displaying 431 - 440 results in total 609
Grigg, J.; Chattaway, A.
view article (1.0)Evaluation of Advanced Agent Working Group Agents by Kidde.Kidde Research; Fenwal Safety SystemsHalon Options Technical Working Conference. Proceedings. HOTWC 2001. Sponsored by: University of New Mexico, Fire Suppression Systems Assoc., Fire and Safety Group, GlobeTech, Inc., Halon Alternative Research Corp., Hughes Associates, Inc., Kidde plc., Modular Protection, Corp., Next Generation Fire Suppression Technology Program, Sandia National Laboratories, Summit Environmental Corp., Inc. and 3M Specialty Materials. April 24-26, 2001, Albuquerque, NM, Daniels, B. L.; Cole, D. G., Editors, 204-212 p., 2001Yu, H.; Kennedy, E. M.; Dlugogorski, B. Z.
view article (1.0)Gas Phase Reaction of Halon 1301 (CBRF3) With Propane.University of Newcastle, AustraliaHalon Options Technical Working Conference. Proceedings. HOTWC 2001. Sponsored by: University of New Mexico, Fire Suppression Systems Assoc., Fire and Safety Group, GlobeTech, Inc., Halon Alternative Research Corp., Hughes Associates, Inc., Kidde plc., Modular Protection, Corp., Next Generation Fire Suppression Technology Program, Sandia National Laboratories, Summit Environmental Corp., Inc. and 3M Specialty Materials. April 24-26, 2001, Albuquerque, NM, Daniels, B. L.; Cole, D. G., Editors, 253-262 p., 2001Senecal, J. A.
view article (1.0)New Technology Delivery System for FM-200 Clean Agent.Kidde-Fenwal, Inc.Halon Options Technical Working Conference. Proceedings. HOTWC 2001. Sponsored by: University of New Mexico, Fire Suppression Systems Assoc., Fire and Safety Group, GlobeTech, Inc., Halon Alternative Research Corp., Hughes Associates, Inc., Kidde plc., Modular Protection, Corp., Next Generation Fire Suppression Technology Program, Sandia National Laboratories, Summit Environmental Corp., Inc. and 3M Specialty Materials. April 24-26, 2001, Albuquerque, NM, Daniels, B. L.; Cole, D. G., Editors, 282-287 p., 2001Wierenga, P. H.
view article (1.0)Advanced Environmentally Friendly Fire Protection Technology.General Dynamics OTS-AerospaceHalon Options Technical Working Conference. Proceedings. HOTWC 2001. Sponsored by: University of New Mexico, Fire Suppression Systems Assoc., Fire and Safety Group, GlobeTech, Inc., Halon Alternative Research Corp., Hughes Associates, Inc., Kidde plc., Modular Protection, Corp., Next Generation Fire Suppression Technology Program, Sandia National Laboratories, Summit Environmental Corp., Inc. and 3M Specialty Materials. April 24-26, 2001, Albuquerque, NM, Daniels, B. L.; Cole, D. G., Editors, 373-388 p., 2001Vinegar, A.
view article (1.0)Modeling Cardiac Sensitization Potential of Humans Exposed to Halon 1301 or Halon 1211 Aboard Aircraft. Technical Note.Aviation, Spce and Environmental Medicine, Vol. 72, No. 10, 928-936, October 2001Yang, J. C.; Manzello, S. L.; Nyden, M. R.; Connaghan, M. D.
view article (1.0)Discharge of CF3I in a Cold Simulated Aircraft Engine Nacelle.National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD; Army CECOM Research, Fort Belvoir, VANIST SP 984NIST SP 984
June 2002Halon Options Technical Working Conference, 12th. Proceedings. HOTWC 2002. April 30-May 2, 2002, Albuquerque, NM, Gann, R. G.; Reneke, P. A., Editor(s)(s), 1-11 pp, 2002., 1-11 p., ['2003', '2002']Gann, R. G.
view article (1.0)FY2002 Annual Report Next Generation Fire Suppression Technology Program (NGP).National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MDNIST TN 1451NIST TN 1451
January 2003
58 p.Vinegar, A.; Jepson, G. W.
view article (1.0)Physiologically Based Modeling of Halon Replacements for Human Safety Evaluation.ManTech Environmental Technology, Inc., Dayton, OH['Final Report', 'Section 1 of 2']Final Report; Section 1 of 2
69 p.Toxicological Assessment of Human Health Consequences Associated With Inhalation of Halon Replacement Chemicals. Next-Generation Fire Suppression Technology Program (NGP). Final Report. Project 3B/1/89. Section 1 of 2. April 3, 2000, 2000Vinegar, A.; Jepson, G. W.; Rubenstein, R.; Brock, W. J.
view article (1.0)Setting Safe Acute Exposure Limits for Halon Replacement Chemicals Using Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Modeling.Man Tech Environmental Technology, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH; Great Lakes Chemical Corp., West Lafeyette, IN; Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC; DuPont Company, Newark, DEInsulation Toxicology, Vol. 12, No. 8, 751-763, August 2000Tapscott, R. E.
view article (1.0)Replacement Agents: An Historical Overview.University of New Mexico, AlbuquerqueHalon Alternatives Technical Working Conference 1992. Proceedings. HOTWC 1992. (Halon Options Technical Working Conference.) University of New Mexico; New Mexico Engineering Research Institute; Center for Global Environmental Technologies; National Association of Fire Equipment Distributors, Inc.; Halon Alternative Research Corp. May 12-14, 1992, Albuquerque, NM, 58-69 p., 1992