SILICONE

Natural. 2,052,500. 1,900,000. Total production. 3,952,500. 1965 World Requirements. GR-S. Butyl. Neoprene. Nitrile. 1,845,000. 225,000. 150,000. 50,0...
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DOW CORNING production would n o t be available in time to make u p the 300,000-ton deficit. D u r i n g 1956, 139,051 long tons of r u b b e r were exported from t h e United States: GR-S Butyl Neoprene Nitrile

SILICONE DEFOAMERS

102,249 8,699 21,909 6,194

A desire to b e self-contained a n d to avoid being dependent on t h e Suez Canal for deliveries has r e ­ sulted in the planning or actual con­ struction of at least 10 G R - S plants, one Butyl plant, one nitrile plant, and one neoprene plant in Europe. Based on the indicated capacities of these plants, together with t h e capacities of U. S. plants, total world capacities will b e :

have proved their efficiency and versatility in countless applications. For example : 1 OUNCE KILLS F O A M I N . . .

1965 Capacity GR-S 1,630,000 Butyl 197,500 125,000 Neoprene 100,000 Nitrile Total synthetics 2,052,500 Natural 1,900,000 Total production 3,952,500

625,000 lb sodium bromide crystallization solution

250,000 lb molasses, vat dye solution, trioxide pickling solution, tall oil

1965 World Requirements GR-S 1,845,000 225,000 Butyl 150,000 Neoprene 50,000 Nitrile Total synthetics 2,270,000 2,200,000 Natural 4,470,000 Total requirements

125,000 lb phenolformaldehyde, urea formalde­ hyde, asphalt, starch sizing

62,500 lb

It is seen that there will be a world­ wide shortage of polymers by 1965, although the installed capacity b y t h a t time in t h e United States will b e more than a d e q u a t e to meet U . S. rubber requirements. By 1965, production a n d consump­ tion in the United States should be about in balance b u t the Gulf Coast undoubtedly will have a n excess of both G R - S a n d the r a w materials from which it is manufactured. I m ­ proved methods of transporting r a w materials, particularly gases, will have to be developed. A good start has been m a d e in shipping butadi­ ene by water a n d m a n y other devel­ opments a r e being worked upon. Panel M e m b e r s R . F . P F E N N I G , H u m b l e Oil K E N D A L L G R E E N E , Gulf O i l H . A. M I T C H E L L , Shell C h e m i c a l JAMES G. P A R K , Enjay

Co. Co. Co. Co.

This month's special feature is a condensa­ tion of the papers presented at the joint C C D A - C R A Meeting held in Houston, Tex., November 1957.

soft drinks, 7 0 % caustic liquor, black liquor, sulfuric acid pickling bath

Just α few drops of α Dow Corning SILICONE DEFOAMER can prevent mountains of foam . . . enabling you to utilize full pro­ ductive capacity a n d put your processing into high gear. What's more, when you control foam, you eliminate the mess a n d waste of boilovers. Whatever your foaming problem, a Dow Corning SILICONE DEFOAMER will help solve it at amazingly low cost.

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To receive α generous trial sample of a Dow Corning Silicone Defoamer, return coupon below or write on your letterhead. N o obligation, of course. first in silicones

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