Institution
Cabot Corporation
Company•Boston, Massachusetts, United States•
About: Cabot Corporation is a company organization based out in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Carbon black & Carbon. The organization has 1279 authors who have published 1399 publications receiving 36736 citations.
Topics: Carbon black, Carbon, Alloy, Oxide, Tantalum
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the structural transitions which occur during long-range ordering to Ni4Mo in a Ni-Mo alloy were studied and it was found that a DO22-type superlattice forms as an intermediate metastable phase.
24 citations
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11 Oct 1974TL;DR: Improved aqueous slurry type coating colors for coating of paper, paperboard and the like are described in this article in which there is incorporated along with the usual finely divided inorganic pigments, such as clay, an auxiliary pigment consisting of a substantially water-insoluble, cross-linked urea-formaldehyde pigment in highly dispersed particulate form.
Abstract: Improved aqueous slurry type coating colors for coating of paper, paperboard and the like are described in which there is incorporated along with the usual finely divided inorganic pigments, such as clay, an auxiliary pigment consisting of a substantially water-insoluble, cross-linked urea-formaldehyde pigment in highly dispersed particulate form. The urea-formaldehyde pigment constitutes from about 2 to 25% and preferably from about 3 to about 15% by weight of the total pigment solids in the coating colors. The BET specific surface area of the particulate urea-formaldehyde pigments ranges from about 40 to about 75 square meters per gram in which instance the average agglomerate size of the pigments ranges from about 2 to about 3.5 microns. In those instances where the BET specific surface area of the urea-formaldehyde pigments ranges from at least 15 to 40 square meters per gram, the average agglomerate size of the pigments ranges from about 2 to about 4 microns.
24 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are shown to grow rapidly on iron oxide catalysts on the fuel side of an inverse ethylene diffusion flame.
Abstract: Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are shown to grow rapidly on iron oxide catalysts on the fuel side of an inverse ethylene diffusion flame. The pathway of carbon in the flame is controlled by the flame structure, leading to formation of SWCNTs free of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) or soot. By using a combination of oxygen-enrichment and fuel dilution, fuel oxidation is favored over pyrolysis, PAH growth, and subsequent soot formation. The inverse configuration of the flame prevents burnout of the SWCNTs while providing a long carbon-rich region for nanotube formation. Furthermore, flame structure is used to control oxidation of the catalyst particles. Iron sub-oxide catalysts are highly active toward SWCNT formation while Fe and Fe2O3 catalysts are less active. This can be understood by considering the effects of particle oxidation on the dissociative adsorption of gas-phase hydrocarbons. The optimum catalyst particle composition and flame conditions were determined in near real-time using a scanning mobility particle sizer (SMPS) to measure the catalyst and SWCNT size distributions. In addition, SMPS results were combined with flame velocity measurement to measure SWCNT growth rates. SWCNTs were found to grow at rates of over 100 μm/s.
24 citations
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10 Feb 2006TL;DR: In this article, a vehicle and a polymer modified pigment prepared by a 'grafting from' polymerization process are described, and various embodiments for the process for preparing the polymer modified pigments as well as the polymermodified pigments themselves are disclosed.
Abstract: The present invention relates to inkjet ink composition comprising a) a vehicle and b) a polymer modified pigment prepared by a 'grafting from' polymerization process. Various embodiments for the process for preparing the polymer modified pigment as well as the polymer modified pigments themselves are disclosed.
24 citations
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03 Apr 1990TL;DR: In this article, the performance of carbon black rubber was evaluated with a CTAB of 120-160 m2 /g, a N2 SA of 125-180 m2/g, and a CDBP of 95-120 cc/100 g.
Abstract: Improved treadwear/hysteresis carbon blacks having a CTAB of 120-160 m2 /g, a N2 SA of 125-180 m2 /g, a CDBP of 95-120 cc/100 g, a DBP of 110-145 cc/100 g, a Tint/CTAB ratio of 0.80-1.10, a ΔD50 of 70-100 nm and a ΔD50/Dmode ratio of 0.80-1.05. Also disclosed are rubber compositions containing the carbon blacks which exhibit superior treadwear/hysteresis performance properties.
24 citations
Authors
Showing all 1279 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Plamen Atanassov | 73 | 439 | 21442 |
Marek Skowronski | 48 | 264 | 7679 |
Toivo T. Kodas | 47 | 240 | 8342 |
Andrew A. Peterson | 41 | 87 | 12292 |
Hong Liang | 39 | 297 | 5981 |
Mark J. Hampden-Smith | 35 | 162 | 5631 |
Karel Vanheusden | 31 | 89 | 9289 |
Paolina Atanassova | 29 | 66 | 2919 |
Narasi Sridhar | 27 | 202 | 3017 |
James A. Belmont | 25 | 52 | 2387 |
Berislav Blizanac | 22 | 44 | 4047 |
Andreas Zimmermann | 21 | 71 | 1193 |
Quint H. Powell | 21 | 45 | 1918 |
Klaus Kunze | 21 | 37 | 2074 |
Rimple Bhatia | 21 | 49 | 1380 |