The reduction of organic sulphur compounds by oil washing
β Scribed by Cooper, Charles
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1939
- Weight
- 667 KB
- Volume
- 58
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0368-4075
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Poper to be read a t a joint meeting of the Chemical Engineering Group with the Monchester Section o f the Society, the Institution of Chemical Engineers, and other Societies to be held on Friday.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Taking the unweiehted vaiuee, ns given in Tnble 111, we have found the comelabon coefficient, r, to be 0:58 (P, for 11 pairs, = 0.06). There is thus a 1 in 16 probnbility thnt n grenter value of r might. nrise by chance in sampling uncorrelnted material. Farthermore, pens (" Harrison's Glory," dried
## Abstract A recently described apparatus for the determination of traces of sulphur in organic compounds has been investigated. The original method described B vertical tube heated to 830Β° C. and packed with silica, on to which the sample was allowed to fall drop by drop, and burnt in a rapid cur
a ; M c H o '0 sible to obtain aphenyl boron-azomethine chelate [B(C6H5)2+] in which with tetraphenyldiboron oxide only one [cf. (4)] (m.p. 130-135 'C, yellow) but with BF3 both chelating groups react (m.p. 276-277 "C, yellow, fluorescene blue green).
## Abstract Reactions at 35Β°C of orange oil in contact with air and water were investigated by gasβliquid chromatography (g.l.c.) and by oxygen absorption measurements. Degradation of the orange oil was reduced in the presence of citric acid, but addition of sulphur dioxide caused a drastic increas