ultraconcentrated

English

Etymology

From ultra- +‎ concentrated.

Adjective

ultraconcentrated (not comparable)

  1. Extremely concentrated; of utmost concentration.
    • 1951, The American Journal of Medicine 1951-09: Volume 11, Issue 3[1], Elsevier Sequoia S. A., page 327:
      She was treated effectively with calcium and A.T. 10. Since 1947 she had been given an ultraconcentrated vitamin H² preparation.
    • 1937, Journal of the American Rocket Society 1937-03: Issue 36[2], American Institute of Aeronautics, page 19:
      Efficiency at this speed 11.2%, and increases with velocity. Combustion chamber operates at 3000 C. Cost calculated at 12 francs per H.P. in large units, as contrasted to 250 francs for conventional engines. Inventors claim it logical driving mechanism for high-speed aircraft operating in the stratosphere. At hyperspeeds (greater than sound) expansion of nozzles reversed.
    • 1937, Journal of the American Rocket Society 1937-03: Issue 36[3], American Institute of Aeronautics, page 19:
      Efficiency at this speed 11.2%, and increases with velocity. Combustion chamber operates at 3000 C. Cost calculated at 12 francs per H.P. in large units, as contrasted to 250 francs for conventional engines. Inventors claim it logical driving mechanism for high-speed aircraft operating in the stratosphere. At hyperspeeds (greater than sound) expansion of nozzles reversed.