Institution
Albemarle Corporation
Company•Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States•
About: Albemarle Corporation is a company organization based out in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Alkyl. The organization has 645 authors who have published 701 publications receiving 7583 citations.
Topics: Catalysis, Alkyl, Aqueous solution, Fire retardant, Bromide
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The digestibility results showed that lignin content and biomass crystallinity dominated digestibility whereas acetyl content had a lesser effect andCrystallinity reduction tremendously increased the initial hydrolysis rate and reduced the Hydrolysis time or the amount of enzyme required to attain high digestibility.
491 citations
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Louisiana State University1, University of Louisville2, University of Missouri3, Texas Southern University4, Massachusetts Institute of Technology5, University of Maryland, College Park6, Portland State University7, Winston-Salem State University8, Southern Illinois University Carbondale9, Georgia State University10, Albemarle Corporation11, University of Iowa12
TL;DR: This review covers literature indexed by Chemical Abstracts from January, 1985, Vol 102, issue 1, through October 1987, Vol.
Abstract: As you may have already noted, this year introduces a new set of authors for this fundamental review. As new authors, they hope that they can do as accurate a job as did their predecessor, Professor Earl Wehry, of the University of Tennessee. The format for this review follows the basic outline used by Professor Wehry, with some modifications. They have condensed several sections and eliminated the section on gas-phase chemiluminescence. The primary areas of emphasis including advances in experimental techniques, developments in instrumentation, and applications for chemical analysis, remain the same. To keep the review at a reasonable length, they have not included articles that are only peripherally related to analytical chemistry or those that represent straightforward extensions or demonstrations of previously published research. In this first issue, it is likely that they have made some errors of omission, and they request your assistance in identifying any obvious errors. They have tried to be conscientious in surveying the literature and have also surveyed individual researchers in the field. This review covers literature indexed by Chemical Abstracts from January, 1985, Vol. 102, issue 1, through October 1987, Vol. 107, issue 16. Accordingly, there will be some overlap between this reviewmore » and Professor Wehry's last review.« less
213 citations
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TL;DR: DBDPO was not acutely toxic, was not irritating to the skin or eye, and did not induce skin sensitization, while components of the PeBDPO product bioconcentrated in fish but produced little evidence of adverse effects.
132 citations
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TL;DR: Extensive testing of the DBDPO commercial product has demonstrated that it is toxicologically and pharmacokinetically different from the predominant PCB and PBB products used in the past.
124 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a method for characterization of methylaluminoxanes (MAO) and determination of trimethylaluminum (TMA) using proton NMR is presented.
120 citations
Authors
Showing all 645 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Arpad Horvath | 58 | 190 | 11341 |
Joaquín Martínez-Triguero | 25 | 37 | 2579 |
Min Li | 17 | 22 | 1095 |
Vincent J. Gatto | 16 | 58 | 746 |
Avelino Corma Canos | 16 | 190 | 957 |
Todd Stedeford | 15 | 56 | 3080 |
Charles H. Kolich | 15 | 39 | 469 |
Christopher J. Nalepa | 14 | 50 | 484 |
Zhike Wang | 13 | 16 | 1343 |
Arthur G. Mack | 12 | 72 | 516 |
Joe D. Sauer | 11 | 46 | 274 |
Kim R. Smith | 11 | 53 | 446 |
Marcia Hardy | 11 | 33 | 559 |
James E. Borland | 11 | 41 | 361 |
Robert H. Allen | 10 | 23 | 339 |