Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Magnesium Chloride From Naturally Occurring Brines and EvaporitesBy A. F. Nylander, J. H. Jensen
Magnesium, in its combined forms, is the sixth most abundant element and the third most abundant metal in the earth's crust, but it is so reactive that it is never found in nature in the elementa
Jan 11, 1964
-
Magnesium From OlivineBy E. C. Houston
THE presence in the Tennessee Valley of extensive deposits of olivine, a silicate of magnesium and iron that contains approximately 28 per cent magnesium, has been recognized since 1896 when Lewis8 pu
Jan 1, 1945
-
Magnesium Hydroxides Production From Natural Brine In MichiganBy Paul E. Scheerer
Synthetically produced magnesium hydroxide serves as the precursor for much of the magnesium oxide produced in the world today. Magnesium oxide, in a variety of physical and chemically reactive forms,
Jan 1, 1978
-
Magnesium Oxide For Deep Bed Filtration Of Water ? ObjectiveTo improve efficiency in producing clarified water from mineral and metallurgical processing streams containing suspended particles. Approach Particles suspended in mineral and metallurgical proce
Jan 1, 1983
-
Magnesium Oxide Suppression during Nickel FlotationBy R. Casagrande, L. R. Moore, J. Sessoms, P. Macy
"A South American nickel mine has been producing a nickel concentrate that also contains copper and iron (15 percent nickel, 5 percent copper, 28 percent iron) for the end use of stainless steel produ
Jan 1, 2015
-
Magnesium Removal from Secondary Aluminum Melts in Reverberatory and Rotary FurnacesBy Eulogio Velasco, Jose Nino, Marcos Cardoso
"Recycling of aluminum scrap for production of secondary alloys used for automotive applications is increasing continuously. Automotive alloys require a strict control to remove alloy impurities, incl
Jan 1, 2011
-
Magnesium Sheet Production Today and TomorrowBy Fr. -W. Bach
In the past years the enormous weight saving potential of magnesium sheet has been demonstrated by various research projects all over the world. It has been shown magnesium flat products can benefit a
Jan 1, 2006
-
Magnesium Sulfate Production ù First Value Added Salt From Saline Waters of the Murray Basin (Australia)By T Barto, D Thomson, T Norgate, C Doblin
Collaboration between CSIRO Minerals and SunSalt Pty Ltd, a salt producing company located in rural Victoria, has resulted in a commercial process to recover magnesium sulfate (commonly called Epsom s
Jan 1, 2004
-
Magnesium Technologies -Present and FutureBy Robert E. (Bob) Brown
Magnesium was discovered by Davy in 1808. The production processes as they exist are not economically competitive with aluminum The electrolytic magnesium process is divided into two steps; one to mak
Jan 1, 2001
-
Magnesium-Its Etching And Structure (9179fad8-3067-4f28-9a4a-de3e3d99ba3e)By H. B. Pulsifer
ABOUT 15 varieties, or modifications, of the best magnesium available were prepared and subjected to etching tests, then examined for microstructure. Of the 30-odd etching reagents that were tried, ne
Jan 1, 1927
-
Magnesium-Its Sources, Methods of Reduction, and Commercial ApplicationBy Paul D. V. Manning
MAGNESIUM is an exceedingly strategic material but the importance of its production at the time this war started was not realized. Our Government then suddenly became much alive to the need of a treme
Jan 1, 1943
-
Magnesium: Origin And Role In Calcium-Treated InclusionsBy P. Chris Pistorius
Calcium treatment of alumina inclusions, to convert the alumina to molten or partially molten calcium aluminates, is a well-established treatment for steel, to improve the castability of aluminium-kil
Jan 1, 2006
-
Magnesium: Reviewing Its Technology of Production and UseBy John A. Gann
WITHIN a very few years magnesium has sprung from oblivion, from classification as a technically unknown, little appreciated, and expensive material to front-page importance in many fields of engineer
Jan 1, 1932
-
Magnetic Aging Of Iron Due To OxygenBy T. D. Yensen, N. A. Ziegler
AGING is a term that connotes a slow change in properties under ordinary operating conditions. It can be accelerated by increasing the temperature and by mechanical straining. The magnetic properties
Jan 1, 1935
-
Magnetic Aging of Iron Due to Oxygen (27b00f98-be7d-428c-8d64-e67bc5efd496)By T. D. Yensen
AGING is a term that connotes a slow change in properties under ordinary operating conditions. It can be accelerated by increasing the temperature and by mechanical straining. The magnetic properties
Jan 1, 1935
-
Magnetic Analyses of Transformations in a Cold-worked 18-8 AlloyBy R. Buehl
ALTHOUGH the main features of the transformations occurring in 18-8 have been published already,1-4 certain conclusions merit questioning and discussion. The questions may be summarized as follows:
Jan 1, 1939
-
Magnetic and Chemical Analyses Of Ores and Mill Products Containing Magnetite and IlmeniteBy Erkki Laurila
INVESTIGATION of the methods of analyses for magnetite and ilmenite in the Otanmäki iron-titanium ore and respective mill products has resulted in certain improvements in the methods conventionally em
Jan 9, 1951
-
Magnetic and Gravity Modelling of the Renison Tin Mine, TasmaniaBy Mudge S. T
Tin mineralisation occurs at Renison Bell, near Zeehan in Tasmania, as a group of cassiterite-bearing massive pyrrhotite bodies in Cambrian sedimentary rocks. Mineralising fluids from the underlying
Jan 1, 1997
-
Magnetic Anomalies and Igneous RocksBy Mark Malamphy
MOST igneous rocks, and particularly those of the basic type, con-tain relatively high percentages of magnetite and other iron oxides, which give them moderately high magnetic susceptibilities and mak
Jan 1, 1936
-
Magnetic Anomalies of the Coromandel RegionBy D J. Woodward, A B. Christie, S A. Henrys
Low-level aeromagnetic data available in digital form have been combined to produce a new 1:100 000 scale map of total force anomalies of the Coromandel region, New Zealand. The map incorporates data
Jan 1, 2001