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  • 1
    ISSN: 0749-1581
    Keywords: 13C NMR ; 1H NMR ; 9-Methylenefluorenes ; Substituent effects ; Substituent-induced chemical shifts ; Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The two 13C NMR methyl signals of the sterically congested 9-benzylidene-1,8-dimethylfluorene (1a) have the surprisingly small separation of only 0.37 ppm; for 9-benzylidene-2,7-dimethylfluorene the corresponding methyl separation is 0.04 ppm. An alternative analysis of 1a with respect to 1,8-dimethylfluorene shows that the perturbing syn-phenyl substituent has caused a downfield ( + 0.47 ppm) 13C shift but an upfield 1H shift ( - 0.97 ppm) of the compressed 1-CH3 group. For further comparisons, NMR assignments were also made for 2,7-dimethylfluorene, 1,8-dimethylfluoren-9-one and 2-(1,1-dimethylethyl)-3,3-dimethyl-1-phenylbut-1-ene.
    Additional Material: 2 Tab.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0749-1581
    Keywords: 13C NMR ; 1H NMR Olefins ; Substituent effects ; Substituent-induced chenical shifts (SCS) ; Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: 1H and 13C NMR signals were assigned and CH coupling constants (1J, 2J, 3J) determined for a series of α-mono-and α,α-disubstituted (1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-2-indanylidene)methanes with the following α-substituents: (mesityl)2B, n-propyl, phenyl, tert-butyl-C(=NH), cyano, (tert-butyl)2C(OH), pivaloyl, H2N-CO, PhNH-CO, carboxy, ritro, acetoxy, Me3SiO, Me3Si, PhS, PhSMe+, PhSO, PhSO2, bromo and trimethylstannyl. The 1J couplings with the olefinic proton span the range 124.3-193.7 Hz. Substituent-induced chemical shifts (SCS) of most of the nuclei with respect to the α-unsubstituted olefin obey simple additivity in the α,α-disubstituted compounds and are very similar to the SCS values along the C=N double bond in the isoelectronic (1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-2-indanylidene)amines within the error limits. The exceptions concern nuclei in the immediate vicinity of the perturbing substituent. A dominant mechanistic contribution of electric field effects appears likely for the more distant aromatic part of the indanylidene moiety. The chemical shifts of two (2,2,5,5-tetramethylcyclopentylidene)methanes are shown to be compatible with the SCS parameters from the indanylidene series.
    Additional Material: 2 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A new protocol is presented that efficiently implements a reliable, causally ordered multicast primitive and is easily extended into a totally ordered one. Intended for use in the ISIS toolkit, it offers a way to bypass the most costly aspects of ISIS while benefiting from virtual synchrony. The facility scales with bounded overhead. Measured speedups of more than an order of magnitude were obtained when the protocol was implemented within ISIS. One conclusion is that systems such as ISIS can achieve performance competitive with the best existing multicast facilities - a finding contradicting the widespread concern that fault-tolerance may be unacceptably costly.
    Keywords: COMPUTER PROGRAMMING AND SOFTWARE
    Type: NASA-CR-186495 , NAS 1.26:186495 , AD-A220910
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The ISIS toolkit is a distributed programming environment based on support for virtually synchronous process groups and group communication. A suite of protocols is presented to support this model. The approach revolves around a multicast primitive, called CBCAST, which implements a fault-tolerant, causally ordered message delivery. This primitive can be used directly or extended into a totally ordered multicast primitive, called ABCAST. It normally delivers messages immediately upon reception, and imposes a space overhead proportional to the size of the groups to which the sender belongs, usually a small number. It is concluded that process groups and group communication can achieve performance and scaling comparable to that of a raw message transport layer. This finding contradicts the widespread concern that this style of distributed computing may be unacceptably costly.
    Keywords: COMPUTER PROGRAMMING AND SOFTWARE
    Type: NASA-CR-187976 , NAS 1.26:187976 , TR-91-1192 , AD-A233887
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