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1 calcined lime
Макаров: обожжённая известь -
2 calcined lime dolomite
Металлургия: обожжённый доломитУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > calcined lime dolomite
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3 anhydrous lime
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4 burnt lime
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5 caustic lime
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6 unhydrated lime
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7 kalk
chalk, limebränd kalk; calcined lime, caustic limejärnkalk; calcined ironklorkalk; chloride of limemager kalk; poor limeosläckt kalk; quick lime, unslaked limesläcka kalk; slake the limesläckt kalk; hydrated lime, hydrated limestone, slack lime, slaked lime -
8 обожжённый доломит
1) Engineering: burned dolomite, calcinated dolomite, calcined dolomite, dolomitic lime, fired dolomite, shrunk dolomite, single-burned dolomite2) Metallurgy: calcined lime dolomite, dolomaУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > обожжённый доломит
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9 обожжённая известь
1) General subject: dololime2) Engineering: burned lime, burnt lime3) Construction: quick lime4) Metallurgy: precalcined lime5) Ecology: quicklime6) Makarov: calcined limeУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > обожжённая известь
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10 Gesner, Abraham
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 1797 Englandd. 1864[br]English pioneer in the extraction of paraffin.[br]Gesner qualified as a physician in London in 1827 and developed an interest in geology. Possibly through his friendship with Admiral Thomas Cochrane, later tenth Earl of Dundonald, he began experimenting with asphalt rock from Trinidad; he obtained several patents for the processes he employed to extract an oil from the rock. In 1853 the Asphalt Mining and Kerosene Company was founded to work his patents, which described how to purify the liquid produced by the dry distillation of asphalt, by mixing the liquid first with 5–10 per cent by volume of sulphuric acid to remove tars, and then with freshly calcined lime to remove water. It was then redistilled to produce an inflammable oil. Gesner called it kerosene, from the Greek keros, meaning "wax"; in Britain it came to be known as paraffin. The new oil sold well, especially when accompanied by a cheap lamp with a flat wick and glass chimney. By 1856 Gesner considered his product could replace whale oil as a fuel for lamps; success was short-lived, however, for the oil was overtaken three years later by the drilling of the first American petroleum wells.LRD -
11 Frost, James
[br]b. late 18th century Finchley (?), London, Englandd. mid-19th century probably New York, USA[br]English contributor to investigations into the making of hydraulic cements in the early nineteenth century.[br]As early as 1807 Frost, who was originally a builder and bricklayer in Finchley in north London, was manufacturing Roman Cement, patented by James Parker in 1796, in the Harwich area and a similar cement further south, at Sheerness. In the early 1820s Frost visited Louis J.Vicat (1796–1861) in France. Vicat was a French engineer who began in 1812 a detailed investigation into the properties of various limestones found in France. He later published his conclusions, which were that the best hydraulic lime was that produced from limestone containing clay incorporating silica and alumina. He experimented with adding different clays in varying proportions to slaked lime and calcined the mixture. Benefiting from Vicat's research, Frost obtained a patent in 1822 for what he called British Cement. This patent specified an artificial cement made from limestone and silica, and he calcined chalk with the clay to produce a quick-setting product. This was made at Swanscombe near Northfleet on the south bank of the River Thames. In 1833 the Swanscombe manufactory was purchased by Francis \& White for £3,500 and Frost emigrated to America, setting up practice as a civil engineer in New York. The cement was utilized by Sir Marc Brunel in 1835 in his construction of the Thames Tunnel, and at the same time it was used in building the first all-concrete house at Swanscombe for Mr White.[br]Further ReadingA.J.Francis, 1977, The Cement Industry 1796–1914: A History, David \& Charles. C.C.Stanley, 1979, Highlights in the History of Concrete, Cement and Concrete Association.DY -
12 རྡོ་ཐལ་
[rdo thal]lime stone, ashes, calcined stone, chalk -
13 प्रलेपक
pra-lepakamfn. anointing, smearing, plastering W. ;
m. a plasterer, an anointer W. ;
a partic. marine substance, lime made of calcined shells (?) L. ;
a hectic orᅠ slow fever Suṡr. Bhpr. ;
( ikā). f. gaṇa mahishy-ādi
См. также в других словарях:
calcined lime — noun a white crystalline oxide used in the production of calcium hydroxide • Syn: ↑calcium oxide, ↑quicklime, ↑lime, ↑calx, ↑fluxing lime, ↑unslaked lime, ↑burnt lime • Derivationally related forms … Useful english dictionary
Lime kiln — A lime kiln is a kiln used to produce quicklime by the calcination of limestone (calcium carbonate). The chemical equation for this reaction is::CaCO3 + heat → CaO + CO2This reaction takes place at 900°C (at which temperature the partial pressure … Wikipedia
burnt lime — noun a white crystalline oxide used in the production of calcium hydroxide • Syn: ↑calcium oxide, ↑quicklime, ↑lime, ↑calx, ↑calcined lime, ↑fluxing lime, ↑unslaked lime • Derivationally related form … Useful english dictionary
fluxing lime — noun a white crystalline oxide used in the production of calcium hydroxide • Syn: ↑calcium oxide, ↑quicklime, ↑lime, ↑calx, ↑calcined lime, ↑unslaked lime, ↑burnt lime • Derivationally related forms … Useful english dictionary
unslaked lime — noun a white crystalline oxide used in the production of calcium hydroxide • Syn: ↑calcium oxide, ↑quicklime, ↑lime, ↑calx, ↑calcined lime, ↑fluxing lime, ↑burnt lime • Derivationally related forms … Useful english dictionary
White lime — White White (hw[imac]t), a. [Compar. {Whiter} (hw[imac]t [ e]r); superl. {Whitest}.] [OE. whit, AS. hw[imac]t; akin to OFries. and OS. hw[=i]t, D. wit, G. weiss, OHG. w[=i]z, hw[=i]z, Icel. hv[=i]tr, Sw. hvit, Dan. hvid, Goth. hweits, Lith.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
vienna lime — noun Usage: usually capitalized V : a high magnesia lime specially prepared from calcined dolomite for use as a buffing and polishing material especially for metals, plastics, and glass … Useful english dictionary
Plasterwork — refers to construction or ornamentation done with plaster, such as a layer of plaster on an interior wall or plaster decorative moldings on ceilings or walls. This is also sometimes called pargeting. The process of creating plasterwork, called… … Wikipedia
Plasterer — A Plasterer is a tradesman who works with plaster, such as forming a layer of plaster on an interior wall or plaster decorative moldings on ceilings or walls. The process of creating plasterwork, called plastering, has been used in building… … Wikipedia
steel — steellike, adj. /steel/, n. 1. any of various modified forms of iron, artificially produced, having a carbon content less than that of pig iron and more than that of wrought iron, and having qualities of hardness, elasticity, and strength varying … Universalium
calcium oxide — noun a white crystalline oxide used in the production of calcium hydroxide • Syn: ↑quicklime, ↑lime, ↑calx, ↑calcined lime, ↑fluxing lime, ↑unslaked lime, ↑burnt lime • Derivationally related forms … Useful english dictionary