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Kenneth Bernard Keating

Researcher at DuPont

Publications -  11
Citations -  177

Kenneth Bernard Keating is an academic researcher from DuPont. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hydrogen halide & Hydrogen chloride. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications receiving 177 citations.

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Patent

Electrochemical conversion of anhydrous hydrogen halide to halogen gas using a cation-transporting membrane

TL;DR: In this paper, a process for electrochemically converting anhydrous hydrogen halide, such as hydrogen chloride, hydrogen fluoride, hydrogen bromide and hydrogen iodide, to essentially dry halogen gas was described.
Patent

Alloy coatings for electrical contacts

TL;DR: A plating bath and process for electroplating coatings of palladium nickel alloys on a conductive substrate at current densities in the range of 10 amps/sq. ft. to 150 amps/square ft. was described in this paper, wherein the palladium content of the alloy remains substantially constant despite current density variations during plating.
Patent

Electrochemical cell and process for splitting a sulfate solution and producing a hyroxide solution sulfuric acid and a halogen gas

TL;DR: In this paper, an electrochemical cell and a process for producing a hydroxide solution, sulfuric acid and a halogen gas from a hydrogen halide and a sulfate solution are described.
Patent

Electroplating bath and process for maintaining plated alloy composition stable

TL;DR: A plating bath and process for electroplating coatings of palladium nickel alloys on a conductive substrate at current densities in the range of 10 amps/sq ft to 150 amps /sq ft where the palladium content of the alloy remains substantially constant despite current density variations during plating is described in this article.
Patent

Membrane hydration in electrochemical conversion of anhydrous hydrogen halide to halogen gas

TL;DR: In this article, an electrochemical cell, system and process for converting essentially anhydrous hydrogen halide to essentially dry halogen gas were described. But the present paper is limited to the case where water is provided to the cation-transporting membrane at the cathode in various ways.