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Papers - The Nature of Metals as Shown by Their Properties under Pressure (Annual Lecture)
By P. W. Bridgman
It is characteristic of most scientific investigators that they are not satisfied with the discovery of new facts, no matter how curious or unexpected, but that along with the factual discovery there
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Production and Some Testing Methods of Metal Powders (With Discussion)
By J. D. Shaw, E. B. Gebert, D. O. Noel
It is, of course, expected that manufacture of the various metal powders should involve numerous methods adapted to the specific characteristics of the metals themselves. Several methods for powdering
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Types of Metal Powder Products-a Classification (With Discussion)
By Gregory J. Comstock
There is a growing interest in the possibilities presented by the manipulation of metal powders, which justifies an attempt to summarize their character and potential value. A summary of this kind pre
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Ductile Tantalum and Columbium (With Discussion)
By Clarence W. Balke
Small buttons of fused tantalum have been produced by are fusion in a vacuum, by drawing an arc between sticks of pressed tantalum and a tantalum-faced water-cooled copper block. However, ingots of ap
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Cemented Tungsten Carbide Alloys (With Discussion)
By W. P. Sykes
Seven years ago, Dr. S. L. Hoytl presented a masterful discussion of the hard metal carbides and cemented tungsten carbide. His lecture summarized most of the data then available in the field; many of
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Tantalum Carbide Tool Compositions (With Discussion)
By Philip M. Mc Kenna
When a new material becomes available to industry, it is useful to describe its properties as a guide to its most effective application; and when the new material may be produced in compositions havin
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - The Yield Point in Metals (With Discussion)
By M. Gensamer
In applied mechanics and in metallurgy the transition from elastic to inelastic action is a matter of considerable interest and importance. Often the first inelastic deformation is apparently quite ho
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Creep and Fracture Tests on Single Crystals of Lead (With Discussion)
By John B. Baker, Bernard B. Betty, H. F. Moore
For several years there has been in progress in the Materials Testing Laboratory of the University of Illinois an investigation of creep and fracture of lead and lead alloys. In the course of this inv
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Measurements of Internal Friction in Age-hardening Alloys with a Modified Torsion Pendulum Apparatus (With Discussion)
By R. A. Flinn, John T. Norton
A considerable number of experiments in recent years have definitely established the fact that the internal friction or mechanical hysteresis of a metal under cyclic stress is a property that is highl
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - The Sintering Process and Some Recent Developments (T. P. 963, with discussion)
By John E. Greenawalt
In view of the increasing importance of sintering in the beneficiation of iron ores preparatory to their reduction in the blast furnace, the writer believes the time is opportune for an up-to-date, th
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Efficiency of the Blast-furnace Process (T. P. 943, with discussion)
By J. B. Austin
In considering so complex a process as the smelting of iron in the blast furnace, there is obviously no single method of calculating efficiency that gives a complete appraisal of the performance of th
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Pressure Operation of the Pig-iron Blast Furnace and the Problem of Solution Loss (T. P. 921, with discussion)
By Julian M. Avery
In its dual role of pig-iron smelter and gas producer, the blast furnace is a remarkably satisfactory and efficient apparatus. Many metallurgists and engineers have pointed out, however, that since th
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Benefits from the Use of High-iron Concentrates in a Blast Furnace (T. P. 956, with discussion)
By C. E. Agnew
The Eastern district, composed of New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania, with its native ores, was the cradle of the iron industry of the United States. The district attained and held the leadership in
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Relative Desulphurizing Powers of Blast-furnace Slags, II (T. P. 8-75, with discussion)
By W. F. Holbrook
In a previous paper1 a method for the measurement of the comparative desulphurizing power of slags was described and data were presented covering the range of likely slags containing up to 10 per cent
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Desulphurizing Pig Iron by Ladle Treatment with Soda Ash or Caustic Soda, And a Nontechnical Discussion of the Reactions of Alkali Slags
By George S. Evans
Certain American operators bclieve that desulphurizing in the ladle offers a means of increasing blast-furnace and open-hearth yields with the possibility of improvements in quality of the steel. In f
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Combined Carbon-A Controlling Factor in Quality of Basic Pig Iron
By Ralph H. Sweetser
At the joint session of Blast Furnace and Open Hearth Committees, April 7, 1937, at Birmingham, the subject of the quality of basic open-hearth pig iron was so well presented and discussed from so man
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Composition and Microstructure of Ancient Iron Castings (T. P. 882, with discussion)
By Maurice L. Pinel, Thomas Wright, Thomas T. Read
The erroneous, but until recently widely prevalent, belief that iron castings were first made in Europe in the fourteenth century has been adequately refuted in a number of earlier papers;1, ll, l² bu
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Distribution of the Metalloids in Rimmed-steel Ingots (T. P. 898, with discussion)
By J. W. Halley, T. S. Washburn
Rimming steels derive their name from their action during solidification in the molds. As a result of incomplete deoxidation, gas is evolved during freezing, and the metal has a characteristic rolling
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Evolution of Gases from Rimming-steel Ingots (T .P. 942, with discussion)
By K. C. McCutcheon, John Chipman
To a very large extent the quality of a mild steel ingot is determined by the manner in which it is poured into the ingot mold and its behavior during the first few minutes after it has been poured. T
Jan 1, 1938