2008, U.S. chemical production fell by 4.7%. Now, the American Chemistry Council (ACC) chief economist Kevin Swift is expected this year, U.S. chemical production has dropped by 8.1% again, but 2010 will be resumed in 2011 and 1.6% and 2.2% growth.
Since the 1980s, the U.S. chemicals industry has experienced the most serious recession, but this decline has eased. In May this year, the U.S. chemical production fell by 9.5% year-on-year, while capacity utilization from 76.6 percent a year ago dropped to 69.5%. If drugs are not included, then the production of chemicals fell 15.5 percent year-on-year. Judging from the supply chain, inventory and sales of chemicals, the ratio has in the past few months has improved, but the proportion has remained at a historic high. However, in 2008 and 2009 a significant reduction in the first quarter of inventory appears to weaken the action.
Swift predicted that if the drugs do not take into account, then the United States this year, chemical production is expected to decrease by 11.6%. Play a role as the inventory cycle, basic chemicals and chemicals of certain professions is expected to face changes in the most volatile. He added that the production of chemicals in 2009 in the United States will decline in all regions, while the decline in the coastal areas of the Gulf of Mexico is expected to reach double-digit rate because of global economic weakness will hinder the recovery of exports to the United States and will also slow down the United States domestic demand growth.
Swift said that the Asian emerging economies seems to be the lead in the global chemicals industry recovery, "is expected in 2010 and 2011 before the recovery of the global chemicals production in 2009 will decline 6.3 percent, growth in developing countries will be better than developed countries, the latter a greater decrease in production. "
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Decline in U.S. production of chemicals
Electroplating Additives and Specialty Electroplating Soluti...
GFS Chemicals has a long tradition in high purity reagents for analytical and laboratory use. While electroplating solutions typically do not require high purity reagents, the recent trend up the performance ladder to high-ticket applications such as electronics, optics, and military end uses frequently demand high quality constituent reagents from which to make a blend. GFS Chemicals is pleased to present the following reagents for use in electroplating blends. We will be happy to meet your purity needs. Acid Copper Plating (ASTM B-734; MIL-C-14550; AMS 2418) Cupric sulfate 98+ or 99.9% Cupric fluoborate Non-Cyanide Alkaline Copper Plating (ASTM B-734; MIL-C-14550; AMS 2418) Cupric sulfate 98+ or 99.9% Cupric pyrophosphate Miscellaneous/Specialty Copper Plating Cupric chloride 97+ or 99+% Cupric nitrate 98+% Trivalent Chrome Plating (QQ-C-320; ASTM B-650; MIL-C-23422; AMS 2406) Chromium chloride 98+ or 99.9% Chromium sulfate 98+% Chromium nitrate 98+ or 99.9% Chromium formate Chromium ammonium sulfate Nickel Plating (QQ-N-290; ASTM B-689; AMS 2403; MIL-P-27418) Nickel chloride 98+ or 99.9% Nickel sulfate 98+ or 99.9% Nickel sulfamate Nickel carbonate 98+ or 99.9% Nickel chloride 98+ or 99.9% Nickel nitrate 98+ or 99.9% Nickel tetrafluoroborate Phosphorous acid 99% Cadmium Plating (QQ-P-416; ASTM B-766; AMS 2400; AMS 2416) Cadmium oxide 97% Cadmium tetrafluoroborate Cadmium chloride 98+ or 99.9% Cadmium sulfate 98+ or 99.9% Cadmium acetate Cadmium iodide Acid Zinc Plating (QQ-Z-325; ASTM B-633) Zinc chloride 97+ or 99.9% Zinc sulfate 99 or 99.9% Zinc tetrafluoroborate Non-Cyanide Alkaline Zinc Plating (QQ-Z-325; ASTM B-633) Zinc oxide 99 or 99.9% Miscellaneous/Specialty Zinc and Zinc Alloy Plating Zinc pyrophosphate Zinc hexafluorosilicate Zinc fluoride Zinc sulfamate Zinc formate Zinc citrate Cobalt chloride 98+ or 99.9% Cobalt sulfate 98+ or 99.9% Lead and Lead Alloy Plating (ASTM B-579; MIL-P-81728; AMS 2418) Lead tetrafluoroborate Lead methanesulfonate Lead hexafluorosilicate Lead carbonate basic Lead chloride Lead acetate Lead perchlorate Complexing Agents/Chelators Potassium pyrophosphate Sodium pyrophosphate Ammonium citrate 98% Sodium citrate 99% Potassium citrate 99% Lactic acid Ethylenediamine 99% Sulfamic acid 99% Di-sodium EDTA 99% Rochelle salt 99% Brighteners 2-Butyne-1,4-diol 99% Thiourea 99% p-Toluenesulfonic acid 98.5% 1-Allyl-2-thiourea Saccharic acid, monopotassium 98% Electroless Reducing Agents With the recent acquisition of a key synthetic technology, GFS Chemicals is pleased to announce its new aminoborane line of reductants for electroless nickel and electroless nickel alloy plating. Dimethylamine borane (DMAB) Diethylamine borane (DEAB) Also: Sodium hypophosphite 98% Ammonium hypophosphite Formaldehyde solution, 37% strength Sodium borohydride 98% Miscellaneous Additives Boric acid 99 or 99.9% Ammonium chloride 99 or 99.9% Ammonium sulfate 99% Ammonium sulfamate 98% Sodium thiocyanate Potassium thiocyanate 98% Ammonium hexafluoroaluminate Ammonium tetrafluoroborate 97 or 99.9% Ammonium hexafluorosilicate Ammonium hexafluorotitanate 99% Sodium tetrafluoroborate Potassium tetrafluoroborate Potassium hexafluoroaluminate For further information about materials availability and research currently ongoing at GFS Chemicals in these coatings areas, please e-mail paintandcoatings@gfschemicals.com
Too hot,the trees will pollute the environment
Normally, trees are the best defence against pollution; but when it's too hot outside, the trees' own self-defence mechanism may actually make things worse.
Trees produce natural chemicals, called isoprene and terpene, that are thought to protect their leaves from too much heat and sunlight. When the chemicals react with nitrogen oxide--found in pollution from cars--they form ozone, a much bigger health threat to humans and animals.
Dr Alastair Lewis and his team at Britain's York University noticed how the production of isoprene, and thus ozone, suddenly went up at high temperatures. "At 30℃, it's starting to become important. By 35℃, the emission rate has gone up by maybe an order of magnitude 10 times," Lewis told the BBC. Lewis says that isoprene and terpene were responsible for 30 percent of the ozone in the air during the hottest part of the summer.
Prof.David Fowler of the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology in Edinburgh says we shouldn't blame the trees for this. "Realistically, the best way to counter this is to reduce our production of both ozone and nitrogen oxides from industrial and personal processes."
Powder Coating Curing Agents and Hardeners
| Current powder coating constituents available from GFS Chemicals include the following. GFS Chemicals and/or its suppliers can offer product certification for the specific constituents described below. A) Phosphonium Curing Agents for Epoxy Powder Coats Tetrabutylphosphonium iodide Ethyltriphenylphosphonium iodide Ethyltriphenylphosphonium bromide Ethyltriphenylphosphonium chloride Butyltriphenylphosphonium bromide B) Phosphonium Curing Agents for Fluoropolymer Powder Coats Benzyltriphenylphosphonium bromide Benzyltriphenylphosphonium chloride Benzyltriphenylphosphonium iodide Benzyltriphenylphosphonium tetrafluoroborate C) Hardeners for Epoxy Powder Coats Dicyandiamide Adipic acid dihydrazide Succinic acid dihydrazide D) Matting Agent for Epoxy Powder Coats ortho-tolylbiguanide For more information contact paintandcoatings@gfschemicals.com. |
US Congresswoman Mary Jo Kilroy (D) Tours GFS Chemicals Plan...
US Congresswoman Mary Jo Kilroy (D) Tours GFS Chemicals Plant Operations
Inorganics - Cerate Oxidimetry - Excerpt from GFS Monograph
Inorganic Method Development
Client Solutions = Chemical Selection + Customer Service Chemical problem solving requires several factors working closely together: Chemical manufacturing versatility combined with family-business tradition at GFS has translated customer service into client solutions for over 80 years. For example: GFS Chemical Manufacturing in Support of NASA Space Program In the 1960's when the NASA space program began to focus on the Apollo missions and the goal to retrieve and analyze lunar samples, GFS was asked to develop a process that would manufacture high purity acids having virtually no trace metal contaminants. By using specially designed quartz stills, we were able to provide NASA scientists with the highest quality acid available, including the perchloric acid needed to digest these unique samples. GFS continues to be a primary producer of Trace Metal grade acids used in all kinds of advanced analytical protocols. Traditional GFS Amine Ligands Finding New Use as Chemical Sensors Many of the heteroaromatic amine ligands that were developed in the 1930's are now playing an important role in fiber optic and sensor technologies. Bathophenanthroline (4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline) complexes of Ruthenium(II) have been engineered into a broad range of chemical sensing systems. In the 1990's, customers advised us that the growth of some technologies of considerable environmental impact depended upon the development of complexes having more favorable solubility in organic and polymeric matrices. In response, GFS chemists were able to manufacture a new, more soluble tetraphenylboron salt of (tris) Bathophenanthroline ruthenium(II) and make it available for chemical sensor research. GFS Meets Special Needs for Pharmaceutical Process Chemicals Manufacturing pharmaceutical intermediates requires raw materials and reagents meeting especially tight specifications. Major drug companies have learned that GFS can manufacture many chemical products in ton lots to specifications more stringent than those described in the GFS catalog. Taking a 50 gram sample to commercial volumes in a few months goes a long way toward building the long-term client relationship that has been the tradition at GFS since 1928. Commercial Markets also Benefit from GFS Client Solutions Several years ago GFS was approached about providing an active, hard-surface sanitizer that was needed in the beverage service market. At the time, GFS had no experience with the material and no facility designed to carry out the chemical manufacturing on large scale. Within six months, the GFS plant site was modified to create a facility that was approved by customer, EPA, and FDA, and we implemented a manufacturing process for this active ingredient that continues to this day. Broader Manufacturing Capabilities = Better Client Solutions GFS has greatly enhanced its chemical manufacturing capabilities in recent years. With increasing resources for R&D and for the development of both technical and safety information, GFS offers a broad range of Client Solutions on both the organic and inorganic sides of the business. In some cases, the two chemical disciplines can be brought together to offer unique problem solving capabilities. GFS has been the primary supplier of anhydrous lithium perchlorate to the battery industry for decades. Now we are helping to develop new methodologies for complex chemical synthesis involving solutions of anhydrous lithium perchlorate and magnesium perchlorate in organic solvents such as diethyl ether or ethyl acetate. Commercialization of this technology offers many attractive possibilities in the manufacture of pharmaceutical precursors, agricultural intermediates, and in polymer synthesis. For more information or to request a free a monograph contact service@gfschemicals.com or call 1-877-534-0795. Our quality, price and availability are excellent on: BY GFS chemicals——www.gfschemicals.com
GFS Inorganic Facility Info
GFS relies on innovation to meet customer needs. Constant enhancement of technology and equipment is a key reason GFS is the perfect business partner for the specialty chemical industry. Some of our inorganic capabilities include: The total GFS manufacturing capacity exceeds 100,000 liters for the combined production of inorganic and organic specialty chemicals; more than 80 years of experience are at your disposal. We are not presently certified for cGMP manufacturing; however, we carefully follow ISO-9001:2000 guidelines and manufacture a wide range of precursor materials that facilitate the synthesis of various pharmaceutical ingredients. For more information, contact inorganicdevelopment@gfschemicals.com or call 1-877-534-0795. by GFS chemicals-www.gfschemicals.com

Development Inquiry
GFS Chemicals has over 80 years of experience manufacturing high purity lab reagents, organics and inorganics. As a manufacturer we can work with you to develop new products for your organization or market. If you would like to learn more about new product development, please e-mail your requirements to service@gfschemicals.com or call 1-877-534-0795. By GFS chemicals-www.gfschemicals.com
