Introduction. 200 Years of Nickel Progress 1751-1951 - Industrial

200 Years of Nickel Progress 1751-1951. O. B. J. Fraser. Ind. Eng. Chem. , 1952, 44 (5), pp 949–949. DOI: 10.1021/ie50509a016. Publication Date: May...
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Symposium presented

in part before the Division of Industrial and Engineering CHEMICAL SOCIETY Chemistry at the Diamond Jubilee Meeting of the AMERICAN

DEVELOPMENTS IN NICKEL 0.B.J.Frarer

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METAL; OXIDE ISOTOPES OF NICKEL

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A.R.Brosi ELECTROCHEMISTRY O F NICKEL W.A.Wesley CORROSION-RESISTING NICKEL A L L O Y S W. Z.Friend and F. L. LaQue M E T A L L U R G I C A L NICKEL A N A L Y S I S W.D. Moaerman RELATIONBETWEEN ELECTROCHEMICAL FOREIGN ION CONTENT Robert L. Tichenor

CATALYSTS

950

955 957 965

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911

990 995 999 1003 1006 1011

CHEMICALS 973

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977

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985

CATALYTIC ACTIVITY O F NICKEL. THEORETICAL ASPECTS D. A, Dowden NICKEL C O M P O U N D S A S C A T A L Y S T R A W M A T E R I A L S John G. Dean

H Y D R O G E N A T I O N O F FATS AND O I L S A.E.Balley.. ACETYLENE AND C A R B O N M O N O X I D E CHEMISTRY Clyde McKinley H Y D R O C A R B O N - S T E A M REACTION M. R. Arnold, Kenton Atwood, H. M. Bough, and H. D. Smyser H Y D R O G E N A T I O N O F C O M M E R C I A L ALDOLL C. Kinney Hancock CATALYTIC ACTIVITY OF NICKEL BORIDES Raymond Paul, Paul Bulsson, and Nicole Joseph O X I D A T I O N O F SULFUR C O M P O U N D S IN C O A L G A S Roland H. Grlfflth

NICKEL C O M P O U N D S IN CERAMICS Cameron G. Harman and Burnham W. King 1015 . . NICKEL DERIVATIVES OF AZO DYESN e i l M. Mackenzle, Henry E. Millson, and Byron L. West 101 7 NICKEL C O M P O U N D S IN ELASTOMERS John J.Verbanc. 1023 1 Presented at the Southwest Regional Meeting, ACS, Austin, Tex., December

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1951.

NICKEL

has much of interest to chemical and allied industries, either by itself or in numerous corrosion-resistant alloys of high strength and fabricability for the construction of equipment for process operations and facilities for transportation and storage. Nickel catalysts have industrial value in vegetable and animal oil processing, petroleum refining, and in producing petrochemicals and pharmaceuticals, which is out of a l l proportion to the moderate but increasing tonnage of the element so used. The value of its oxide in ceramics, principally for the promotion OF adherence of ground-coat vitreous enamels i s well known, but uses for nickel compounds in synthetic rubber formulations, dyestuffs, and other fields are less appreciated. The Nickel Symposium brings together previously known and considerable new information of value and adds t o the record of the Diamond Jubilee Meeting a commemorative interest in the discovery of nickel, in 1751, b y the Swedish scientist A x e l Fredrik Cronstedt. 0. B. J. FRASER May 1952

INDUSTRIAL AND ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY

949