SINGLE CRYSTALv DUPED ALLOYr ARSEN(C CONTAINING ALLOYv -SOLID SOLUTION CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ,~.,DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED -..PROXY REEL/FRA.1-iE--1996/0821 STEP NO--IJR/0363/70/006/002/01-93/0195 CIRC ACCESSION 40--AP0118002 UNCLASSIFIED 2/3 017 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--lbOCT70 -,CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0118002 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. AN ELECTRONMICROSCOPE STUDY WAS MADE OF THE STRUCTURE OF Sl SINGLE CRYSTALS DOPED WITH A'S TO A CONCN. OF 5 TIMES 10 PRIME20-CM PRIME3. THE CRYSTALS WERE GROWN SY THE I-rZOCHRALSKI TECHNIQUE IN THE MEAN VALUE OF ILL DIRE~TION-. THE SAMPLES WERE SECTIONED ~j'OTH IN TPANSVERSE AND IN LONGITUDINAL CROSS SECTIONt 'COINCIDING WITH THE (110) PLANE. ELECTRON REPLICATION AND THIN FILM ELECTRON TRANSMISSION TECHNIQUES WERE USED. FOUR SYSTEMS OF PARALLEL GROWTH BANDS WITH PERIODS OF SIl?4ILAk TO 100t SIMILAR TO 40, SIMILAk TO 10, AND SIMILAR TO 2 MU WERE OBSERVED ON LONGITUDINAL SEt:TIONS. FINER BANDSi WITH PERIODS OF SMALLER THAN OR EQUAL TO 0.1 MU, WERE 06SOo INSIDE THE SIMILAR TO 2 MU BANDS. THE PRESENCE OF PERIGOIC HETEROGEINELTY IN CAYSTALS IS GNERALLY ASSOCD. WITH PEI-,1001C CHANG" OF ..GROWTH RATE. THL PRESENCE IN THE CRYSTALS OF A WHOLE SPECTRUM OF FINE GROWTH BANDS ATTESTS TO THE COMPLEXITY OF THE PROCESSES 14KING PLACE AT JHE CRYSTN. FRONT. IN THE MIDDLE PART OF THE CkYSTAI-S THERE 15 A "GATHER 1`14G" OF FINE GPOWTH BANDS INTO WINDER ONES. A DISCALTE STRUCTURE OF THE CELLS VvAS 035D, IN THE SAMPLES ALOING WITH THE- (;ROIATH BANDS. THE BOUNDARIES OF THE CELLS LOOK LIKE THIN GROOVES (SIMI(.Ak TO 4 MU)v INTERSECYING rHE GPOWTH BANOS IN THE MEAN VALUE OF 110 01RECTIONS. PPTS. MEASUkING SIMILAR fO 10 PRIME3 Aj',iGSTRLJ,'-l I N " I I E R. E 1j, t3 s D . I I N r THE C014PN. OF ~%-HICH ENTERS THE DOPING IMPURITY. Itil- NuST PkOBABLE REASON FGR THE FORMATION OF $UCH FINFLY DISPERSED PPVS. 'LS THE PAP.11AL (;O()iJl6 OF THE CaY$rAi. DKOMP14. UF TH~ SOk.ll) SOLN. OF AS ANO St UURING FRON THE M.P. UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASSIFIED USSR UDC: 546.28:54,8.55 G.RISHPIA, S. P., ILMOVA. N. M., OSVENSKIY, V. B., and MIL-1 'YIECM, M. G., 'Rare v Giredmet (State ScreMrl-c Research &ad Planning Imrstitutw of t~,c etalB Industry) "Structural Features of Silicon Single Crystals Highly Dopedl With Arsenic" Moscow, Neorganicheskiye Materialy, '101 0, No 2, Feb 70, PP 193-195 Abstract- An electron microscopy study of areenic-doped stlicon crystals, groum by the Chokhralski method, revealed growth zones with a period of up to 1 micron. A study with the replica method established 1:11at the cell ctnd gra-wth zones have a discrete structure. Segregations measuring N-' 1o3A contailning the alloyini~ addi- 'ial decomposition of the soLi(k solution of arsenic tion were de-,~t:cted. The pa-m I in silicon, d~xrinG the cooling of the crystal from its melting temperature, ray be responsible for the form- tion of sixch finely dispersed i;egxegations. There Is a lack of informtion, however, in the literature on arsenic sol-ability I-In silicon over a wide temperature range; the appreciable stability of* tht- segregations vith respect to thermal effects cautionit against uaivalued- viewn rep ,wi%iing their nature. Further studies are essential. Acc. Nr. 48'787 Abstracting, Service: Ref. Code, PPOO CHEMICAL ABST C~ 90 90914q Initiation of the polymerization of some vinyl motto- r Mers ky aqueous solutions of vipyleme carbonate. XUZnNISOX~ Yu. A.; Golenishcheva S. A.: K161,31kays, L. R., va L - L__1_M Zh. MT 7A Len_Gj','m"rM ",W7114"1441"MY CHI;CHCONHz (10, MeCH:~'HCQM (1b), - Ult:MCN, CH2-CHOAc (1c). and PIICHXH2~were palymd. at 2r ii3o in the presence of vinylene carb'i'te (1). and 0. tie hi4h~st yields of polymer.(92-5%~ were obiained when the monumeriand polymer were completely 1-110-sol. Qa and 1W. Irwreasing the temp. shortened the induction perixi due to acceleration of I hy- drolysis, but the intrinsic viscosity 67) of the polymeni cleemated. It was preferable to decrease theinduction period by introduc- tion of the initiator (aq. 1) after prior treatment at 4~-70* for 1-2 hr. 'T'his. treatment decreased the 'induction perAo(l in the polymn. of 1e at 20' to g 10-20 milk (compared with 5-6 hr), and -ed its initiating did not decrease 1. A 1% sq. soli. or I presen ability for > 12 days. Introduction df hydrotropic agents such as AP00487187 Et0H and dioxane. and ?ncreulng the vol. ot ttw'sq. ph;I T-HjO ratio >1-5 in the hamapolyma.~ of I did not Inc oly(vinytene carbonate) (17) field.. ~ HydfolAis, produ t Viz., HOCHtCHO (M) *d HCOM4 accumulated polymn.- lncremwg tfii aint. of HCOjiin the startings4t ered -the yield of 11 and its 2p-ordy" Oen' iubstan" 'AiIiiii added. apparently diie to incressid hy,4xvIYsU at had no effect on I polymn. The yield 6rit was ;J=~a D 198005418 to n I t4 of L wen 1. UK 48 hr. 3JR' i /_10 Acc. Nr. Abstracting Servtcp?_L--- Ref. Code -A 99 CHET MICAL ABST-. -111860m S~vnthesis of poly(vinylene galvc%ol)e er!i~ and co- polymers of vinvlene glycol and viriv-1 alcohol. N1. V.; grad. USSR)- t-7-sMr 0-1-75"(~Jem -'VRF-n7r, u,-itm-wrv- Mu'"). Polvivikyl a1c.), vinyl sic,'.-Vinylene j:1 *ycof copolvrners. (11, (cent-,. 15 and 22% glycol groupil, vinviene carhollate-virlyl acetate copoly mers, jwly(v inylene glycol) (if). and poly(virlVIL-111? carbonate) were refluxcd with HtBr, ko-IMr, DuBr- CH.!Br, and Ph(-H~Cl in dr.- pyridine 11111 r4T in III -; 210% aq. NaOH. ~rhe degree oftzherificatitin iiieperided rm IN-)rder in which the rewenis were a0ded. Introduction it an all. NaOH soln. (i.e., izicrea:~vd pr)1aritv) ,ed to a det-rease in ~ho ilc6vatilln enerV- (E.) and an inma . the reactian eori,t E,, imiched a So in rr;jx. wherif-wer Ow formation of an ether involved increalwd sletic hindrance: in tile oherifientiOn of 1, fii.mever, th~ 01'6!t8 of 'teric hindrance wi-re lc!-.s significaot, Eth %'j'ficlfion of H 1111dut hoirli)- geneous conditions inkficated that the reactivity 4 ,v-01-1 gr( 't;1m was csselltwilv.'imilat to flat "A 4-01-1 proupti. JR "i REEL/FRA.1ME 19841008, Abstracting Service Ref. Code Acc. Nr -UROO'90 CHEMICAL ABST. ril2Ollx Degradation of copolymen of winvieno glycol with vinyl alcohol, and ethylepe under the influetic-e of alkali. * - - Wag& 0 M.; Klub;kova-6 &.; Duvakina ~. [.~ ziftntiova. A. 'IUM-ffiirad. ' ekhnol. Im9r. im. Lem, Y_e~n i n r a I %Ara , Zh, Mhl- Khi-m-. (Lenin-W7 11,- -1)-, , 7 111 V.I KUWQ. rolv- (vinyl Ale.) (1) (contg, 1.3 onole % a-glycol tnits). vinvi alc.-vinv'l- ene glycol (1111 copolymers (111) (contx. 8.'9 a~ul 15 awle % 4-4- )Y- col units). and 11-ethyleni~ copolymei~ jcont,~, 6 and - 13 moleg % 11) were subjected to oxidative thermol degindafion at M zt I' for3hr. Increased content of a-glycol units in, III gave higher oxi- dative degradation resistance and resistance to a 40% aq. KOH soln- Introduction of givicNA units into i increlised the stabilitv presumably by the formation of intramol, H Itonds. which inhi6- Red dehydration. CKJR REEL/FRAME 19830823 Rgidlbbiolo& USSR UDC 577.391:546.18.5'.13:546.171.2 TIKHOKROVA, M. V., YLKOVLEV, V. C., and A institute of Biophysics, Ministry of Health USSR, Mosccrl4 "The Radiation-Protective Activity of Diammonium Amidothiophosphate" Moscow, Radiobiologiya, Vol 11, No 4, Jul/Aug 71, pp 533-536 Abstract: In experiments on mice and rats, diammonium anildothiophosphate (1) exerted a pronounced prophylactic effect when administered 10-20 min before irradiation with gamma-rays at a high dosage. Ilie rrdiation doses applied were 800-1000 r for mice and 850 r for rats at a dosage of 483-558 rhmin. The effective dose of I was 10 mg/kg for mice and 20-30 mg/kg for rats. The LD50 of I for mice on intraperitoneal administration was 13 mg/k,,. Study of spleen preparations showed that I was effective in expediting the~restora- tion of hemopoicsis when administered before irradiation 'to mice. In ex- periments on dogs that were irradiated with a dose of 420 r, I.on intra- venous.administration had a protective effect in a (lose of 5 mg/kg, but was ineffective in dones of 3 and 4 mg/kS. However, I in a dof,-e of 5 nig/kg wa5 highly toxic to dogs; two of six non-irradiated control dD8s trenated with -1 in this dose died. 1/1 IF9 TMIj: M USSR UDC 632.9'- BLIZNYUK, N. K., PROTASOVA, L. D., KVASHA, Z. N., KLIMOVA. T. A., and KWPKOVA, R. S., All-Union Institute of "Synthesis of Thiophosphocyclopentenyl Chlorides" USSR Author's Certificate No 327208, filed 16 Jun 70, ptblished 28 Mar 72 (from Referativnyy Zhurnal -- Khimiya, Svo.dnyy Tom, (1, L-S), No 1(I1), 1973, Abstract 11o lN457P by T. A. Belyayeva) Translation: The intermediate products for the synthesis of pesticides, the alkylthiophosphocyclopentenyl chlorides, were prepared (luring the reaction of there hydrocarbon with alky1dichlorophosphite and PSC13 at 100-150%. Example. One mole BuOH is added to 3 moles PC13 ac 15-20% with constant stirring, the mixture is heated at 60-65% for 2-3 hr; Nie reaction mixture is cooled to 0-5*C, then I mole of coiled C[12-r,1101-012 and 3 moles PsCl are added, the mixture is heated in o stainless autoclave at 110-120% Lr 3 hr. The mixture is distilled and the ml_xture of ac-id chloride isomers of thiophosphocyclopeatenic (2 and 3) acid is separat*d fra:a the reaction mixture. The yield was 81%, b.p. 120-140*C/14, n20D 1,5.840, (110 1,3225. The acid chloride of 3-metliylthiaptiospliocyclopenteitic-3 acid was also ob- tained, b.p. 137-140'C/12, n201) 1,5895, m.p. 43-45'C, as well as mixture 1/2 jj A. I!i it sf.il ~tl' il-tt. III PAIR #IVIVI flit wlq~i 'AW:111CH 111i'llIMIN, ~HIAWIIV_I, 1 :11 1hVI Ut.IqLfl TIM"A jofiMA 13114 F111 RINI USSR BLIZNYUK, N. K., et al., USSR Author's Certificate No 3.27208, filed 16 Jun 70, published 128 Mar 72 of isomers of acid chloride of 3-methylthiophosphocyclopentente (2 and 3) acid, b.p. 125-135*C/12, n20D 1,5845. Example of the reaction with piperylene. USSR UVC 547.241.07 BLIZNYUK, N. K., PROTASOVA, L. D., KVASILA, Z. N., KLIMOVA, T. A.,,Jnd KLOPKOVA, R. S., All-Union Scientific Research IlfferWg"6,f"l".hVtopatholog,\r "A Preparative Method for Benzylphosphinic Acids" Moscow, Otkrytiya, izobreteniya, promyshlennyye obraztsy, tovarnyye znaki, No 11,, Apr 71 Author's Certificate No 298590, division C, filed 23 Jan 70, published. 16 Aar 71, p 87 Translation: This Author's Certificate introduces: 1. A method of making benzylphosphinic acids of the general formula R -OH ArCH 0 where R is an alkyl, aryl, or aralkyl, and Ar is an unsubstituted or sub- stituted phenyl. As a distinguishing feature of the patent, the process is simplified by treating diarylphosphonite with benzyl chloride in alcohol with subsequent isolation of the product by conventional methods. 2. A 1/2 -W i; lid T' Min, UPR Airl I RON 9-NITH911 USSR BLIZNYUK, N. K., et al., Otkrytiya, izobrecenlya, promyshlennyye obraztsv, tavarnyye znaki, No 11, Apr 71, Author's Certificate No 298590, division C, filed 23 Jan 70, published 16 Mar 71, p 87 modification of this method distinguished by the fact that the process is ed out with heating to 150-2500C. ri 2/2 USSR UDC: 6~t9. 78:533.1 GUSEV, V. N. and KLINIONIA, T. V. "On Similarity of Hypersonic Jet Flow" Moscow, Uch. Zap. Tsentr. Aerogi-drodinarn. In-ta (Worlds of Central -t Ro -ativnyy Aerohydrodynamic Institute), 1972, No 6, pp 1-9 (fran -_fei Zhurnal -Rake tos troye niye, 1973, Abstract No 4.41.148) Translation: The problern is investigated of hyperso-ilic jet ilow of ideal gas in the framework of cornpresged layer thaory and and(!r condition that the jet flow is equivalent to one -dime ns ion;.-&I flow. Sirriflarity criterloill. ~Lre established for highly underexpanded and overexpantk!d jels, flawing into a flooded space and into a hypersonic, flow of the saine direction. Conlp;_Li-ison of available experimental data with calculation resulti; indicate a good accuracy of the compressed layer inethod. 7 illustratiowi. 8 references. Author's resurne. WSR We 669. 14.M-293 621.7924, .033o620.143 YXrr4LRMj A. M. y GOMAN j G. M. I (;OLOVCMXOi V. $.'I, UJHOVA Y A. and SITALDY, V. P. "Corrosion of Hul Steel Weldnente Leningmd, Sudostroyeniye, No 6, Jun ?3. pp 40-43 Abstracti The influence of the thermal cycle of weldments on the corrosion resistance of shipbuilding steels was investigated on butted specimens of 09G2j 1OWND9 and 45 standard hull aWela In rapid-nowing sea water over a period of 1000 hrs. Various methods and welding practices were applied to determine the influence of the character of the thermal effect ard of the cooling rate. The investigation results axe discussed by reference to diagrams showing the beating and cooling curves In the thermal imMence zone of O9G2 steell the corrosion dependences an the welding energy and the cooling rate, and the corrosion resistance dependence an the condi- tion of tho burning off beading weld, The imain factors afrecting the corro- inion resistance are the cooling rate on welding (accoraing 'to the running waLaing energy in cal/cm) and the character of structu-na conversion of st"l. At 4500-5000 cal/cm running energy# the resistauice of 09GZ steel USSR TEMARM, A. i., et all. g Sulostrayeniye, Vo jun r,j pp 4()-43 and 4S steel in the thernal influence zone is the sam-e as that of the WUal material. To avoid the development of selectivo corrosion in the thermal irnuence tons, welding with higher rwuting energies or t", use ar bu=Ing off bepAs is recommended. Four fIg=s# one U)Aep four biblio- gmPhIc references. 112 010 UNCLASSIFIED PR PC E S S ING 'P10 __TATLE---CATALYTIC ENE SYNTHESIS WITH CARBONYL COMPOUNDS. ADOITION OF ISCIPRE-NE TO FORMALDEHYDE -IJ- _l,.-.AUTH0R-(02),-KLl,40VA, YE,ls~, ARBUZOV, YU,A. tOUNTRY OF INFO--USSR -~,'50URCE-DOKL. AKAO. NAUK SSSR 1970, 190(llp 102-3 AT EPUBLISHED ------- ~70 !',.SLIBJECT AREAS--CliPi I S TRY TOPIC T.AGS--CATALYTfC ORGANIC SYNTHESIS, CARSONYL G *(lMPC:UNL), T I N CHLORIDEP ISUPRENE, F0R4ALDEHY0EV ACETATEw N4PHTHALENE, QUINONE, POLYNUCLEAR HYDROCARBONt HYDROGEIVAT I C,111,p ALCOHOL v ~:PHTHALATE, BENINC ACV)i ESrER :---_CGNTROL .4akKiN%--wj -Rr_-srRICTl0NS' CLASS--UNCLASSIFIE0 PROXY R_EEL/FRA4E--1984/l5d2 5TEP TL7 212 1 ull"ICL AS S I F I E D C I RC A C C E S S 10 N N 0 - - A T 0 10 3 2 0 0 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) ~;P-0- ABSTRACT* ADDING LO.4 SNCL SUB4 ril 15 G F I -T F`ILLIUI~F.D 3Y 1-0 PARAI-0) -~ AAL 0E'-IY;j- AN:) 30 N't- CHU SIT33-20 RL SMl? I ISOPREN'i G.AVE ~,,,FrER 10 H.R IN THE COLDs FOLU.IWI:0 P1 JR PARAFU IALUEHYDE 62PERCENT H'MH SLJ3" SLID:! c ( :c" sljo!2 )cl.": c"t "U32 t B S U37 5 0- 10 E *G-F E ES , IN P R I ME 2 0 S UB 0 1 . 4 ~9 2 t 0 PR I M F 2.0 0.11969. 1 AND AC SU82 0 IN THY PzESENCE OF PYqIDINE IN 2 DAYS -3,44ME: COqRESPONDING ACETATEt 6 SU57 53DEGREES, 1.4560y Oa.943tft *"M[Cri McATED WfTli NAPHTHOQUINONE IN C SUB6 14 SU36 6 Hq GAVE SGRI-qCE-11T I f , M. ~93-40EGREES. THE ALC. I AND I-C SuB10 H SUB7 NCO C,AVI: lilcl- NAPHTHYLUA ETHANE, -M. 99-100DEGREES, WHICH WITH GAVE 80PERCE04T ADDUCT, 111, M. 132DEGREES. HYDROGENATMINJ OF I OVER PT GAVE HOPERCENT 3-METHYL-1-PENTANOLt, B., 152-:30EGREESP lit..OSE ,'i~~..3.5-01,NJTROBENZOATE M. 37-BDEGREE-S, ANO HYDROGEN 3-NITIMPHTHALME M. T I JUU1, I I U UNLLAb~~Jl-ICU VkULttpb4NU UAlt TITLE--CATALYTIC AND THERMAL REACTIONS OF 2v3,0IMETllYLBU'TA0lENE AND tSOPRENE AND CHLORAL -U- ~,AUTHOR-(03)-TRESHCHOVAr YE.G.t KLINOVAv YE.I., ARBUZOV, CCUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ,SOURCE-ZH. ORG. KHIM. 19709 6(3)9 419-22 0 AT EP USL I S HED------ 70 :-,-.SU8JECT AREAS--CHEMISTRY TOPIC TAGS--ISO4ER9.SPECTR0SC0PIC AN4LYSISt CATALYTJC HYDRO"GENATIGNi CONDENSATION REACTIONt BUTADIENEP ISOPRENEt CHLORINATED ORGANIC COMPOUND, TIN CHLORIDE ~~-~__CCNTROL- MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY kEft/FRAME--1992/1678 STEP NO--UR/0364,/70100i~/003/041910422 --~ClqC ACCESSION r,40--AP0112672 WNC 1. A S S I F I 2/2 014 UNCLASSIFIeD kOCESSING DATE--300CT70 C-IRC ACCESSION NO--AP0112672 -ASS.TRACT/EXTRACT--(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT, JHE REACTION OF H SU32 C:CMECME:CH SUB2 (I) WITH OHCCCL SUB3 (11) IN THE PRESENCE OF SNCL SUB4 AT ROOM TEMP. GAVE AN ISOMERIC MIXTo CONTG* SIMILAR TO ZOVERCENT UIENE ADDUCT 3,4,DIMETHYL,6,(TRICHLORUMETHYLI,5,6, 0IHY0kO,2H,PYRAN (111) ANO SIMILAk TO 80PERCENT.H SUB2 C:CMEC(:CH SUB2)CH SUB2 CH(CCL SU83;Oli (IV). THE STRUCTURES OF THESE PRODUCTS WERE CUNFIRMEU BY CATALYTIC HYDROGENATION AND SPECTROSCOPY. THE THERMAL CONUENSATION OF I )WH 11 GAVE .-PREDOMINANTLY III AND ONLY A SMALL AMT* OF TV. ISOPRENE REACTED WITH 11 ANALOGOUSLY TO GIVE AT ODEGREES IN THE PRESENCE OF SNCL SU84 'PREDOMINANTLY H SUB2 C:CHC(:CH..SVB2)CH SUB2 CH(CCL SUB3JOH AND AT -145--~50DEGREES TO GIVE PREDOMINANTLY .41,hETHYLP69(TRICHLOROMETHYL)t5t6wDlHYDROPZHtPYRANv FACILITY: USOVA# MOSCOWt USSR, MUSK :GUS. UNIV. IM. LOMON 1/2 008 UNCLASSIFIED PROCES$ING DATE--300CT70 TITLE--CATALYTIC AND THERMAL REACTI.ONS OF 213,DIMETRYLBUTACIENE AND WITH GLYOXIYLIC ACID ESTERS -U- AUTHOR-(03)-KLIMOVAI, YE.Iop TRESHCHOVA, ;YE.G., 4RBUIOV, Yu.A. OF INFO--USSR '~:.:SOURCE-ZH. ORG. KHIM. 1970, 6(3)9 413-118 PUBLISHED - ----- 70 _7 SUBJECT AREAS--CHEMLSTRY .,.TOPIC TAGS--ISOPRENE, PRIMARY ALCOHOLt TIN CHLORIDEI BUTADIENEP ESTER --NO RESTRICTIONS CONTROL MARKING :_~DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED 'PROXY REEL/FPAME--199211677 STEP NO--UR/0366/'10/006/003/0413/04L8 NO--- APO 112 671 2/2 008 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING 0ATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0112671 -.ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE REACTION OF li SU62 C:CMECME:CH SU8Z (1) WITH OHCCU SUBZ BU (11) IN T14E PRESENCE UF SNCL SU84 AY ROOM TEMP* GAVE AN ISOMERIC MEXT. CONTG. 30PERCENT DIENE ADDUCT BU 3t4#01METHYLt 5t6tDlHyDROtZHtPYRANP69CARBOXYLATE ~ND 70PERCENT H SUB2 C:CMEC(:CH SU82)CH SU82 CH(OH)CO.SU82'8U. THE NOPICATALYTIC I-11 REACTION AT 130DEGREES GAVE PREDOMINANTLY THE DIENE ADDUCT. ISOPRENE REACTED ANALOGOUSLY* FACILITY: MOSKo GOS UNI'Vo. IM. LOMONOSOVAj MOSCOW, USSR* US$R UDC 612.014.45:612.79 KLDIOVICH, Chair of SkirL and Venereal Diseasos, Vitebsk Nedical lastitiate Snifts in tho Skin ofHealthy People Under the Influ-mue of 1herapoutic oses of Ultrasound" YLinsk, Zdravockhra-neniye Belorussii, Vol 16, No 7. Jul 70, pp 26-29 Abstract: The effect of ultrasound on the 81cin of hoalthj, suo.-le,:.-La was :3-ti:dIed. Ultrasound in varying doses was applied to the inner surfoce of T-nia rignt arm of a? healthy adults, while the left arm was tested for 5yiaiietric, I re-$,. at the corresponding site without pplication of ultrasoLwti. 'file dosez; wore 0.4 w1cm2, 0.8 W/CW-, and 1.2 W/cJs Within 10 rdnutos aTter applicaLdua of ultra- sound there occurred a lowering of pH an the tested stla-faco of the skin. i;Ln in- crease in redox properties. increased va5cular penetration. and a sliGht increase in temperature. Areas of skin outside the site tostod rona'~-ncd norml. doses produced more pronounced effects in a shorter tirie. Tho *!to on the left arm showed Similar offacti, with a alight dolajr In t1mo, hoLtl returned to normal within 24 hours, Repeated applicttions of ultrisound produced more pronounced effects. An incroaso in tompornture alone doo:i noi; pro.-jilco incroaao in varjcular pcinatration nuch -as ia obsumKi wIL11, doses (if uitxx~ound pr(yliieo roversiblo ru=LJJ)mI tho can bn rc.Lno ns iMireatu orfoct.- or oo t MRIM USSR UDC 621,317.36/16 XIRIANIKI, N. V., KLIMOVITsKAyr., and FOSKOMIENKIt Yu, K. -Al I "A New Zero-Beat Indicator and its Use for Frequency Measuxament" Otbor I peredech inform. Resp. inezrhved sb. (Selection and Tr'--.-iv~n li:-. ton of Information. Republic Interdepartmental Collection), 1972, Ho, 32, i~p 85 - 89 (from RM-Avtomatika Telemechanika i Vychislitellnaya Tekhnika,, No 3, Mar 73, Abstract No 3 A300 by the authors) Translations A new optical zero-beat indicator is descrillol P-nd the possibility of using it for frequency measurement is discussed. An anala-1 frequency meter circuit with such an indicator and the results of experimental frequency meter studies are given. Ways to improve the circuit further are pointed out. Three illustrations, three bibliographic entries. USSR UDC 669-017,539-263620.187 KUMVICH, L. G., VA)MBIATp YU, bl. j VrECH9111, B. I., and BER, L. B., All- Union Instituto of Light Alloys "Determination of the Grades of Separationa in the Breakdown of the Solid Solution in the AI+O.IepZr Alloy by Reane. of Small-Anglo X-Ray Dispersion and Electron Microscopy" Ordzhonikidze, Izvestlya -iysshlkli Uchebnykh Zavedeniy, Tavetnaya 11letallurgiya, No 6f 1973, pp 135-137 Abstracti The breakdown of the solid solution was inveatigattd. on specimens cut ou-,,. from Presaed bars of the AI+0.4%Zr alloy by the methods of small- angle 6-ray dispersion (SXD) and electrom microscopy. The specimens wore aged at 400 and 500 0 for 10 to 500 hr after water-hardening axid heating at 61tO0 for 10 min. It is shown that the particles separating on aging are spherical. Their average sizes satisfactorily coincide with dizensions calculated by the 5XD method of oxide replica. The analysis off volumes of difforent fractions ~seems to indicate that the quantity of the larger fraction increases with the duration of aging. The joint application of 5X1) and eloctron microsco-py methods provides reliable information on aging processeu of alloys, Two figures, two tables, five bibliographic references. 1A Am -Nn Ref**~'Code: UR 0050 'A1PV0'Vn'287G9__ PMARY. SOURCE: Meteorologiya'/i idrologiya, 1970, bir 1, PP CLOUD TRANSMISSION OF SOLAR RADIATION OVER DIKSON V, A 44mvichs-1 ation transmission b different forms or clouds ov,~r Coefficients of solar radi, Y Dikson are represented in the article. Accurary estimation of calculations with th',se coefficients of total radiation values for a day, five- and ten-day period from July through October is gaiven. It is shown that the mean relative error in calculations of daily tiurns is equal to 19% for July anti 30--10% for other nionthi, The inearx relative error in calculations of five. anti tcn-da,%, values. is equal to 13% for July and 19$1' froin,4WVust, throllLili, October. REEL/rRAME . .......... --- ii-1 --- I------- NOW 00--il' ....... ..... 1/2 025 UNCLASSI FlEb PROCESSING DATE--04DEC70 TITLE--ANISOTROPY OF TRANSVERSE MAGNETOkESISTANCE OF THIN NiSt FILMS -U- Aelot SNITKO, O.V.t KIRILLOVA, S.I. COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ERS (USA), VrL.,-,,I, NO. 2, P. 119-23, JAN. 1970 SOURCE--JETP LETT -"DATE PUBLISHED ---- JAN70 SUBJECT AREAS--PHYSICS TOPIC TAGS--MAGNETORESISTANCEt THIN PLATE, SILICON $INGLE CRYSTALl LOW TEMPERATURE EFFECTv MAGNETIC ANISOTROPY CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME--3007/1089 STEP NO--US/0000/70/011/002/0119/0123 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0136509 F-UEAD 025 UNCLASSIFUE0 PROCESSING DATE--04DEC70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0136509 ABSTRACT/E.(TRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE ANISOTROPY OF MAGNETORESISTANCE IN THIN PLATES OF N-151 AT LOW TEMPERATURES (20-77DEGREESK) WAS INVESTIGATED AND THE POSSIBLE EXISTENCE OF A SIZE EFFECT OVER THE COOLING LENGTH AND THE MEAN FREE PATH AAS DEMONSTRATED. THE SAMPLES WERE CUT FROM SINGLE CRYSTAL SILICON IN SUCH A WAY THAT THE SURFACE WAS ORIENTED PARALLEL TO,THE (100) CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC PLANE AND THE CURRENT DIRECTION COINCIDED WITH T14E MAGNITUDE OF 010. SINCE YHE PRESENCE OF MACROINHOMOGENEITIES IS IMPORTAUT IN kAGNETORESI STANCE MEASUREMENTS, THE RESULTS WERE SUBDIVIDED INTO TWO GROUPS. (1) RESULTS OBTAINED FOR HOMOGENEOUS SYSTEMSt NAMELY, THE BENDING OF THE BANDS AY THE SAMPLE SURFACE IS ZERO OR DEPLETINfyf~ (2) RESULTS OF INHOMOGENEOUS SYSTEM STRONG ENRICHMENT ON THE SURFACE&' FACILITY: UKRAINIAN ACAO. SCIS.r USSR. USSR KOVAL,, A. D., VYaGIN, G. I., BOBKOV, V. V., )!1.bT0-V.MY-LJA4-A-o STIRAL-ChENKO, S, S., and FWPL,, Ya. M., Khar1kov State University, imeni A. M, Gorlkiy "On the Question of the Difference In Composition of Chax-ed and Neutral Particles Knocked out of Gallium Arsenide by a Beam of Ar+ Ions" Leningrad# Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoy Plziki, Vol 43, No Axiff 73, pp 1753 1754 Abstracti A previous study in which Ar+ particles had an energy of 2 kev I + showed that the DOSiti.Vdly chaxred secondary particles were prlm-%rily 2a, n ions and conplexes, with As n+ Darticles being 2 - 3 orders of m-ignitude less frequent, while the neutral secondary particles were all arsenic atbms or complexes. Two types of frallium arsenide crystals were used aa targets,000) and (111), with no discernible difference in the distribution of secondavy 9mrticlo-s ejected between the two types, It Is theorized that the difference in dintribution is related to proc%esses between the departing secondary particles aid the surface of the solid and that these Processes are determined by the velocity of the dapartinla, particles the relatiye arrangement of energy zonea of the tolid tody hn~ excited levels of the particles. The present work extends this investigation, using a beam of Ar particles at 25 kev. The spectrum of the emitted particles In the vEsibla light range was recorded. It consisted entirely of two resonance lines of Gai at 4172 and IW33 ani7stroms. These were found to be produced by Ga pax-ticles at eriergles on the 11 - 59 USSR KOVAL A. D. et al., Leningrad, Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoy Fiziki, Vol 43. lo 8, pp 1753 - 1754 order of 2 3 kev. This is understandable, since the resonance level at 3.1 ev of the Ga atom, the transition from which to the base level produces fast excited Ga particles, is in resonance with a zone of free condtictivity levels of the Ga-As nonocrystal, leading, to a high probability of resonance ionization, while a significant portion of the levels of the As atom is. in resonance with a forbidden sone of the crystal, making resonance Ionization unlikely for these atoms. The neutral, emitted As atoms radiate in the yacuum ultraylolet, and were not recorded in the exDerimental spectrum. Resonance ionization can occLir for As atoms at an onergy level of 7.6 ev, but only a small percentage reac~,es this level. 2/2 ... ... .... .~ /0 C~ 0 6- -/ 3 ("1 XV-5. APPLICATION OF IME HETHOD OF SECMU4RY IC1.4-IoN LMISSit)N Tu sr~pT 11ii, suitrArt nr Alflay rNtttc=.vucT;;; cummmm; (Article by V. V. 80kov, A. G. Novel' . Yu. A_~Jjr.~mkjv, V~ P. "=tv. and V. V. .11huldna, ishar'kalt-kaluga; III rr! Ptoteleff-loon Ronta i Sliliiijia _PnIuprnvqdniknvvkh xrtstsljo~vj, Th. kr,# at the P*Vved aj,j-;nd.rv ion-ion -tevi- i. rrvv_oerd in rnts Paper to stitdy the si-orface of It sericonductor Th:s tatt'aail w= us ed muccessfulLy previously 11) to studv the surface reattltis ces the ootomi,, Ih Is rforilled demonstrated titat the Laoss spectra of the secon- 4ary joallaitoot :esr.ch,dP,R,., contains two Xrvurz of particleA: 1) tho,ae kvsvtLc,~ out of the atizarbood layer and 2) those knocked out of ch. FAIj1l,,n 4".-en%4# lattice. Igo It- first itc Quip, ionooof OW Camv "*. no Us k4l+ find C.'I0'40711, tvo~w Were aboterved the origin of which Is rclate4 to the surface contamination. 1s# t"dv of the t,ompoorsturs dependence of these tons demanstratood t"t the g&l*i= Manide surface is clearsed in a vacutim of 10'? ron Hit at a Te~erstwve of in the sagand Broup of particleis, Lane, 9f titil Ca As a ty" %-P." o4so,4 4~ = a r1-1 In this Paper there is a discussion of proosible motchantsmto of thwir ovrurrenm connected with the characteristic features of the chemical bond tit SmIlLux or- sorstda. A study wag %,dV of certain aspects of tile application of tboe method of secondary Lon-ion amlasion to the studV of the Processes at the to-"tloft of nuclestiniq centers (or growth of heteroapttoonloil levers. BIBLIOCKAFHY 1. Y&. ". Papal' . UTM (Progress In the Physical Sciences I . Plis 91 . 1075. 11167. USSR UDC., 535-33:546.292 FOG' GRI M.Itl., V. V., KIYA'N', T. S., M' Ya . 1: 7.1 L A G and ftKfY Ki A. _"o "Glow of Slow .eon Pirticles Appearing in thc: mbardmcnt of Car- bon Films by a Blij n m o - LC a s t LNe o n Ions" Leningrad, Qpti!~a i Spektro kooiya, Vol. 29, 4, 1970, pp 641- 643 Abstract: This is the third paper publisheul by the first four of V-hors named above on tht sam-e subj-_:-c~-. .1 j the au4 i On,,! t-,.,o e-ir'.ier papers (ZhBT-, lv.~tters to the -,di )9, p 212 5 8, tor, 5, .2, 19( i9~~70) tho authors repor-ted discovery of a (,A-law ."rom 1.ow liclium atoms and molecules resulting from prolonjed- o1t, rd L.ar~-,uts of Ni, Pd, Pt, Ta, and J by I-'e+ ii3ns. jap-_~r re~)orts 4' experiments conducted uith carbon films as th,~ tar~;olls for b.-:ams 'kT+ I + + A , Ar , and !~e , wiIh a beam density of about 30 ",/crq2 and rt an ion cner,"Y ol' about 20 k.ev. When zhe N+ iens were used, no gl~~w was registeved for the s;low nitroeen particles. 'There 'w39 alao no glow for slow argon particlea upon bor;i~ardf.-umt of the ire film with flr+ iono. ?or particles, howar-r,!r, there was a glow, and the sole illustration in this short iirLiale Lhoors, the suectrum of this f:Low with a beam density o-f 1-0 PA. USSR UDC 632.935.4 Ye. loniziruyushcbiye lzlucheniya-v Bor'be s Vrednymi Nasekomymi (Ionizing Radiation in the Control of Harmful Insects), Riga, "Zinatne," 1971, 132 pp Translation: Annotation: This monograph describes the sexual sterilization of Insects using ionizing radiation. Data are given on the sensitivity of .various species of insects to the effect of ionizing radiation depending on their phases and growth stages. Longevity and mating activity of exposed individuals and pathological changes in developing sex glands of exposed individuals, as well as the history of development and prospects for practi- cal application of the method of sexual sterilization of insects are discuss- ed. Sterilizing dosages of Ionizing radiation for various species of insects are given, and note is taken of the necessity of a quantitative preponderance of sterilized individuals over individuals of the normal population. Special attention is devoted to the problem of sexual sterilization *f the sugar beet fly. In connection with the fact that ptactical. application of the sexual sterilization method is determined in a majority of cases by- the possibility of massive reproduction of exposed insects, the problems of breeding insects -in artificial nutrient media are presented. Table of Contents: Page 'Fn-rmjn-eO1 5 ~ iL USSR KLINPINYA, A. Ye., Ioniziruyushchiye lzlucheniya v Bor'be s Vrednymi Nasehomyrii, Riga, "Zinatne, 1971, 132 pp Page Chapter 1. Sensitivity of Insects to Ionizing Radiation 7 Effect of Radiation on Insects in Different.Phases of Their Development 10 Embryonic Phase 10 Larval Phase 13 Pupal Phase 16 Imaginal Phase 20 Longevity and Mating Activity of Exposed Insects 22 Chapter 2. Pathological Changes In the Process of Development of the Sexual Glands of Insects Underthe Influence.of Ionizing Radiation 30 The Effect of Ionizing Radiation on the Sexual Glands of Female Insects 36 The Effect of Ga a Rays on the Gonads of Male Inl3ects 44 Chapter 3. Development and Prospects of the Method of Sexual. Sterilization of Insects 614 2/4 USSR KLIIIPMA, A. Ye., Ioniziruyushchiye lzlucheniya v Bor'be s Vrednymi Nasekomymi, Risa, "Zinatne," 1971, 132 pp Page Essence of the Method of Sexual Sterilization 64 Conditions for Application of the Sterilization Method to Destroy Harmful Insects 66 History of the Development of the Sexual Steri]~Lzation Method and Prospects for Its Practical Application 68 Sterilizing Dosages of Ionizing Radiation from Insects 72 Sterilizing the Sugar Beet Fly 82 Quantitative Ratios of Sterilized and Normal Individuals 85 Polygwous Insects and the Sexual Sterilization Method 89 Application of the Sexual Sterilization Method for Mducing the Population of Sugar Beer. Flies 91 Chapter 4. Artificial Nutrient Media for Insect Reproduction 95 Synthetic Nutrient Media 96 Polysynthetic Nutrient Media 97 Aseptic Media lor, Feeding Insects in Imaginal Phase 108 3/4 %~M - --- - -- MUMOSM3 M- WE I .. ,, ~. -, !; j~ I - ---- -M ~ Acc. Nr Ref. Code: UR 0016 P003681C PRINUARY SOURCE: Zhurnal Mikrobiologii, Epidemiologii, i Immunobiologli, 1970, Nr 1, pp~18~-QJ NOSOGEOGRAPHICAL ASPECT OF TYPHOID CARRIER STATE AND OPISTHORCHIASIS P. Ya. Kravchenko, B. V. 1. Prokooer kc., A. A. Terrifor;al disiribution of tt-phoid carriers and of the extent o I affection of the popula- flon with ovisthorhiasis proved to coincide in graphic mar, analysis. Among the atients 50fering fion opisthorhiasis typhoid carrier state proved to be almost 5timestriore frequent than among those free of this invasion. FR A'! 17, LSSR uDc 621-791-754-2a~3;669-295 GUSEEVA YE. A.) V-Cl!E;V, A. I. A., and V=X, V. K. E Z.!~' I., FOMICERVA, "Argon-Are Welding of 'Titanium Alloys by Through Fusion" YOSCOV, Svarochnoye Proizvodstvo, No 2, Feb 70, PP 15-16 Abstract: A -orocedure is described for through fusion welding oe tJt_-ni=. alloys ges, r re up to 10 mm thick without dressing the ed, 7;,.ie welds obt-nin.- by t i p oce u have good penetration and a hi6h weld shape factor. There are no s'=rp transitions from fusion to basic metal on thc, backside of the weld. X-ray coatrol of the welded joints showed that the pores in the weld are verj sinall. Comparative data arc- -presented showing that the strength of za:,Tlea without rxeinforcen-ent for the ~61,,112 higher than weld;d Joints execiated by through fusion is approximately ,LO 1, in the case of two-pasa welding. it is shown that thmu--,h fusion can be obtained only imder ce:tain welding con- ditions. The basic condition for throt4;h fusion weldix4,r ia insurir.~,- a. specific arc pressure on the pool of molten metal which can overcow the surface tension, force the molten metal out of the pool, and equalize the hydrosUatic pressure of the liquid metal. Tae comparatively low specific weight, of titaniu;n alloys and corres- pondingly lower hydrostatic preasure provido a basis for anaurIng that for these metals through fusion welding can be realized more easily than Cor steel. 1/12 USSR VUSEVAI rZ. A., et al., Svarochnoye Prolzvodfitvo, No 21 Feb 70, PI? 15-16 Conditions ftor argon-are through fusion welding are calculated ~~b_r sheet mazerial made of oT4 and VT6S alloys 4, 8, and 10 thick. 2/2 j~ 'Reaction Kinetics USSR UDC 533.66.063 A A., 'FRIDMAN, Ye. M., and BOKSHTE)W, B. S., VOROB'YEV, Ye. M., KLINGER L..] -SHVINDLERMAN, L. S., Academy of Sciences USSR, Institute of the Solid Body Physics, Moscow, Institute of Steel and Alloys "Osmotic Effect at the Border Diffusion" Moscow, Zhurnal Fizicheskoy Khimii, Vol 47, No 1, Jan 73, pp 145-149 Abstract: A model of boundary diffusion was developed with consideration of the formation of an effect analogous to the osmotic one. As a result, formation of dislocations takes place in the boundary :,ones which accelerates the diffusion inside the grain and with its motion carrying the atoms of the admixture. A self-adjusted system of equations was derived which describes the process under analysis. in 016 UNCLASSIFIED PAOCESSING DATE--30OCTTO TITLE-RESONANCE IN FERRIMAGNETS CONTAINING PARAMAGNETIC IONS WITH NEAR CROSSING ENEkGY LEVELS -U- AUTHOR-(03)-GUREVICH. A.G., AGEEV, A.N., KLINGER, M.K. ~-_~COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ~SOURCE-J. APPL. PHYS. 1970t 41(3)t 1295-302 DATE PUBLISHED------70 AREAS--PHYSICS TOPI.C. TAGS--MAGNETIC-RESONANCE, FERRLMAGNETISM, r4RANSFORMATIONr HOLMIUM# YTTERBIUMv TERBIUM ,_tONTROL~MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS ,-:DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFILO '~_PRUXY REEL/FRAME--1996/049t3 PARAAAGNETIC ION, MAGNETIC STEP NO--US/UOOO/70/0411003/1295/1302 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0117732 2/2 016 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0117732 'ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. SOME NEW ExPTL- RESULTS C014CEPNING THE MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN PR PRIMF3 POSITIVE DOPEO YIG ARE PRESENTEO AND DI SCUSSEUr TOGETHER WITH THE RESULTS FOR TB P9 IME3 ~ 1105,11 [VE AND 110 PRIME3 POSITIVE IN YIG ALRr--At)Y PUBLISHEOt IN TERMS. OF I-XISTING THEORIES. T14E MAG14ETIZATION DIRECTIONS CORRESPONDING TO THE -NEAR CROSSINGS OF ENERGY LEVELS IN THE CASE OF HO PRIME3 POSITIVE CA14 Ll.E wlTmIN A CERTAIN LOCAL PLANE AND, 1,14 THE CASE OF PR PRIME3 POSIrVEP rAN COINCIDE WITH A LOCAL AXIS OF THE DODECAHE,DRAL SITE (FUR TB PRIME3 POS[r[VE9 AS HUBER HAS FOUND, THESE DIRECTIONS FORM A CONIC AL SURFAC0. THE ANGLE AND TEMP. DEPENDENCES OF DELTAH FOR TS PRIME3 POSITIVE AND HO PRIME3 POSITIVE ARE VERY SIMILAR AND CAN t3jE EXPLAINED COMPLETELY IN TERMS OF ,SLOW RELAXATION, FOR PR PKIME3 POSITIVE9 THESE DEPEtNDENCES IN THE DIRECTIONS OF NEAR CROSSINGS RESEMBLE THE "ANOMALOUS" BEHAVIOR FOR YB PRIME3 POSITIVE IN OCTAHEURAL SITES, A CONTRIBUTION FROM TRANSVERSE RELAXATION IS P&OBA8LE IN THE CASE OF PR PRIME3 POSITIVE. FACILITY: INST. SEMICUND., LENINGRAD, USSR. aar.ftlnk?-~tflh Im".1-92005ti 2 i R ;Ii :l! i i 911 USSR uDc 621.3?5.82 KUMV, V. K., and MUKHTAROV, CH. K. "Disruption of Oscillation in lasers Due to Redistribution of Energy in Resonator. Oscillation of Ruby laser With Vbving Selector" V sb. Kvant. elektrotilka (quantum Eaectronics -- Collection of Vorks), No 2(14), Hoscowt "Sov. Radio," 1973t pp 61-64, (&glish suariiary) (from R--,n- ~Izika, No 10, Oct 73, Abstract No 1OD830 from authors' abstract) - - Translation: The article studies the behavior of induced rwilation in a laser with flat external. mirrors during deep,modulatioxi of the oscillat-lon threshold as a result of' redistribution of the energy In the resonator. It is shD,.m that monotonic migration of the internal dielectric bo=daries -leads to periodic dis--upticns of the oscIllation In each mode and to multi- mode irocillations In real lasers migrations of the dielectric boundaries axe due to heating of the active mediujn, Its vibrationa,etes All this sub- stantially affects tLe smeactral kdineticz of free oscillaLion. The effect of the energy redistribution mechanisn on oscillation Is traced experimentally in a ruby lasor. Bibliography with nine titles, kkkiiit b __" W " ----------- ---- 1/2 021 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--04DEC70 TtTLE--USE OF AN INDI.;ATUR METHOD FOR DETERMINING THE DEPTH OF DIFFUSION OF INORGANIC ACIDS IN POLYMER FILMS -U- -,..AUTHOR-(03)-MUROV, V.A., SHEVCHENKO, A.A.. K,6WQd.&_t.,:YA. COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ~-SOURCE-LAKOKRASOCH. MATER. IKH PRIMEN. 1970-l (2)v 6a-4 .:DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 ~,SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS OPIC TAGS--PLASTIC FILMP DYEt CHEMICAL INDICATOR, EPOXY kESIN, FLUID _".';:~DIFFUSIDN, SULFURIC ACID, NITRIC ACID, HYDROCHLORICIACID/10ED5 EPOXY RESIN MAPKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ,~DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO :.-PROXY FICHE NO----FD70/605012/BO7 STEP NO--UR/0303/70/f)00/002/0062/0064 NCCESSION N.0--AP0140246 2/2 021 UINC L ASS I F I E 0 PROCESSING DATE--040EC70 CIRC, ACCESSION NO--AP0140246 ABSTRACT/EXI'RACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. TROPEOLIN On-OR ME-THYL RED DYES WERE AUDED TO LIQ. EPOXY RESIN ED-5 IN:AI.C. OR ACETONE SOLN. THE AODN. OF POLYETHYLENE POLYAMINE (A AHRDENER) TO THE SOLNo AND'EIRYING ON GALSS SLIDES GAVE FILMS. THE DIFFUSION PATES OF HCL, NHO SUB31 OR H SU82 SO SUB4 SOLNS. INTO THE FILMS WERE DETO* IN 20-70DEGREFS INTERVAL BY THE IMMERSION Of THE FILMS IN SOLNSs OF VAR:,L(1US, CONCNS, FOR A KNOWN TIME, MAKING MICROTOME SLICES PARALLEL TO THE; SURFACEP AND OETG. THEIR COLOR UNDER A MICROSCOPE. THE DIFFUSION OF H.SUB2-S0 SUG4- AND HCL SOLNS. INTO :-.-ED,5 IS LINEARt BUT THE DIFFUSION OF HNO SUB3 15 NOIT DUE TO THE 7DEGRADATION OF THE POLYMER. ililt- I A7r,-t~ t r- ?-111 023 UNCLASSIFIEb AOCE~SING OATE-21 "C"o TITLE--AGING OF POLYPROPYLENE IN NITRIC ACtO -U- 'AUTHOR-(03)-VO . LCHEKp A.Mov BOKSHITSKIYt M-N.# KLINOVv I*YA. COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR SOURCE-PLAST. MASSY 1970v (3), 37-9 DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS--MATEPIALS, CHEMISTRY p. -TOPIC TAGS--THERMAL AGING, POLYPROPYLENEt NITRIC ACID .CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME--1997/0662 STEP NO--UR/019I/701000/00310037/0039 CIRC ACCESSION N"]--AP0119570 I 1ra- I ~ It ~ I.-M 414 'iPjTr~ III ~Tlf 111, Ilm"11 , Ili C ii;n 1 1 milm. th" '11 mg Itll-11 Hs! j N11111 I:r ; t~m U 1~~i I I VIPM tioll KA-;Al Qi I 212 023 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--Z30CT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0119576 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE AGING OF CRYST. POLYPROPYLENE (1) (DEGREE OF CRYSTALLINITY 50PERCENT) IN 10-aOPERCENT HNO SUB3 WAS STUnIED AT 20-LOODEGREES FOR 1800 HR (AT EACH EXPrL. TEMP.?. THE AGING KINETICS ARE DISCUSSED. SEVERAL EQUATIONS WEkE DERIVED ANAL. FOR THE CALCN. OF I DURABILITY (TAU) AND MAX* A-CID CONCN. AT WHICH THE POLYMER RETAINED ITS BASIC FUNCTIUNS FOR A CERTAIN PERIOD OF TEEM. TWO NUMERICAL EXAMPLES FOR THE CLACNo OF TAU AND MAX. ACED CONCN. ARE PRESENTED. 7 1:,'[ j I il)l:i~iil A I:iii:*l Vil 11.11.1i ill it'll, F I I if 111W~N I I MUMNI I! E Ill I ilml~ii I It I I ulf I Sit I it t I JrA' Ril'44~ I M I i-AlocliN N"El ilgiVIIIIH USSR uDc 612.26 TIUNOV, L. A., IUMM,_A, I., KOLOSOVA, T. S., IVANMGV, Yu. G.., and AKHMATOVA, M. A., Leningrad "The Causes of Differences in Carbon ~bnoxide Concentration in Exhaled Air in ftmfl Leningrad., Fiziologicheskiy Zhurnal BBSR imeni I. M. Sechanov, Vol 58, No 11, 1972, PP 1756-1759 Ab-'ract: In man, carbon monoxide concentration in exhaled air normally varies 2.8 to 25 n g/M3. It increases with increasing ez-1throcyte concentration. For example, when erjthrocyte concentration is 4-71 Miwon/mm% the aircrage CO concentration is 9.6 mg/m3 of exhaled air, and when the RBC count is 5-34 Million/mm3, CO concentration is 22.9 irg/O. On the other hard, the concentra- tion of catalase in the erythrocytes decreases with incre,,:zing hemoglobin con- centratlon in blood; and -with decreasing catalase, heir-oglobin catabolism increases. The CO molecale is formed through incomplete oxidation of the carbon atom in the alphatniethylene bridge in the tetrapyri,ole ring. I ius, CO U production is proportional to hemoglobin catabolism, and,it increases in hemolysis. Since 1.27 units of CO are produced for one equivalent unit of hemoglobin catabolized, other heir-containing corq)ounds, s~uch aij myo,-,1obin and USSR TMOV, L. A., et al., FiziologichesU.-y Zhurnal SSSR imeni 1. 1-1. Sechenov, Vol 58) 'To I'.. 1972j, pp 1756-1759 cytochrones, also contribute certain amounts of 00. However, the ratio of CO produced over hemoglobin catabolized is so constant that measurements of CO concentratIon in exhaled air can be used as an indirect mthad of dete:LT,,ining ex7throkinetics. 2 /' 21 X iF cr im vi ic rr IT 6- ~~777, USSR UDC: 537-312.62 RADIMIN, A. G.___JQTSHAr1OVA,_L. A., PRONINA, L. 11. "Concerning the Effect of High-Presisure Treatment on the Phase ComDosition and Superconducting Properties of Zircnoium-Niobium Alloys" V sb. Probl. sverkhurovodyashch. materialov (Problem--, oil Su-oerconducting Materials--- co I I ecti an of works), Moscow, "Hauka", 1970, pp i4l-i47 (from kZh-Radiotekhnika, No 51 May 71, Abstract No 5D551) Translation-. The paper presents the results of a stuc~,i of the temperatures of transition to the superconducting state, critical fields and phase cow, position of alloys of zirconium with 2-40 atomic percent niobium after they have been subjected to high hydrostatic pressure treatment (35-65 kbar). It is found that just w, in the case of' pure zirconium, the application of hi4i pressum, leadz to the formation of' m to-phwe in tdloys with 2-30 at0aic percent nioblum. altholigh the w-phuse is fixed by quenching only in alloys vith T-10 atomic percent niobium. The reoultant high-pressure w-phase is retained in the specimens after prerisuro relief, the quantity of w-phase increasing considerably in alloys with 7-10 atomic percent ni6bium. A110Ying of zirenoium with niobium reduces the pressure at which the w-:phase arises as compared with pure niobium. In all cases, the formation of high-pressure &j.-phase in the alloys or a reduction in its quantity lowers the Tk, widens the temperature ranee in which a transition to the suriercunducting state takes place, and reduces Hk2- One illustration, one table, bibliography of nine titles. Authors' abstract. 1/1 USSR UDC 669.296.5.293.018.5.537.312.62.669.98 RABINIKIN, A. G., KLISHANOVA, L. A., PRONINA, L. N. 'The Influence of High-Pressure Working on Phase Composition and Superconducting Properties of Zirconium-Niobium Alloys" Probl. Sverkhprovodyashch. Materialov [Problems of Superconducting Materials -- Collection of Works], Moscow, Nauka Press, 1970, pp. 1111-147. (Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Metallurgiya, No. 5, 1971, Abstract No. S 1792 by the authors). Translation: Results are nresented from a study of the transition temperatures Tc, critical fields and phase composition of alloys of Zr with 2-40 atA Nb after treatment by high hydrostatic pressure (3S-65 khar). As is the case for pu-re Zr, the application of high pressure results ir, the formation of an W phase in alloys with 2-30 at.'k Nb whereas during hardenin& the w phase is fixed only in alloys with 7-10 at.%,Nb. The high-pressure w phase is retained after removal of the pressure in the specimens, its quantity iRCTessing significantly in alloys with 7-10 at.% Nb. Alloyin- of Zr with niobium decreases the pressure at which the w phase is developed. In all cases the formiation. of the high-pressure W Dhase in the alloys or an increase in its quantity causes a reduction in Tc, an expan- of the temperature interval over which the transition occurs, and a decrease in the value of Hc2. I fig; I table; 9 biblio refs. USSR SMANINIA, L. B., LES11C11FNKO, S. S., YEGORG", Z. S. , STMtODUBTSEV2 D. S. KLINSHPON7, 'OV, M. Ya. , and KiWOV, V. L. , Scientif i c R stLarch Institute imeni L. Ya. Karpov ItRadiation StructuralizatiOR of Ethylenepropylene Rubber i.n Presence of N-Phenylmaleimide Sensitizer" Moscow, Vysokomolekulyarnyye Soyedineniya, Vol 12, No, 11, Nlov 70, pp 2,1+01- 2N407 Abstract: The process of radiation structuralization of ethylenepropylcne rubber [SKEPI and its mixtures with N-phenylmaleimide was studied. It was determined that INP11I is a sensitizer for radiation cra:;sliti'4ing of SKEP, -formation being directly proportional to the qualitity o "P',,T the rate of gel added. The effect is neither ionic nor radical.; addition of NPHI does not affect the production of free radicals and the recombination of the radicals is identical with or Without NPRI; liberation of chartes trappcd in the trap..; shvna also no ef feet on the proce_aB. It has been propov-,d that 11,.11'M11 acLii r; an accepLor of hydrogen during the f-irradiation, being r~educed to rl-phenyl- succinimide in the process. Thus it aide in. productAou of movi Oxylldene bonds in SKEF and accelerates the crosslinking of SKEP. Acc Nr Abstracting Service: Ref. Code AP0045156_ cHEMICALA!jg~ ~6 71/ X/ r 90945a Structure of free radicals in -r-irradiated -polypro- pylene. Milinchuk. V. K. (.'Piz.-Khi_m_ Inst lm. KarDova. NI"o"r' Ub.3 . A/11M. KVF_ tierg. 1970, 40), 8" IRuss). - Polyp,ropylee i ers were irradiate6 with ~-tavs at 7rK. EPR S ' tia were obtained immediately aAer the irradn., after the irra n with -y-rays and uv light, or after the irrad with -Y-rays and w'arming up to 300% CNEl- PEELIFRW-. -:197150056 1;-.1/2 034 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--18$EP70 ,T,,ITLE--PHOTO INITIATED REACTIONS OF FREE RADICALS IN,POLY14ERS, PEROXIDE RADICALS IN POLYPROPYLENE -U- . I. I ',AUTHOR-tO3)-KLINSHPONT, E.R.r MILlNCHUKv,V.K*o PSHEZHERSKIY, S.YA. -COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR -,SOURCE-VYSOKOMOL. SOEDIN.v SER. 8 1970v' 12('I)r 88-91 .-DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 .SUBJECT AREAS--CHEHISTRY9 NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOG.Yr PHYSICS .,.TOPIC TAGS--GAMMA RADIATIONt PHOTOEFFECT, FREE RADICAL, POLYPROPYLENE, PLASTIC FILM9 EPR SPECTRUMt PEROXIDE .-..:CO.NTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ..PROXY REEL/FRAME--1984/0940 STEP NO---UR/0460/70/012/001/0098/0091 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0055638 LASS IFIED FI L 17!~_lel~-l 212 034 UNCL Assl FI ED PRIDCES*SING DATE-13SEP70 CIRC, ACCESSION NO--AP0055638 ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. IRRAON. OF (SOTACTIC POLYPROPYLENE (1) FILM'S (80 MIJ THICK) WITH GAMMA RAYS (15-200 M L- G fARAOS) PRODUCED ALLYL (11) AND POLYENE (111) RADICALS.. THE PHOTO 11NITIAl*ED RFACTIONS OF THE RADICALS WERE INVESTIGATED BY EPR SPECTROSCOPY AT.77DEGREESK. ON CONTACT WITH 0, 11 AND III RADICALS WERE CONVERTED TO PEROXIDE RAD[CALS R PRIME1 AND R PRIME2 HAVING IDENTICAL EPR SPECTRA. THE TOTAL CONCN. OF R PRIME1 AND R PRIME2 IN I INCREASED 3 FOLD FOLL014ING ;IRRADN. WITH LIGHT OF LAMBDA IS SMALLER THAN 2130 NM. A MERCHANISMP.[N~OLVIUG THE FORIJIATION OF REACTIVE SITES BY A CHAIN PROtESS,~WAS PROPOSEO. ..USSR UDC 539-3:4~ VOLKOV9 S. D., GIRS, Vi N., DENISOV, Yu. V., KLINSTRIKH1 N. Am, and KOMISSAROVA, M. L. . Sverdlovec,, Ural Polytechnic Inst-itute imeni S. M. ]Kirov "On Methods of Solving Froblems.of Therpoelasticity" .Kiev, Problemy Frochnosti, No 5. May 73, PP j_8 Abstract: The previously by one of the authors suggested now method of applying Green's functionz of la-place equation for derivation of universal algorithms foi, isothermic problems, which was propaggated to problems of thermoelawticily (!bid.; Volkov, S. D., et al., No 2, 1972)t presented the solution by a series of quadratures the convergence of n-hich was demonstra- ted.on an example with already Imown solution. 3ome result's of a further development of this method are reported. It is demon- strated that by knovm Green's function of Lanlace enuation of a given domain, the reduction to a series of ouadratures c2n be applied to the solution af adisconnected boundgry problem of" 1/2 7 71- UM VOLKOV, S. D., et al., Froblemy Prochnosti, No 5, May 73, pp 3-8 thermoelasticity of homogeneous isotropic bodles. General con- ditions of the uniform convergence of this series nxe determi- ned. The distribution of stresses in an :Uifirdte circular cy- linder loaded wit-h radial forces in an as,,,=otric and non-stan- dard tem-oerature field was detennined. Twenty six, formulas, four bibliographic references, 2/2 101 0.9 UNCLASSI.FlE0 PRqCESSING OATE--11SEP70 .,.TLE--SKIN PLASTY IN KIBE OF THE~PATELLAR REGION -U- UTHOR-KLINTSEVICH, G.N. _46 COUNTRY-'OF INFO--USSR '-'.SOURCE--VESTNIK KHIRURGT.1 IMENI 1, le GREKOVAt 8 1 - 8 3 ------- 70 ATE PUBLISHED i::~~SUBJECT AREAS--BIDLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES JOPIC TAGS-SKIN GRAFT, PLASTIC SURGERY CONTROL MAPKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED 19701 VOL 1041 NR 3, PP ..,PROXY REEL/FRAME--1966/0640 STEP NG--UR/0589/70/104/1,)91/00-3L/0081 CIRC ACCFSSION NO--AP0l0?626 F-D IOINHO31 NVIIVII -;Hl Di !)Nl(Y8' ):)V Al-Wid NINS ~131AV AINO ~A83SBO SVPI A~GA0338 GlJV bOOd CJ sllns3ii 5.tvi '~83AI3MOH 'WllglVd 3HI AD AWOlD3b33NO31SO IVIIN39NV.1 AINU lr'3SS~~JOAS SVM AISVId NINS 'Al 9OVdD '-:MN V NI 'AISVId NINS :1-ibi 30 SNV~V~ AO 0 3NIV9 SVM All I 3OVb!) 13giN V NI NqlD3b SV113IVd 31J.1 NI '03-A33 NINS ~Hl J~j lqOllV'dDiS3)J *13T81SUV -0-d0 (n)--j-3VjJ.LX~/.j:)VjjjSGV~ ma:l OLd3S!]--:-;IVG ~NISS9)GiUld fl31Jl.ssvl:)Nn 6M - UZ - ---- -------- TZ GO ll,"PaROCESS414 DATE"-11SEP70 -E--SKtN PLASTY IN KIBE OF TH& VATELLAR REGION -U-~ T G.N. ~CCUNTRY OF INFO--USSR l-'~_'SOURCE-_VESTNIK KHIRURGII IMENI I, I* GREKOVAi 1970Y.VOL 104, NR 31 Pp 0 ATE PUBLISHED------70 REAS--BIDLOGICAL A-40 MEDICAL SCHNCES ,~.SUBJECTA .'JOPIC TAGS--SKIN GRAFT, PLASTIC SURGERY CONTIROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED -PROXY REEL/FRAME--1986/0640 STEP ~'40--UR/0589/70/104/093/00~l/!'~,08" CIRC ACCFSSID.N NO--AP0102626 UNCLASSIFIED oos U-CLASSIFIEb PRIJUSS ING DATE-11SEP70 IRC ACUSSION-NO-AP0102626 A,BSTRACT/EXTRACT-- ILI) GP-0- ABSTRACT. RESTORATION 'IF THE SKEN COVE:R IN ~-THE PATELLAR REGIbN IN A KIBE, GRADE 111, WAS GAINFI) BY MEANS OF Fp~:E SKIN PLASTY. 1.4 A KIREt Gf?AUE lVy SKIN PLASTY WAS SUCCESSFUL CNLY AFTER TANGENTIAL OSTEONECRECTOMY OF THE PATELLAt HOWEVERo LAT'!: RESULTS 4ERE POOR AND RECOVERY WAS OBSERVED ONLY AFTER SKIN PLASTY ACC3ROING TO THE ITALIAN TECHNIC. UNCLASSTIFIED- Acc. Nr: Ref. Code: 4F0047358 PRDIARY SOURCE: Vestnik Khirurgii imeni 1. 1. Grekova, 1970, Vol 104, Nr j p e?y -jo SURGICAL TREATMENT OF FROST-BITEN IF-'INGERS By CL.E-- &1intscyiCA The analysis of preserving surgical tr6tment of 218 fingers in 54 patient5- with frostbite is given. A total of 340 operative interventions including 79 free skin plasties have been performed. The technic, terms and most rational methods of replacement of the wound defect after amputation of fingers are described. REEL/FRAME 19790884 4~2 -014 UNCLASSIFIEO~~ PROCESSING DATE--30OCTTO OF THE ENZYMIC ACTIVITY OF 1,EUKOCYTES ~_'AUirHOR-(05)-MIKHEYEVAl A.I.t KARDOSp V.S~t KUQtf9X*YA, A.G., MAGID, E.M., MAGI Ot A.E. or C'OUNT RY OF INFO--USSR. SOUR CE-LAB. DELO 19701 (1)v 5-7 ,_.0ATE PUBL ISHED ------- 70 `~-~~ISUSJECT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES 'll'--TOPIC TAGS--LEUKOCYTE, ENZYME ACTIVITY, LYMPHOCYTEs ESTERASE# PHOSPHATASE -'CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS r..'A)OCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ~.PRQXY REEL/FRAME--L997/0212 STEP NO--UR/9099/701000/,JO1/0005/0007 _CIRC ACCESSION 1110--APG119208 1 ,iC J~__~_SJJ7 2/2 014 UNCLASSIFIED PAdCES5.ING DATE---30OCT70 .-CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0119208 :,,ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- At3STRtCT. ENZYMIC ACTIVITIES IN LEljl-(.0CYTES OF 50 HEALTHY MEN WERE DETD* 5Y THE KAPLOW METHOD (19555. ALK. PHOSPHATASE IN NEUTROPHILS WAS 5-67 UNI ~T S, MEA~l 27.5 UNITS. A C C ORI G TO THE ACTIVITY OF ACID PHOSPHATASE (1) LEUKOCYTES 6EPLE CLASSEU INTO 4 'GROUPS. (1) NO TIVITY F CYOPLASMA DI NOT CONT IN GkANULES 2) CYTO LA ZA W TH ZS THM 0 EQ L T 5 RA LES ( ) 6-20. (41 LAKGEq THAN 20 GRANULES. IN NEUTROPHILSt THE IST 2 GROUPS WEAE- MOST COMMON (MEAN' 38.6 UNITS); 8-62PERCENT OF THE NEUTROPHILS CIINTAINFJ 1. LYMPHOCYTES LONTAIINED 6-60 UNITS (MEAN 26.8 UNITS) 1. WNSPECIFIC 'ESTERASE (11) ALSO CLASSEO LEUKOCYTES INTO THE SAME CROUPS AS I AND IN 'NEUTROPHILS IT ACTVITY WAS T HATOF LEOKO Y GROUPS 3; 20-90PE CENT OF THE LYMPHOCYTES XONTAIN D TIVE 11 (1 -13 UN T-S, MEAN 72.4 UNITS). FACILITY: GL. KLIN. VOEN. GOS. IM. BURDENKOs MOSCOW, USSR. U-N(; L AS "f ED- 112 038 UNCLASSIFIED OROCESSING DATE-30OCT70 i-.--TITLE--INTERSYMBOL INTERFERENCE DURING DATA TRANSMISSION IN MINIMU14 PHASE CHANNELS -U- q YE.I. CWNTRY OF INFO-USSR OURCE-ELEKTROSVIAZIt VOL. 24w MAR. 19709 P. 46-53~ DATE PUBLISHED ---- MAR70 :';-_!~SUBJECT AREAS-ELECTRONICS AND ELECTRICAL ENGR. T 0 P I CTAGS--DATA TRANSMISSION# AMPLITUDE FREQUENCY CURVE, SIGNAL INTERFERENCE, Q FACTOR 14ARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS -00CUM J ENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED ,-.PROXY REEL/FRAME--1997/1161 STEP NO--UR/0106/70/024/000/0046/CO'i3 17-1CIRC ACCESSION NO--APOL2000,3 UNCLAS*SEFIED UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0120008 c --(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT* INVESTIGATION OF THE VROSLEM OF ABSTRACT/ExrRACT SELECTING THE SHAPE OF THE AMPLITUDE FREQUENCY CHARACTERIST CS FOR A I MINIMUM PHASE TYPE CHANNEL WITH ALLOWANCE FOR INTERSYMBOL INTERFERENCE AND SHOOTH NOISE. THE MEAN ERROR PROBABILITY IS CALCULATEO FOR DATA -TRANSMISSION IN A CHANNEL WITH A NEAR OPTIMAL AMPLINUE FREQUENCY CHARACTERISTIC (USING THE CHANNEL~Q FACTOR AS THE 01171MALLTY CRITERION). UNCLASS IFIED ~'_'112 013 0111CLASSI pleo PROCESSIN5 DATL- -Z71NOVIO ~.-T'lTLE--EXQTHER,4IC MIXTURE FOR STEEL POUAING -U_ '~:*'iUTHOR-(05)-ASTR(lV, YE.I., KLIPOV9 A.D., KONYSIIEV V.I., LFYI)OVICHP P.M., PAXHa40Vt N. A. OF INFO--USSR :~."SOURCE-U.S.S.R- 262,329 -FREFERENCE--0TKRYTlYA, IZUBRET., PPOR. OBRAZTSY, TLIVARHYE ZNAKI 1970 47(6) PUBLISHE0-26JAN70 AREAS--MATERIALS ;-"TOPIC TAGS--METALLURGIC PATENT, METALLURGIC PLANTt EXOTHE-RIMIC PROCESS, SLAGi FOWLIORY TECHNIOLOGY, STEEL MANUFACTUPE PROCESS,L FLUORITE CG4T-Rf)L M4,qXPJG--N0 RESTRICTIUNS ~,:DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED ~"PROXY REEL/FRAME--300 1/1462 STEP NO--UR/04f)2/7(1/-',IOO/OOL)~()i)00/0,)()() CIRC ACCESSION NO--AA0126993 UINCLASS I i' (FD 212 013 UNCLASSI FIEO PROCESSENG DATE-27."JOV70 C I PC ACCESSION '40--AA012-6993 --IXT., FOR PREPG. 7ABSTPACT/EXTRACT--IU) GP-0- AB'TRACT. AN EXOTHERMIC .11 ..SLAG DURING THE CASTING OF STE4ELP HAS THE FOLU.)WING CM-1111N. SILICOCALCIUM 25-35, CA,(NO S(JB3) SURZ OR KNO SUB3 5-15t FE CINDEA 20-5, A SUBSTAINCE CONTG. 8 OXIDES 1-10 WT. PERCENT, AND FLUORITETHE REMAINDER. GORKOVSKlY METALLURGICHESKIY ZAV00- USSR UDC 576.858.25-097.2,077.3 CAYDAMIOVICH, S. Ya., OBUKHOV1k, V. R., ME12NIKOVit, Ye. E., ~~ ~LOKHO~V,&~A., KTRYUSIICHP,TKO, T. V., KLIS WO G. A., x SNOBAYEVA, Z. LAVROVA, N. A., RA SHARIPOVA, Sh. A., and SHANOYAN, N. K., Institute of Virology imeni D. 1. Ivanovskiy, Academy of Medical Sciences USSR, Moscow "use of Ultrasound to Increase Arbovirus Antigen Activity in Serological Tests in Vitro" Moscow, Voprosy Virusologii, No 3, May/Jun 1973, pp 356-360 Abstract: An ultrasonic technique to increase antigen activity was tested on five groups of arbovirus antigens. Antigens prepared from suckling mouse brain by the sucrose-acetone and freon methods, or in chick fibroblasts with- out preliminary processing, were subjected to 30-40 see of 20,000-25,000 Hz ultrasonic treatment. Titers determined before and after treatment by hemag- glutination inhibition (HAI), complement fixation (CF), and agar gel diffuse precipitation (AGDP) were compared. For group A and B arboviruses CF and HAI titers increase 4-8 times after treatment, while AG11rP titers remaiued unchanged. In the Kemerovo-Bunyamvera-California group, the CF titers increased by 2-4 times, and no change was observed in MI titers. CF titers increased 2-8 times for all but Neapolitan arbovirus of the Phlebotomus group. 1/2 1116 USSR GAYDLHOVICH, S. Ya., et al., Voprosy Virusologii, No 3, May/Jun 1973, pp 356- 360 The only RAI response in this group was by Bujaru arbovirus, and only after treatment the AGDP titers increased in a few cases. Ultrasonic treatment bad an especially favorable effect on CP and AGDP titers in the Uukuniemi group, while changes in IL&I titers were less pronounced. Thus ultrasonic treatment normally facilitates antigen activity in CP and tW reactions and has a variable effect on the AGDP reaction. Treated antigens did not lose specificity. It is concluded that ultrasonic treatment can be used not only to increase titers but also to reveal titers of relatively inactive antigens. 2/2 17 -=M=I a i T. -7 USSR Z) L uw 576-853-25-010,73-9) SK0FET,'T:SA, P. G., Cvf:)..!mvjc-r, S. 'La. V. it., YAROVIDY.1 p. G. il. 2-2,L'IUKOVA Ye. E., Instit-Ite Of I~IMC2 rand OC Vir:.)I-ojy ineni D. 1. AcaOomy of Isolation of M-m -cc;-.1 the Kc!,--crovo Grouj) ill t2ne SSR" 6, 1-9'(,q, ri) 709-711 -Abcmract: A In 1971 fro!n ut, lxod.,z,.n ricinus n0c.1 by day re :a!; u 50 had littIc! effout o,j yj.,!,,-, j..; as U, lu~ ta o-t";'! huma: by CUL i7c. x.!t-'-:),i reaction. Tlt-~ 'u I f lu- 'id 111Z Ffr) a~:h vj Url ii;114)1"k, -t~. c".11 rll-r ir. the GAYDAMNICH, USSR 1W 5-6-858-25 S. YA., NIKIFOROV, L. P., V. L., OSM7.0VA, V. &-j-h-MSENKO, G. A., U-71WONSKILY, V. 1.9 and I~XSVNIXOVA, Y2.11%-, institut~- of I. Ivan ovskiyj USSR Academy of Nedical Sciences, 140scow 111vew Aebovirus Sm-wakh from the Uulkuniemi Group" 1,110sco if* Voprosy virusolog,11, lio It JW1/F4b 71, PP 21-25 Abstracti I5olation of the arbovirus Sun,3kh In the USS-11 is describad for the first time. The v1rus waz obtained fron the hearts and lwigs o-f black- bi-rds (Turduo ncrula) collocted in AzerbVdzl,=. The virim -was sitd-lar to but not identical with UttAuniem:L, as shown in the ap. r (,o1. difiCurion test, but not by the COMDic~,.cnt fixation tezt. Thu isolated virus was patho'-enic for suckling white nice. An incubation period of 11 daya ;a-3 foun-1 upon intracerebral, which in subsequent passages iraz reduced to 56 hou--s. ,uce 1-3 days of aGe were most susceptible. t'~n antiGon for ho:,,tc-,-,,1uUnatIon re- actior-s was prepared from sucklinG riouse brains by the u-rose-acetone nethod. The titer of this antiCon did not exceed l164, Subsequent wozrkup with Tween- 80 and ether raised the titer to D256-1i512, 'When the.anLigen ),as prepared by the freon nethod, the riaterial uas enriched with Tween-C-0 and ethor and 25 USSR GAYDAMOVICH, S. YA., et al. , Voprosy Virusologii, 110 J., Ran/Pab 71, PP 21-25 cou2A serve for agglutination of erythrocytes in dilutioor, OT 1[ 32-1164, Optimum heraWlutination was achieved at pli 5.8 ard at a ter.-per.-ature of 370C. According to prelininary data on agar diffusionp the ~u=-J:h vinis is not- Identical with the Uul-.un3 emi virus. A detailed study of the axtigenic atructure of Sumakh virus is urder way, 2/2 USSR une ft6.9~18-25-ky,0-9-091 GUSOVSKIY, Ya, M , .imisEmo, G. A.., and GAYDPIIDVICH, S. Ya, Institute of Infectious Diseases,' Mil-EV~Y-6rMh1th Ukrainian SSR, Kiev, mid the Institiate of Virolooi Imeni D. 1. Ivanovskiy, Acadevj of Medical Sciences USSR, Moscow "Morphological Changes in Experimental Infections With the Sumakh Virus (Uukurliyemi Influenza)" Moscow, Voprosy Virusoloeii, No 2, 1973, PP 167-171 Abstra-et: This commirication. consists of the first pathomorphologic description of mice infected with the Sumkh Virus. Infections were, induced in 1-2 and Q6-7 day-old mice by intracerebral injection of A brain suspeasion contai.,3ing a 100 LD 50 dose of the virus, strain 540, isolated in Azerbaydzhan in 1963. Prior to injection, the suspension was filtered through a 220 nrl pore size 14illipore filter to exclude bacterial infection. Centrol animals recetv-ed a Eindlf-rly treated suspension,of a normal brain. Histologic sections were obt,~,ired dailYl comencing with the 3rd post-infection day (prior to the apnea-rance of clilical symptoms), fixed in !,Yfj foiimlin, and stained with bevatoxylln-eosin and thionine by the method of Nissl. Histoloi--ic evaluation tfilit pl-ior to the dev~-__Isp- deVelareri tJ_,C ra;a, rient of clinical signs, encephalitis had al primary infla;mkition of the dorsal regions oP Vine. (Ontic tolamius), gray matter of the horn of hmon, and 'the vontral aectiono of' the USSR GUSOVSKIY, Ya. M., Voprosy Virusologii, No 2, 1973, pP 167-171 brain stem. The cells showed partial destniction or mnplete karyojysis' Infiltration of the affected parench,,ma consisted prinarily of ve--Mented. leul-.ocytes, with some lymphocytes and an occasional. histiocyte. DitCr, an inflammatory vascular reaction occurred which was fairly lirnitcJ. With the passage of time neii regions became involved, but.the hi,;tat'op_o[:-,ra_phic distrili;-I- tion of the lesions remained the sane. On the 4th day thure vax evidence of phagocytosis, accelerated 1,.nnphacyte infiltration., and more discrete Clial hyperplasia. On the 6-7th day, the infiltrate consisted predominantly of lymphocytes, Uong with a small number ofmonocytes, hiqtiocytes, and Clial elements. Leptnmeningitis develolood in each of tim iru'octed aniz,nic. viLh locai- ization of the infla-nmatox-f- infiltrates in the sulci. 1P~Ptorai:nInid Lis in. the control mice was apparently due to injection of the bradn sliGnension and the attendant %'Orauna, and parenchymal cells at sove distance from the inflar-.ratory foci were seen to undergo dystrophic changes, from tigiolysis to frank lysic while glial reaction was lirdted to irregular hyperplasin. in the ..-hite and C~IRIY uatter. In the excerimental anLTals the inflammatory c).-1azCes in the 1-2 and the 6-7 day old mice (at the tine o.,-r' injection) were comparr-th:1e, with the oldei: animala only showing a tandency fox- uarlier localizatioori of the :LeLio.-as. It! addition, the experimntal anim,18 shmed. productive frx':al InOniiiiattion ivid 2/3 1~9 USSR GUSOVSKJY.~ Ya. M., Voprosy Virusologii, No 2, 1973, PP 167-171 dystrophic changes in the skeletal mscles, vhile no such cha-r4.7es were observed in the control mice. Lesions of the internal organs were noncontributory in that they did not differ from those commonly encountered in other infections or intoxications. In terms of the morpholoBic picture) Su=M virus encephalitis may be cha-racterized as a selective, acute., primm-y polioenceplialitis. 3/3 USSR MC 632.95.02860-253 SUPIN, G. 8.9 I=SENKO, M. A., and UWEMN, M. 3H., All Union Scientific Research Institu'leof Chemical Plant Proteetive Agents and An Union Scientific Research Institute of the Hygiene and Toxicology of Pesticides, Polymers,, and Plastic Materials "Polarographic Determinations of*the Residual Quantities of Fungicides Derivatives of DithlocarbanIc Acids" Moscow, Xhimiya v Sellskom Xhozyaystval Vol 11p No 11 (1201 197)j pp 40-42 Abstracti The authors studied the conditions fbripola=graphic determima- tion of microquantities of taineb, polyzar-cins, polycarbacinep forbam, tsiran; and othylenothiuram dioulfide in biological -material, The Luialytical r4athod. has been reported in detaill The minimal quantity of penticides dieternined by this method is 80 .44g/ml (for ground for f bers 10-2 ). In % analyzIng untreated material the mensitIvity: dmps by ~a. factor of' 10. 27 - USSR UDC 632.95 PISPMENNAYA, M. V., K_LISENKO,.__H_._A_ J.. "Thin-Layer Chromatography of Residual Quantities of New Organophosphorus Pesticides" Probl. analit. khimii [Problems of Analytic Chemistry -- Collection of Works], Vol 2, Moscow, Nauka Press, 1972, pp 111-115 (Translated from Referativnyy Zhurnal Khimiya, No 24(11), 1972, Abstract No 24N,584, by T. A. Belyayeva) Translation: Optimal conditions are found for chromatography for the pusti- cides khlorofos, rogor, kil'bal', sayfos,.trikhlometaLos-3, fenkapton, tsidial, fozalon, karbofos, butifos, fta,lofos. The adsorbent is type KSK or ShSK silica gel, the mobile solvent is CIIC13, the devel.oper is bromophinol reagent. The conditions were used for analysis of residual quantities of insecticides in air, water and vegetable products. The preparations were extracted from the specimens analyzed with ether, n-hexane, CILC13. Adsorption chromatography on columns with A1203, M90, silica gel,..bentonite and freezing were tested as methods for removal of waxes from the extracts. The most satisfactory results were produced by freezing the waxts from an acetone solution (-70*) or a water-acetone solution (0*). The sensitivity of the determination is 5-10 M preparation in a specimen or 0.1-0.2 mg/kg. VM, TIRE 11 USSR KLISENMO,---- "All-Union Symposium on.Pesticide Residues and Their Contamination in Foods, Feeds, and the Surface Environment (Analytical Methods Section)" Moscow, Zhurnal Analiticheskoy Khimii, Vol 27, Vyp 8:0 1972, pp 1656-1657 Abstract: This meeting on the "Introdu Ct4 on of Chemical Technology into Agriculture" was held Nov 17-19, 1971, in Tallin. Topics covered centered around methods of analyzing for pesticidest including the theory of current analytical techniques -- thin-layer chromatography, polarography, colori- metry and enzyme colorimetry, extraction-photometric techniques, and special emphasis on gas-liquid chromatography -- the development of new techniques and improvements for existing ones, and the application of techniques to analyzing for specific compounds in a variety of samples and to analyzing a specific sample for a variety of compounds. F 77 IT,-, -.I: T I ff-rilm- I] 1, lulahal'.1-1 It 11 Iltil! LIli INH I I ItlintrAL I I ffill!W 11.11,11-_411 "'15111711 at 111111 i ipallilt I :q!i 11111A I I ME lWalli -ill T USSR UDC 615.9.074 KLISENKO, M. A., LEBEDEVA, T. A., and YLWOVA, Z. F. '?'_'C~hecal Analysis of Traces of Poisons" Moscow, Khimicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhimikatov (ci. English above), Meditsina, B72, 312 pp (from Khimicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhinli- katov, pp 2-5, 308-312) Translation. This book is a handbook on~the analysis of traces of poisons. On the basis of many years of experience in the field of analyzing traces of poisons, the authors have included the most sensitive,.reliable and simple chemical procedures for analyzing poisons in the air, vater, soil, food products, and biological material in this book. The book opens w-;th a chapter in which the theoretical principles of the basic poison analysin tachniquea nre disciansed: photometric., spectro- photometric, polarographic and chromatographic. In the book procedures are presented for 'determinIng all of the =st wide- spread groups of poisons: organophosphorus, organochlb)-ine, copper-containing, 1/21 5 USSR KLISENKO, M. A., et al., Khimicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhimikatov, Meditsina, 1972, 312 pp (from KhImicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv yadakhini- katav, pp 2-5, 308-312) mercury-containing, dinitrophenols, carbamates and dithiocarbamates, poisons of plant origin and others. The procedures for analyzing herbicides are put in a separate chapter. The description of the analysis procedures is preceded by brief information on the physical-chemical propertiea of the.compounds. At the end of the book there is information About the limiting allowable poison concentrations in the air and water and also the admissible residual amounts of these com- pounds in food products and forage. When selecting the reported general theoretical and practical data, we had in mind tile interests of those readers WILO wish to approach tile use of the procedures recommended in the book creatively. The book is designed for chemists and sanitation is lAtysiclans at the rayon, municipal and oblast sanitation-epidemiological stations and otber special- ists working in the field of industrial sanitation chemistry, hygiene of 2/21 USSR KLISENKO, A. A., et al., Xhimicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhimikatov, Meditsina, 1972, 312 pp (from Khimicheski analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhimi- Y katov, pp 2-5, 308-312) labor, hygiene of foods, and publ'n and communal hygiene. It will be useful to toxicologists, forensic chemists, biochemists, veterinary doctors, agronomists, and so on. The book can also be used as a training aid for students of the medical and other institutions of higher 'earning. Introduction At this time the list of chemicals used in the national economy is growing. The application of chemical means of plant protection from pests, diseases and weeds and also chemical means of protecting animals from ectoparasites is acquiring great significance. 'ilia research In the toxic' izy of applied compounds and their normalization in the external environment Is expanding simultaneously. The network, of laboratories studying the polson content in the air, urater, soil, food products and biological material is growing. 3/21 6 USSR KLISENKO, A. A., et al., Khimicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv vadokhimikatov, Meditsina, 1972, 312 pp (from Khimicheskiy analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhimi- katorv, pp 2-5, 308-312) However, basic research to study the biological effect of chemicals, deep ion into the intimate links of the mechanism of their effect on man, peuetrat animals and plants, sanitary monitoring of the pesticide content in the en- vironment, the diagnosis and prophylaxis.of possible acute and chronic poisonings - these cannot be realized in the absence of reliable methods of qualitative detection and quantitative analysis of these chemicals and the products of their conversion in various media. The indicated methods must be distinguished by high sensitivity. They must define the residual amounts of pesticides an the level of the maximum Der- missible concentrations (MPC) or the maximum residual amounts (MRA) which in the majority of cases do not exceed fractions of a milligram per cubic meter of air or per kilogram of food product. Thus, we are talking about analyzing tenths of a microgram of pesticide in a sample in cases where no poison content is admissible, even appreciably smaller amounts. The mtthod must also be selective since several poisons can be present in a sample belonging to various groups of compounds, Transformations of the compounds 4/21 USSR UDC: 632.95 GIRENKO, D. B., L41SENI~Q ~L A. "Determination of Certain Pesticides in Surrounding Objects by Gas-Liquid Chromatography" Probl. analit. khimii [Problems of Analytic Chemistry -- Collection of Works], Vol 2, Moscow, Nauka Press, 1972, pp 39-43 (Translated from Rcferativnyy Zhurnal Khimiya, No 24(11), 1972, Abstract No 24N578, by T. A. Belyayeva) Translation: The method of GLC is used to determine organic chlorine and phosphorus-containing pestJ'cides in water, air and food products- Analysis is performed on a chromatograph with an electron-Capture detector and a stainless steel column filled with chromasorb IV with 10% nonpolar silicone oil type DS-200. The temperature of the column and detector is 200', of the specimen evaporatica chamber 2200, N2 carrier gas rate 120 ml/min. The temperature was reduced by 20* for organophosphorus pesticides. identification of components is performed by relative delay time in comparison to Aldrin. Compounds are extracted from specimens being analyzed with n-hexane. Extracts of specimens containing no waxes were purified by TLC on Al 0 -? in the T1iF41cCN system 2 (1:1). then in MeCN. Extracts of specimens cont5ining large quantities of waxes were eluted from a layer of petroleum ether adsorbent, purified in a USSR Girenko, D. B., Klisenko, M. A., Probl. analit. khimii, Vol 2, Moscow, Nauka Press, 1972, pp 39-43 column with Al203 with p1l 4.5-S.5, eluted with a mixture of hexane and ether (9:1). The sensitivity of the determination is 0.005 mglkg. 2/2 29 ................. Analytical Ch6mistry USSR uDc 632.96 KLISENKO. 1-1. A.., LEBMEVA, T. A., and YURKOVA, Z. F. "Chemical Analysis of Trace Amounts of Poisonous Cheadcals" Xhimicheskly analiz mikrokolichestv yadokhimikatov (cf. English above), Moscow, "Keditsina!'j 1972, 312 PP ill. 1 r. 66 k (from JtZh-Kbimiya, No 22, Nov 72, Abstract No 22N382) Transiationt The work discusses the simplest, most sensitive and reliable methods of determining poisonous chemicals -- organophow-pbo3nis, organa- chlorine, copper-containing and mercury-containing dinitrophenols, carbamates and dithiocarbamates -- in thc airf water, soil, food products and biologiml materials. In addition, the theoretical principles are given for basic methods of analyzing poisonous chemicals - photometric, photaspectrometric, polarographic and chro=tographic. Infotmation is givon on the physical and chemical properties of cbemicalso maxiwua pernissible concentrationa In the air and water, and also the permissible midual quantities of t" cheaicals In food products and animals feed. The authors gelaeralize the experience on extracting chemicals from a. sampl* and purify1mg the extracts. (From the abstra"). 1/1 USSR UDC 63P--95 KAGAN, YU. S., TSEAMO. M. A.-and PAVISHM T. It. "Some Questions in the Quantitative Toxicology of Orgarophoaphorus Co=Pounds V sb. Khimiya i priy,-eneniye fosfororpan. sovedin. (Cheintstrr and Application of Organophosphorus Compounds -- Collection of Works), Moscaw, "Nauka," 1972, pp 438-448 (from RZh-Yhimiya,, uo 14, 25 Jul 72, Abstract No 14N448 by T. A. Belyayeva) Translation: In vivo experiments during study of the neutralization of orCan- 0 osphorus compounds (OPC) confirnmed the regularity noted during in vitro investigations, viz. that there is a correlation 'between the rate of neu-trali- zation and the degree of toxicity. Neutralization of OFCs in insects takes place considerably more slowly than in the organism of-warm-blooded animals, and this is the basic reason for the seloctivity of QPQn for insects. USSR UDC 632.95 SHMIGIDINA, A. It. , KLISENKO M. A. "Microanalysis of Acrex and Caratan in objects of the External Environment and Biological Examples by the "!ethod of Thin-Layer Chromatography" Tr. 2-go I'ses. soveshch. po issled, ostatkov pestitslEvv i profilakt. zlr-r,,,--z- neniya im! produktov pitanlya, ko=nov i vnesh. sredy (!-!~nrks of the Second All--- Union Conference on the Investi;-ation of Festicide Residues ard Preventive Contamination of Food Products, Fodder and'Environment),, TalliM, 1971, pp 216- 219 (from FM-Khimiya, No 12, Jun 72, Abstract No 32N480) Translation: The nitrophenol pesticides acrex and caratan area analyzed in technical preparations, the air, vater, d1blects of pLint, and animal origin by the mthod of thin-layer chromatography in silica gel KOK (0,15 mm) fixed with gypsum in the hexane-acetone (4;1) system. Zn-powder is introduced into the sorbent,, in the solution of color-torming reagent, AcOIL; the anAno compounds are analyzed with ninhydrin. 52 U6SR uDc 632.95 N!EKSHMYIT- M. SH. ?a V AlQU". A. NORMOW "Chrmt%raphic Separation of Dimethyl and Ethylene-bis-ditbiocarbanates and Their Conversion Products" Tr. 2-go Vses. soveshch. no issled. ostatkov pestitsidov i proftiakc. zas-,rvax- nenlya imiprodukLov .pitaniya, kornov i vnesh. sredv Works of the Second All- Union Conference on the Investipation of Fes~ticide Residues and Preventive p 143- Contamination of Food Products, Fodder an& ZiriironmenOr Tallin, 1971, p- 147 (from lft-Khimlya, No 12, Jun 72, Abstract No 12LN475) Translation: DiL-ethyldithiocarbanates.and ethylene-his-dithiocarbanates are subjected to thin-layer chromatography on a reinforced layer of Al20 3 in var- ious systems of solvents In C611 61 acetone, MeOH and a mixture of n-hexane- C 11 acetone (8:0.8:2)0 ;he magnitudes of R of compounds of the dinethyldi- 6 6- f thiocarbamate group decrease in the follwing series: S > tatramethylthiourea > > TMGD > cyram *> DIUM Mu, and the nobility of tile colVounds of the ethylene- bis-dithiocarbarate group increases in the series: cynab (maneb, and so on) <