Results 211 to 220 of about 36,812 (262)
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PHENOXYETHANOL ABSORPTION BY POLYVINYL CHLORIDE

Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics, 1984
Phenoxyethanol was found to be absorbed by polyvinyl chloride administration sets during continuous irrigation therapy. Depending upon the conditions of administration up to 20% loss of potency could occur. Absorption of the drug by the rigid plastic luer-lock fitting of the set caused softening and decreased rigidity of the plastic.
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WEATHERABILITY OF POLYVINYL CHLORIDE

Journal of Polymer Engineering, 1988
Les processus de vieillissement. Etat present des recherches dans le domaine de la photostabilisation.
B.D. GUPTA, J. VERDU
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Polyvinyl Chloride in Fires

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1976
To the Editor.— The article "Polyvinyl Chloride Toxicity in Fires" by Dyer and Esch (235:393-397, 1976) contains a number of factual errors and certain misleading inferences. In three places, the combustion of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is said to produce chlorine and phosgene.
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PVC (polyvinyl chloride)

2001
PVC was first produced on a large scale in the 1930s in Germany and production in the USA and the UK began soon thereafter (Matthews 1996). Worldwide production grew from about 6 million tonnes in 1970 to 17.5 million tonnes in 1989 (Johnson 1990) and 27.7 million tonnes in 1997 (Chemical Week 1998).
Ruth Stringer, Paul Johnston
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Vinyl chloride and polyvinyl chloride.

Occupational medicine (Philadelphia, Pa.), 2000
Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is an important plastic resin for construction, pipe and tubing, siding, and other uses. Exposures to vinyl chloride monomer during the early years of production resulted in an important sentinel health event: the recognition of an excess of a rare liver cancer, hepatic angiosarcoma, at facilities throughout the world.
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Polyvinyl chloride in waste

1992
In 1987, some 1,320 kt PVC were manufactured in the Federal Republic [I]. Allowing for an export trade surplus of PVC moulding compounds (260 kt), PVC semi- finished goods (160 kt) and PVC in finished products or as packaging material (100 kt), approximately 800 kt pure PVC remained in the Federal Republic. All the figures are calculated with reference
Walter Tötsch, Hans Gaensslen
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