This study attempted to replicate previous reports of associations between panic disorder and joint hyperlaxity. The authors also examined possible associations between reacitivity to carbon dioxide (CO(2)), a model for panic vulnerability, and hyperlaxity in healthy volunteers. One hundred and one
Reactivity of petroleum coke to carbon dioxide between 1030 and 1180 K
โ Scribed by Ralph J. Tyler; Ian W. Smith
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 658 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0016-2361
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Measurements were made of the reaction rate of three sizes (2.9, 0.9 and 0.22 mm) of petroleum-coke particles with carbon dioxide over the temperature range 1018-l 178 K, and at carbon dioxide partial pressures between 26 and 118 kPa. A limited number of G-nikw measurements were made on samples of a commercial aluminium-smelting anode, an experimental anode, and AGKSP graphite. The materials were all reacted under conditions of chemical rate control alone: there were no rate limitations due to transport processes without or within the carbon particles. The order of the rate with respect to carbon dioxide concentration was found to be close to 0.6 for the petroleum coke and anode carbons, and between 0.6 and 0.8 for the graphite. Activation energies in the range 203-237 kJ/mol were found for petroleum coke; 187-237 kJ/mol for electrode carbon; and 293 kJ/mol for the graphite. For the petroleum coke, the order was found to be constant up to 45% burn-off and the activation energy essentially constant between 21 and 45% burn-off. The reactivity ps, based on unit pore surface area of the petroleum coke at a carbon dioxide pressure of 101 kPa, can be represented by: ps = aexp (--E/(RT)I . For the 2.9 and 0.9 mm particles, a = 6.1 X lo6 g/m* min and E = 215 kJ/mol; for the 0.22 mm particles the respective values are 1.8 X lo7 and 222. The reactivity p of the commercial electrode on a weight basis was within the range of those of the coke and experimental electrode. For AGKSP graphite, values of ps were close to those found by Walker and Raatsr4.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The speed of sound u in carbon dioxide has been measured along seven isotherms at ลฝ . temperatures between 220 and 450 K by means of a spherical resonator. At supercritical temperatures, the greatest pressure on each isotherm was chosen to correspond to approximately one-half of the critical density