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Magnetic Properties of Materials Using the Môssbauer Effect by R. W. Grant,. North American Aviation Science. Center; Study of Coordination Chem- ist...
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Circle No. 6

MONOCHROMATOR, miniature quartz prism type, F/7.6 Range 190-1500 mu. Slits are adjustable in unison.

Circle No. 238

PHOTOMULTIPLIER housings and tubes. Thermo-cooled and standard types for all side and end-on photomultipliers.

Magnetic Properties of Materials Using the Môssbauer Effect by R. W. Grant, North American Aviation Science Center; Study of Coordination Chemistry and Biochemicals Using Môssbauer Spectroscopy by Leopold May, Catholic University of America ; Môssbauer Studies of Tektites, Pyroxenes, and Olivines by J. G. Marzolf, J. T. Dehn, and J. F. Salmon, Woodstock College; Môssbauer Spectroscopy of Iron Compounds by N. E. Erickson, Brookhaven National Laboratory; The Môssbauer Chemical Shift in Tin Chemistry by Jon J. Spijkerman, National Bureau of Standards ; Môssbauer Spectroscopy of the Rare Earths by A. F. Clifford, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Môssbauer Spectroscopy of Iodine by D. W. Hafemeister, Carnegie Institute of Technology; and Môssbauer Spectroscopy of Tellurium by C. E. Violet, University of California, LhTermore. Fluorescence: Theory, Instrumentation, and Practice. George G. Guilbault, Editor, xxviii + 697 pages. Marcel Dekker, Inc., 95 Madison Ave., New York, Ν. Υ. 10016. 1967. $15.75.

Circle No. 2.37

PHOTOMETER for photomultiplier opera­ tion with adjustable high voltage and sensitivities to the nano amp range.

This book is an expansion of the papers presented in a two-day sym­ posium, organized by the Analytical Division of the American Chemical Society, and presented at the 153rd National Meeting, Miami Beach, Fla., April 1967. Nineteen speakers par­ ticipated and the most recently active research areas in fluorescence were covered., The book has been produced by photographing typewritten pages. Au­ thor and subject indexes are included.

Circle No. 238

LAMP SYSTEMS with quartz optics, for Xe and XeHg lamps from 75 to 6500 Watts; also stable power supplies.

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Circle No. 239 ACCESSORIES as liquid filters, condens­ ing systems and socket mounts for Hanovia, Osram, GE and other lamps. Write for Brochure

S C Η Ο ΕFFΕL INSTRUMENT-CORP. Westwood, N. J. 07675 (201) 664-7263

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ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY

The Thermal Properties of Transition Metal Ammine Complexes. Wesley W. Wendlandt, James P. Smith, ix + 235 pages. American Elsevier Publishing Co., Inc., 52 Vanderbilt Ave., New York, Ν. Υ. 10017. 1967. $17. This book is a summary of the authors' work in the last ten years in studying the thermal dissociation of transition metal ammine complexes. The modern thermoanalytical tech­ niques used were successful, in many cases, in elucidating reaction stoichiometry, structural changes, and reac­ tion mechanisms involved. Discussion in this volume is limited to those complexes involving metal-tonitrogen bonds only. These consist mainly of metal ammonia, ethylenediamine, pyridine, aliphatic amine com­ plexes, etc.

Chemical Analysis for Ironfoundries, Selected Methods. 215 pages. George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., Ruskin House, Jfi Museum St., London, W.C.I, England. 1967. 4£s. This volume of selected methods contains procedures recommended by the British Cast Iron Research Asso­ ciation Methods of Analysis Sub-Com­ mittee. In 1959 the first part of "Se­ lected Methods of Analysis of Foundry Materials" appeared. It dealt with pig and cast iron. A separate volume for alloy irons, ferro-alloys, slags, refrac­ tories, fuels and residual elements was planned. However, changes in the sampling and analysis of pig and cast iron have been so great it was felt wise to prepare this new book covering all types of irons and also ferro-alloys and slags. Analytical methods for refrac­ tories and fuels, trace and residual ele­ ments have not been included. As stated in the foreword this is a laboratory manual; no extended theo­ retical discussions are given. After a brief outline of the chemistry of each method the procedure is presented. The book contains some illustrations and an appendix which includes infor­ mation on equipment, apparatus, re­ agents, laboratory techniques, the use of spectrophotometers, laboratory hazards, and a table of atomic weights of some elements. Analytical Chemistry of Cobalt. / . V.

Pyatnitskii. xv + 22^ pages. Daniel Davey & Co., Inc., 257 Park Ave. S., New York, Ν. Υ. 10010. 1967. $14This is another volume in the series, Analytical Chemistry of the Elements, published by the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R. and translated by the Israel Program of Scientific Transla­ tions. The book has been translated by N. Kaner and edited by D. Slutzkin. It was originally published in Russia in 1965. Chapter I discusses the chemical analytical characteristics of cobalt and cobalt compounds of importance in analytical chemistry. After this intro­ duction to the subject, the author covers the detection of cobalt ions and the separation of cobalt from accom­ panying elements. This is followed by chapters on gravimetric, titrimetric, photometric, polarographic, and other methods for the determination of co­ balt. Chapter IX, on the determina­ tion of cobalt in natural and industrial materials covers 36 pages and is di­ vided into sections dealing with ores, slags, and silicates; steels and ironbase alloys; nonferrous metals and alloys; and soils, plant, animal, and other biological material.