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  • AIME
    Hydro Power and Metallurgical Development in Norway

    By Carl W. Volz

    NORWAY'S metallurgical development, which has extended over many centuries, is intimately associated with that country's unique topography and climatic conditions. It is a rugged mountainous

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Aluminum - Extraction of Alumina from Clays by the Lime-sinter Modification of the Pedersen Process.

    By John H. Walthall, Raymond L. Copson, Travis P. Hignett

    In October 1942, the War Production Board requested the Tennessee Valley Authority to undertake investigations to determine the feasibility of producing alumina suitable for reduction in aluminum cell

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Phosphates, Arsenates, Vanadates, etc.

    By William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana

    Normal phosphoric acid is H3P04, and consequently normal phosphates have the formulas R3PO4, R3(P04)2 and RPO4, and similarly for the arsenates, etc. Only a comparatively small number of species confo

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Effect of Sinter Mix Composition and Additives on the Quality of Blast Furnace Sinter

    By D. J. Carney, C. W. Boquist, E. C. Rudolphy

    Effect of variations in sinter feed composition on sinter strength, bulk density, re-ducibility, chemical composition, and microstructure were determined by sintering experimental samples on a product

    Jan 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Waelz Treating Of Complex Zinc-Lead Ores, Kiln Products Limited, Berg Aukas, South West Africa.

    By Harry E. Cross

    Kiln Products commissioned a Waelz kiln 4 metres in diameter by 75 metres long, in South West Africa in March, 1969, to recover nine in a form suitable for the production of electrolytic zinc. The raw

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Treatment of Coal Surfaces (d628d918-ac79-4fc8-aa37-9081605257e9)

    By Ralph A. Sherman, J. M. Pilcher

    BY surface treatment of coal is meant the application of a material, either solid or liquid, to the surface of pieces of coal. The purposes of surface treatment are varied. They may be to identify or

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    The Microstructure Of Coal

    By Clarence Seyler

    THE technical difficulties of cutting thin sections of coal for examination by transmitted light have hitherto restricted the investigation of the important subject of the microstructure of coal to th

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Deformation and Fracture of Polycrystalline Cadmium

    By N. S. Stoloff, M. Gensamer

    The effects of temperature, grain size, and magnesium content on the strength and ductility of cadmium were studied in the range -269° to 23 °C. A sharp drop in ductility between -140° and -190°C mark

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Vicalloy - A Workable Alloy For Permanent Magnets

    By E. A. Nesbitt

    THE important permanent-magnet alloys 15 years ago contained carbon and depended upon it for their permanent- magnet properties. In recent years great, advances have been made in a number of new alloy

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Coal - Coal Characteristics and Their Relationship to Combustion Techniques

    By T. S. Spicer

    The relationship of coal characteristics to the principal types of firing equipment has been known to the coal combustion engineer, but is not as familiar a subject for purchasing agents, salesmen, co

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    First Magnetic Roasting Plant in Lake Superior Region (e358e1b4-0552-45f2-bf2a-74a081b415ff)

    By E. W. Davis

    IF the tonnage of merchantable iron ore remaining in the Lake Superior district is divided by the average of the annual shipments for the past 20 years, it will be found that this ore supply will be e

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Mineralogy of the Potash Fields of New Mexico-Texas

    By WALDEMAR T. SCHALLER, EDWARD P. HENDERSON

    THE material available for mineralogic study, consisted of drill cores, 2 to 3 in. thick, supplemented by small well cuttings. Such study has added no essential new information regarding the minerals,

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    The Dorr Hydrometallurgical Apparatus

    INTRODUCTION IT is 10. years this summer since the first of the contributions which it has been my privilege to make to the working tools of the hydrometallurgist was set at work, but a full descript

    Jan 8, 1914

  • AIME
    A Geologist's Plea for More Freedom in Publication

    By Yeatman, Pope

    FOR many years geologists have felt that mining companies should adopt a more liberal policy in the publication of their reports. The increasing usefulness of the geologist to the mining profession in

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Occurrence And Origin Of Finely Disseminated Sulfur Compounds In Coal

    By Reinhardt Thiessen

    UNDER sulfur in coal, is usually understood that form of sulfur which is combined with iron and known as pyrite. It occurs in the form of halls, lenses, nodules, continuous layers, thin sheets, or fla

    Jan 9, 1919

  • AIME
    Part X - The 1967 Howe Memorial Lecture – Iron and Steel Division - Precipitation of Nitride in Niobium (Columbium) and Niobium-Zirconium Alloys

    By C. Altstetter, Y. Huang, E. de Lamotte

    Nitrogen was introduced into pure niobium (colutn-bium) and dilute Nb- Zr alloy wires by equilibration with pure nitrogen gas at high temperatures. Room-temperature hardness was correlated with the al

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Extensive Control a Feature of Open-Hearth Practice at Lackawanna

    By P. F. Kinyoun

    MANY interesting new features are embodied in the latest extension to the open-hearth department of the Bethlehem Steel Co., at Lackawanna, N. Y. Automatic control of the important factors in furnace

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Papers - Nature of Passivity in Stainless Steels and Other Alloys, I and II.

    By John Wulff, H. H. Uhlig

    Since its first mention in the literature in the eighteenth century12 the phenomenon of passivity in metals has stimulated much speculation and attendant controversy as to its nature and cause. No one

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Nature of Passivity in Stainless Steels and Other Alloys, I and II.

    By John Wulff, H. H. Uhlig

    Since its first mention in the literature in the eighteenth century12 the phenomenon of passivity in metals has stimulated much speculation and attendant controversy as to its nature and cause. No one

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Part IX - Communications - Anodizing as a Technique for Studying Diffusion in the TiCb System

    By J. Grosso, D. J. Nagel

    In many metallurgical studies, it is necessary to reveal the composition and structural properties of materials. Usually this is done by etching, but some substances do not etch well or easily. Anodiz

    Jan 1, 1967