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Electronic Materials Research: Present And Future TrendsBy Fred D. Rosi
Introduction There is probably no field in which materials research has played a greater role than that of electronics. However, to trace present and future patterns of materials research in electr
Jan 1, 1971
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Boston Paper - Trough-LixiviationBy Ottokar Hofmann
In tank-lixiviation, the extraction of the silver from chloridized ore by solutions of hyposulphite salts is performed by filtration. The ore-particles are kept stationary, while the solvent moves dow
Jan 1, 1888
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Buffalo Paper - A Modification of Bischof's Method for Determining the Fusibility of Clays, as Applied to Non-Refractory Clays, and the Resistance of Fire-Clays to FluxesBy H. O. Hofman
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, In deternlining experimentally the fusibility of clays, two kinds of methods may be distinguished—the direct and the indirect. Of the direct methods, that of Seger has foun
Jan 1, 1899
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New York Paper - The Plasticity of Clay and its Relation of Mode to OriginBy N. B. Davis
I. Introduction. II. Definition of Plasticity. III. Theories of Plasticity. A. Structure of the clay particles. (1) Fineness of grain. (2) Plate structure. (3) Interlocking particles.
Jan 1, 1915
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Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Effect of Additions on the Exchange of Chlorine between Calcium Chloride and Metal OxidesBy N. F. Neumann, A. W. Schlechten
Metal chlorides were formed by reacting metal oxides and calcium chloride; the effect of additions to the reaction mixture was studied. It was found that by use of proper additions, metal chlorides
Jan 1, 1959
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Papers - Magnetic Methods - Practical Geomagnetic Exploration with the Hotchkiss Superdip (With Discussion)By Noel H. Stearn
To the successful functioning of the geomagnetic method of exploration in engineering and geological practice there are two prime prerequisites : the measurability and the interpretability of signific
Jan 1, 1932
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Experiments Demonstrate Method of Producing Artificial Manganese OreBy T. L. Joseph
LARGE deposits of manganiferous iron ores, representing several million tons of metallic manganese, occur in the United States. The Minnesota deposits of such ore-are of outstanding importance because
Jan 1, 1930
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Glen Summit Paper - Results of Stream-Measurements of the United States Geological SurveyBy F. H. Newell
Measurements of the amount of water flowing in many of the larger rivers of the west have been made by the United States Geological Survey, and by this means the daily discharges of these rivers have
Jan 1, 1892
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Desulphurizing Pig Iron By Ladle Treatment With Soda Ash Or Caustic Soda, And A Nontechnical Discussion Of The Reactions Of Alkali SlagsBy George S. Evans
CERTAIN American operators believe 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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St. Louis Paper - Oil-field Brines (with Discussion)By C. W. Washburne
Recently, Messrs, Mills and Wells1 published a thorough chemical study of the waters associated with oil in parts of the Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia region. Many of their conclusions are of
Jan 1, 1921
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Analysis Of Slopes In A Discontinuous Rock MassBy Fun-Den Wang
An open pit rock structure usually contains geological planes of weakness. They are formed by joints, faults, bedding planes, fractures, and cleavages. Rock slope failures often occur in the form of s
Jan 1, 1972
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Bethlehem Paper - The Secondary Enrichment of Copper-Iron SulphidesBy Thomas T. Read
The fact that certain types of ore-deposits have attained their present condition through the action of descending surface waters was, perhaps, first clearly pointed out by Posepny.l The oxidizing eff
Jan 1, 1907
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Suggestions for the Control of Silicosis in MiningBy Donald Cummings
MEASURES appropriate for the control of the silicosis hazard in mining cannot be formulated precisely, but sufficient knowledge1-19 has accumu-lated during the past quarter century to permit the sugge
Jan 1, 1938
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Quantitative Estimation Of The Impurities In Tin By Means Of The Quartz SpectrographBy C. Stansfield Hitchen
THE introduction of the logarithmic sector method of quantitative spectrography by Scheibe and Neuhäusser in 1928, and the subsequent .modification and improvement of the method by Twyman and Simeon,
Jan 1, 1933
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Plant Waste ContaminantsBy David R. Maneval, W. E. Foreman, J. Richard Lucas
INTRODUCTION The objective of this chapter is to inform the industry, as well as the public, of the challenges in dealing with the problems associated with the contamination of air and water from
Jan 1, 1968
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Quantitative Spectrum Analysis - Part I.- Qualitative Spectrum AnalysisBy F. Twyman, D. M. Smith
THOSE chemists (they are still greatly in the minority) who use the spectroscope, use it very often, and find it almost indispensable. As a means of detecting minute quantities of the metals it is unr
Jan 1, 1928
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Ammonia and Mercury Stress-Cracking Tests for BrassBy Gerald Edmunds, R. K. Waring, E. A. Anderson
Brass is liable to failure under the combined influence of stress, certain corrosion media, and time, a phenomenon commonly termed season cracking or stress-corrosion cracking. The consequences of thi
Jan 1, 1945
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Surface Tensions of SilicatesBy R. E. Boni, G. Derge
SURFACE tensions of molten silicates are of metallurgical importance for many reasons. From a knowledge of their values, an insight into the problem of liquid slag structure
Jan 1, 1957
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The Evolution Of The Round Table For The Treatment Of Metalliferous Slimes.By Theodore Simons
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) DURING the last half century a great amount of ingenuity and energy has been devoted to the invention of appliances for the recovery of valuable minerals from very fine
Jan 7, 1913
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Washington D.C. Paper - The Mineral Regions of Southern New MexicoBy B. Silliman
The regions of New Mexico referred to are in Socorro, Grant, and Dona Ana counties, and a portion of Lincoln County, embracing in the aggregate a very large area, of most of which our knowledge is as
Jan 1, 1882