The Next Two Issues of Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Will Help

Nov 6, 2010 - Publication Date: May 19, 1958. Copyright © 1958 AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. ACS Chem. Eng. News Archives. Cite this:Chem...
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The Next Two Issues of Industrial

& Engineering

Chemistry

W i l l Help You CUT COSTS... INCREASE PRODUCTION and GAIN in PROFESSIONAL STATURE by bringing • • •

you the very latest ideas for . . .

Faster detection of microscopic leaks in chemical process equipment. Latest methods. Apparatus required. Who makes it. Where you can buy it. How much it costs. Continuous processing vs batch production. How to decide which to use. Cost advantages of one over the other. Improving computer applications. Will they save time and money for your company right now? A complete symposium of computer applications in the petroleum field will be offered in the May issue. Covers research, pilot plants and production . . . including "Engineering Design on a Computer", "Computers Use in Pilot Plant Calculations", "Machine Solution of an Equation for Continuous Arosorb Process" and "Reactor Design by the Use of Computers". Short-cutting cost estimations. This will be of real value to the man who needs to know a few rules of thumb to develop cost estimates in a hurry. Re-using industrial waste water. Complete details of what's going on in the chemical, primary metal, paper, petroleum, mining and other industries. Handling radioactive gases. The secret lies in a ceramic filter. You'll get detailed instructions, including pictures and schematic drawings of filter cell construction and mechanical design of filter housings. Employing new alloys in equipment fabrication. A discussion of specific problems in fabrication. Processing spent fuels. Covers the difficult situation you face with fuels which have stainless steel either as an important constituent or cladding material. A newly proposed method offering many advantages over other proposed methods of processing stainless steel fuels. Epoxy plasticizers and stabilizers is one symposium in the June issue, and Advances in Adhesives is another. Both of these subjects are currently of tremendous interest, and here is a wealth of down-to-earth, practical information that anyone in a plant or laboratory can put to good use.

8 forissues only

INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY 1 155 Sixteenth St., N. W . • Washington 6, D. C.

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. . . the May issue, the June issue, and the next 6 issues . . . plus the I/EC Chemical Engineering Reviews, which are published as Part 2 of the September issue. These are carefully screened reports of the significant literature of the past year presented under the titles, Unit Processes, and Chemical Engineering Materials of Construction,

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You'll find the answers to these and many other problems in the May and June issues of I/EC. And in addition you will profit from hundreds of other money-saving ideas to be presented during the balance of the year by taking advantage right novo of a special trial offer of . . .

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MAY

19,

1958

C&EN

71