1934
DOI: 10.1021/ie50291a005
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Economics of Corrective Treatment for Cold Water Corrosion Application in Public Water Supplies

Abstract: recovered grease is considerably lower than any others reported, in spite of the fact that any possible errors in these measurements were in the direction of high results.The latent heat of vaporization will, of course, vary with temperature. However, the temperature range over which it is practical to distill fatty acids and obtain good quality is rather limited, and it is felt that these results will cover most technical needs.

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…Lime, soda ash and caustic soda may be used depending on the economics of the problem. Hopkins, Armstrong, and Baylis (8) have studied the question of the best treatment for the average American community and find that for waters with an initial hardness below 75 p.p.m., lime treatment is the correct one. When high acidities are noted as due to free CO2, a previous aeration may reduce the cost of lime treatment.…”
Section: Treatment Of Water Supply As a Wholementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lime, soda ash and caustic soda may be used depending on the economics of the problem. Hopkins, Armstrong, and Baylis (8) have studied the question of the best treatment for the average American community and find that for waters with an initial hardness below 75 p.p.m., lime treatment is the correct one. When high acidities are noted as due to free CO2, a previous aeration may reduce the cost of lime treatment.…”
Section: Treatment Of Water Supply As a Wholementioning
confidence: 99%