113 research outputs found
Application of the principle of corresponding states for polar substances
"March 6, 1961.""Reprinted from Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data, Vol. 6, No. 1, January 1961 Page 28.
University of Missouri Chemical Engineering 1903 to 2013 : a history from the beginning
"September 3, 2013."This treatise is a history of the Chemical Engineering Department at the University of Missouri. It covers the years 1903 to 2013 and includes the successful development of the Nuclear Engineering Graduate Program, the faculty members, accomplishments and future directions of the department.Preface -- Pt. 1. The first 120 years -- Pt. 2. Tracking the growth of chemical engineering technology -- Pt. 3. Chemical engineering faculty -- Pt. 4. Future directions for chemical engineering
Determination of diffusion coefficients from viscosity measurements : effect of higher Chapman-Enskog approximations
"Reprinted from The Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol. 45, No. 10, November, 1966.""Numerical calculations based on the higher Chapman-Enskog approximations show that mutual diffusion coefficients calculated from binary mixture viscosity data agree within experimental uncertainty with the measured D12 values at compositions corresponding to a trace of the heavy component."--Page 3752
A SURVEY OF RESULTS INVOLVING TRANSFORMS AND CONVOLUTIONS IN FUNCTION SPACE
In this paper we survey various results involving Fourier-Wiener transforms, Fourier-Feynman transforms, integral transforms and convolution products of functionals over function space that have been established since Cameron and Martin first introduced Fourier-Wiener transforms in 1945
RELATIONSHIPS AMONG THE FIRST VARIATION, THE CONVOLUTION PRODUCT, AND THE FOURIER-FEYNMAN TRANSFORM
In this paper we examine the various relationships that exist among the first variation, the Fourier- Feynman transform, and the convolution product for functionals on Wiener space that belong to a Banach algebra S
Thermodynamic properties of n-propyl alcohol
"July 3, 1961.""Reprinted from Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data, Vol. 6, No.1, January 1961, Page 28.
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A study of ascorbic acid metabolism of adolescent children
Published December 1947. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalo
Recommended from our members
Dental caries experience among selected population groups in the state of Oregon
Published May 1950. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalo
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Ascorbic acid requirements of older adolescents
1. The recommended allowance of the National Reasearch
Council, 100 mg ascorbic acid for the 18-year-old boys and 80 mg
for the 16 to 19-year-old girls, did not maintain mean plasma ascorbic
acid values at levels as high as the respective saturation means. For
the girls all the mean values were above 0.80 mg per cent (ranging
from 0.83 to 1.07). The boys' values ranged from 0.67 to 0.91 mg
per cent; two out of the seven values were below 0.80 mg per cent.
2. When the ascorbic acid intake was decreased to 10 mg less
than the recommended allowance of the National Research Council,
it was found that for six of the eight girls the 70 mg intake of ascorbic
acid was as effective as the 80 mg intake in maintaining the ascorbic
acid concentration of the plasma, and that for six of the seven boys
(JJ's values were excluded) an intake of 90 ing of ascorbic acid was
as effective as 100 mg in maintaining the plasma ascorbic acid concentration.
3. The plasma ascorbic acid concentrations of these subjects
showed individual variations even when the ascorbic acid intake was
considered on the basis of mg of ascorbic acid per kg of body weight.
4. The ten-day experimental periods were more desirable than
the periods of one week. This was particularly true for the saturation
period when some of the subjects had been on diets low in
ascorbic acid prior to the study.
5. The data in this study were analyzed statistically by testing
the significance of differences between means and by analysis of
variance.Published May 1950. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalo
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