NEW CHEMISTRY EXAM - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

Nov 6, 2010 - And great effort was made to reduce its reading difficulty. It consists of two parts, 50 items each. Each part can be completed in 40 mi...
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EDUCATION

NEW CHEMISTRY EXAM NSTA and ACS have pub­ lished a n e w chemistry test for high school students

A t Cornell University you'll f i n d almost 2 0 0 0 feet o f PYREX o i o e used f o r drainlines that must h a n d l e corrosive wastes.

LOOK! NO LEAKS! H o w Cornell University solved the p r o b l e m of d r a i n l i n e s for corrosives

Drainlines from the second floor School of Nutrition lab in Cornell's Savage Hall run slon° the cei!in°s of the first floor offices. Here, faulty joints were leaking corrosive damaging wastes. So out came the leaky lines and joints. And in went 700 feet of PYREX brand glass pipe. The people at Cornell have already learned about PYREX glass pipe from the 1200 feet that has been installed in Cor­ nell's Baker Laboratory of Chemistry. With PYREX pipe in, corrosion is out because this pipe is made from a glass that is not bothered by most acids or alkalies. No corrosion means no leaks.

And no leaks means no costly patchwork maintenance. If you visited the Cornell labs you'd see at a glance (this is transparent pipe) that all kinds of wastes go through—like litmus paper, cork, and pieces of tubing. If by chance blockage does occur—a rare happening because glass is so smooth— you can spot it at once, without costly dismantling. Finally, you will find that glass pipe is easy to install. Light in weight, it requires fewer hangers than lines made from other conventional materials. And you can get pipe and fittings in all the sizes you need. For complete details, send for Bulletin PE-30, "PYRJEX® pipe for drainlines." Write to Plant Equipment Sales, Corning Glass Works, 18 Crystal St., Corning, N.Y.

C O R N I N G GLASS WORKS C O R N I N G

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lOHM 1.959, a new high school chem­ istry test, will be ready for distribution on April 1. This is a year-end test d e ­ signed for use by authorized chemistry teachers and administrators. It was prepared by National Science Teachers Association and the Examinations Com­ mittee of the American Chemical So­ ciety with technical advice from the Testing Bureau and Statistical D e p a r t ­ ment of St. Louis University. Test items in the exam measure the degree to which a student has mastered the concepts considered significant by more than 40 experienced chemistry teachers. T h e new test evolved from try-out forms which were evaluated u n d e r ac­ tual classroom conditions. And great effort was made to reduce its reading difficulty. It consists of two parts, 50 items each. Each part can be completed in 40 minutes. Although the parts may be used alone, the Ex­ aminations Committee expects greater reliability when both parts are used. Test booklets and answer sheets come in multiples of 25. Booklets cost $4.00 a package and answer sheets, $1.00 a package. Further information on the exam may be obtained from Ex­ aminations Committee, ACS, St. Louis University, St. Louis 4, Mo.

Ρ Pennsylvania State University, Erie, Pa., holds its eighth annual workshop for high school science teachers at the Behrend Campus, April 8. This year's program: "The Future of Science Teaching in the U. S." • Chemical Public Relations Associa­ tion will repeat its course in the funda­ mentals of chemistry, designed for non­ technical chemical industry executives, from March 18 to May 6. Weekly lec­ tures b y Sidney Karlin of Reactions Motors will be given at Esso Standard Oil's auditorium, 15 West 51st St., N e w York City, on Wednesdays at 4 : 0 0 P . M . Enrollment is $20. • St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minn., has started its annual search for 80 high schoolers who will take part in the St. Olaf Science for Youth Institute, June

dride Chemistry

On Stream! New MHI Sodium Borohydride SWS* lowest cost borohydride available ^SWS-Stabilized Water

Solution!

condensation or polymerization reactions which might be ex­

A new low cost form of sodium borohydride is now available in

pected in the presence of strong caustic. This means that MHI

large commercial quantities from Metal Hydrides Incorporated.

Sodium Borohydride-SWS can be used to clean up small amounts

In this new form, the contained sodium borohydride is priced at

of carbonyl and peroxides in organic products.

less than half that of the pure material. MHI Sodium Boro-

MH\ Borohydride-SWS will also react with many inorganic

hydride-SWS is a stabie, aqueous caustic solution of sodium

ions, as does the pureboruhyufide, without interference from

borohydride. The sodium borohydride content is about 12 weight

the caustic. Other suggested uses for MHI Sodium Borohydride-SWS in­

per cent. This should be good news for chemical processes

clude foaming plastics and silicates; bleaching and stabilizing

waiting for a lower cost borohydride product.

wood pulps; and treating natural and synthetic textiles.

MHi Sodium Borohydride-SWS is an effective agent for the reduction of carbonyl groups to alcohols. With most alde­

Easy and safe to handle and use in standard equipment, new

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MHI Sodium Borohydride-SWS merits your attention. Write for

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complete information and order your trial quantities now! CHEMICAL·

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HVDR1DES

DIVISION

Incorporated

Ι Έ J P I O N E E R S I N H Y D R O G E N CO fS/IPO U NI D S 316 C O N G R E S S S T R E E T , BEVERLV, M A S S A C H U S E T T S MARCH

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EDUCATION 8-13. Students with scientific apti­ tudes in chemistry, biology, math, and physics from Minnesota. Iowa, Wiscon­ sin, and Illinois are eligible for the institute. • Nicholas Molnar, president of Fine Organics, Lodi, X. J., plans to pool the talents of scientists employed in his *irea for a lecture series that can increase high school students* interest in science. The scientists would he granted time to prepare and present talks to high school audiences in Bergen and eastern Passaic counties.

Roland G o h l k e , D o w Chemical C o m p a n y engineer, using B e n d i x Mass Spectrometer t o identify compounds emerging f r o m a gas c h r o m a t o g r a p h .

NOW BENDIX* TIME-OF-f LIGHT MASS SPECTROMETER RECORDS MASS SPECTRA T h e a b i l i t y to record e i t h e r mass spectra o r mass ratios further widens the versatility of the Bendix Mass Spectrometer. T h e speed a n d ease of using this new A n a l o g O u t p u t System are illustrated by the following example: D u r i n g a recent routine analysis performed at our Research Labora­ tories D i v i s i o n , o n e hundred mass spectra were recorded on a direct w r i t i n g recorder i n less t h a n t w o hours. T h e s e were the mass spectra

of the eluted components of a mixture being separated b y a gas chromato­ graph and fed continuously into the Bendix Spectrometer for identification. For complete details contact the Cincinnati Division, D e p t . D 3 - 1 6 , 3130 Wasson Road, Cincinnati 8, O h i o . Export Sales: Bendix Inter­ national Division, 205 E. 42nd St., N e w York 17, IN. V. (Janada: Computing Devices o f Canada, L t d . , Box 508, Ottawa 4 , Ontario.

TRADEMARK

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APPLICATIONS > Chromatograph output identificaidentifica­ tion. includ­ * Molecular beam analysis, including solids' analysis and high temperature research. » Fast reaction studies such as rocket exhaust analysis. ) Analysis o f ions created outside the mass spectrometer. ) Negative ion studies. • Simple, r a p i d analysis.

RUGGED—The Dow Chemical Company experienced only Vl of one percent downtime for maintemainte­ nance during the first six months of operation. FAST—10,000 mass spectra p e r second. HIGH RESOLUTION — U s a b l e adjacent mass resolution beyond 500 o.m.u. • VARIOUS OUTPUTS—OscilloOUTPUTS—Oscillo­ scope used alone or in combinacombina­ tion with ion pulse counting o r recording outputs.

Cincinnati Division CINCINNATI, OHIO

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• American Viscose will assist 71 col­ leges and universities in its 1959-60 aid-to-education program. Scholar­ ships worth 8500 have been awarded undergraduates studying chemistry, physics, engineering, textiles, and busi­ ness. Graduate fellowships for stu­ dents in chemistry, chemical engineer­ ing, and cellulose chemistry range from $2000 to $2800. • W . M . Keck Foundation a n d Superior

Oil are giving California Institute of Technology $2,500,000 for a new engi­ neering building. This will be a fivestory structure housing an engineering materials lab, sanitary engineering lab, and water resources lab. Caltecb's current construction program calls for 16 new buildings. So far, eight of these are financed. • Dunlap and Associates will present its seventh annual Human Engineer­ ing Institute this year from May 19-22. The institute includes ii series of lec­ tures and conferences dealing with hu­ man capabilities and limitations as they relate to design of complex machine systems, equipment, consumer prod­ ucts, and workplaces. Robert T. Eckenrode, Dunlap and Associates, 429 Atlantic St., Stamford, Conn., will fur­ nish information and programs.

ATOMIC MASS UNITS

Oscillogram of xenon spectrum. spectru • W I D E M A S S R A N G E —Ec —Each spectrum covers 1 through 40 4000 a.m.u. • SIMPLE. OPEN CONSTRUCTION— CONSTRUCTION Permits easy modification modification f o r special problems. • A L U M I N U M GASKETS, Hl< HIGH TEMPERATURE FEEDTHROUGHS— FEEDTHROUGHÎ Permit effective bakeout.

• The Industrial Engineering Depart­ ment, Columbia University, holds its annual research conference May 31 to June 5. During that week, experts from industry, Government, and uni­ versities will meet with a cross-section of U. S. industry for a workshop on research management. For further de­ tails, address Robert T. Livingston, 409 Engineering, Columbia University, N e w York 27, Ν. Υ.