Effect of Substituent Functional Groups on Nucleophilic Reaction Velocity: Determination of Quaternization Rates with Methyl Iodide for Poly-Substituted Pyridines

1988 ◽  
Vol 269O (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. M. Elshaße
1992 ◽  
Vol 57 (7) ◽  
pp. 1393-1404 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ladislav Svoboda ◽  
Jan Uhlíř ◽  
Zdeněk Uhlíř

The properties of Ostsorb DETA, a selective ion exchanger based on modified bead cellulose with chemically bonded diethylenetriamine functional groups, were studied, and its applicability to the preconcentration of trace amounts of lead from aqueous solutions was verified. The conditions of the preconcentration procedure in the column and batch modes were optimized for this purpose. The results obtained were applied to the determination of lead in phosphoric acid.


1952 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 612-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. H. Hastings ◽  
A. T. Watson ◽  
R. B. Williams ◽  
J. A. Anderson

1960 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 181-198
Author(s):  
H. L. Pederson

Abstract The use of S-35 in a vulcanizate can lead to an easy determination of bound sulfur as the ratio of activities of the acetone extracted sample and the same sample in its original state. At present, we do not specify the meaning of the sulfur value determined in this manner otherwise than that it is a gross value ideally free from accelerator sulfur. A number of Russian papers have reported the use of radiosulfur in vulcanization studies—for instance, Blokh's survey. Later Dogadkin described exchange reactions specifying the character of the sulfur bond in combination with an extensive discussion of the chain mechanism for the function especially of thiurams, leading to at least three types of vulcanizates: nonsulfur thiuram cures with —C—C— crosslinks and no exchange at all, DPG stocks having a high exchange rate, and thiazole mixes having intermediate rates. Of course, this is a very general picture explaining only the outstanding differences in aging stabilities imported in the systems mentioned. The quoted papers give very little experimental detail. However, there is a description of the exchange that can be performed by boiling the sample in a benzene solution of the reactant—e.g., sulfur or accelerator. It is of minor importance where the radioactivity is placed; however, the treatment of inactive vulcanizates with solutions of active material is very unpleasant. Therefore the active material is added in every case by compounding and the exchange is carried out by means of an inactive solution in acetone. The present work was undertaken to investigate differences in stability of the sulfur bond in vulcanizates having increasing states of cure, preferentially in a series of vulcanizations at constant temperature. In addition to exchange with elemental sulfur and sulfur donors (tetramethylthiuramdisulfide) we have investigated the Meyer and Hohemenser reaction with methyl iodide, more elaborately developed by the brilliant work of Selker and Kemp. This reaction is thought specifically to indicate the allylic bound sulfur. It is easily performed by boiling the active vulcanizate with a mixture of methyl iodide and acetone. Fletcher and Fogg indicate in their recent work that thiuram-sulfur systems owe their remarkable aging resistance to the content of ZnDC formed by the decomposition of thiuram during cure. Further, it is well known that certain compounds, such as the zinc salt of MBT, give a similar improvement. We therefore stress that stabilities as stated here, based upon the exchange reaction, will not necessarily bear a unique relation to aging stability, but rather show an intrinsic stability of the sulfur bond.


1973 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 1148-1155
Author(s):  
Yazaemon MORITA ◽  
Yukitoshi KOGURE ◽  
Akira NOMURA

In a paper on this subject published four years age, Hartridge and Roughton (1927) described some preliminary experiments upon the rate of uptake of oxygen and carbon monoxide by the red blood corpuscle, the observations being made by means of their reaction velocity technique (Hartridge and Roughton, 1922–1927). The general principles of the method were as follows. Through one lead of the apparatus a suspension of reduced corpuscles in saline was forces into the mixing chamber, whilst through the other lead was forced a solution of oxygen (or carbon monoxide) in saline. The two fluids mixed in the mixing chamber within 0·001 second or less and then travelled down the observation tube. Determination of the percentage of oxyhæmoglobin (or carboxyhæmoglobin) in the moving fluid at various cross sections of the observation tube was made by means of the reversion spectroscope, these measurements, together with a knowledge of the rate of flow of the fluid down the observation tube, giving the necessary data for plotting the rate of uptake of O 2 or CO by the corpuscles against time. The most interesting feature of the results was the much slower uptake of O 2 by hæmoglobin in the intact corpuscle as compared with the of O 2 by hæmoglobin in laked solution as previously recorded by Hartridge and Roughton (1925). In the corpuscle experiments the time scale had to be expressed in hundredths of a second instead of in thousandths of a second as in the hæmoglobin solution experiments ( vide fig. 2 of Hartridge and Roghton, 1927). Confirmatory results by somewhat different technique have been obtained lately by Dirken and Mook (1931). These will be referred to again later.


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