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The Nationality Of Commercial Control Of World Minerals (b1d2ccc4-5fb4-4cd9-97a8-3baa2bd2bc73)By William Rawles
THIS report is the first of a series planned by The Mineral Inquiry, organized by the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers to make factual studies of the world's mineral resou
Jan 1, 1933
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Plant For Production Of Magnesium By The Ferrosilicon ProcessBy Andrew Mayer
EARLY in 1942 National Lead Co. was requested by the War Production Board to construct and operate a plant for the Government to produce magnesium by the ferrosilicon process which had been developed
Jan 1, 1944
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Use Of Steel In Top SlicingBy John G. Tate, George W. Nicolson, James L. Bruce
FOR more than 25 years modern mining has been carried on in the Island of Cyprus, Mediterranean Sea, by the Cyprus Mines Corp. of Los Angeles, Calif. The general features of these operations have been
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - The Stabilization of the Size of Fine Iron Particles in MercuryBy R. B. Falk, F. E. Luborsky
Small iron particles in mercury pow by diffusion of iron atoms through the mercury. Iron particles, with diameters about 200Å, have been stopped from gvowing in size, even up to the boiling point of m
Jan 1, 1965
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Geology, Geological Engineering - Ancient Stream Channels and Their Effect on Mine Planning and Grade Control at the White Pine Mine, MichBy Jr. Ensign C. O., J. W. Trammell
The two principal methods of room-and-pillar mining practiced at White Pine make it important to predict variations in the thickness and rock types of a stratum called the upper sandstone. In full col
Jan 1, 1964
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Preferred Orientations Produced by Recrystallizing Cold-rolled Low-carbon Sheet SteelBy M. Gensamer
A RECENT paper1 described, by means of stereographic pole figures, the preferred orientations produced by cold-rolling low-carbon steel of automobile-body grade. It was found that the surface of the s
Jan 1, 1936
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Kinetics of Hematite and the Influence of Gaseous DiffusionBy N. A. Warner
Dense cylindrical specimens of artificial hematite were reduced in hydrogen over a range 0-f total pressures between 0.1 and 1.0 atm and temperatures between 650" and 950°C. Hydrogen reduction at a to
Jan 1, 1964
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Institute of Metals Division - Ultrasonic Attenuation Study of Dislocation Motion Part I. TheoreticalBy Robert E. Green
Formulae are given for calculating the modes of wave propagation in a single-crystdl specimen possessing a given crystallographic orientation. Such calculations lead to determination of the orientatio
Jan 1, 1964
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New York Paper - Forgeability of Iron-nickel Alloys (with Discussion)By T. D. Yensen
In the investigation of the magnetic properties of iron-nickel alloys,' it was found necessary in order to make the alloys forgeable, or malleable, to add small quantities of some other element.
Jan 1, 1922
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Logging and Log Interpretation - Laboratory Studies of a Pulsed Neutron-Source Technique in Well LoggingBy W. B. Nelligam, J. Tittman
Refinements in radiation logging techniques during recent years have involved increasing usage of scintillation ditectors. These detectors produce voltage pulses whose heights are related to the energ
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Physical Metallurgy - Recrystallization of in Terms of the Rate of Nucleation and the Rate of Growth (Metals Technology, Feb. 1945) (With discussion)By W. A. Anderson
Recrystallization of cold-worked metals has long been known to proceed by a process of nucleation and growth.' When a cold-worked metal is heated to a temperature at which recrystallization will
Jan 1, 1945
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PART VI - The Growth of Nitrogen-Austenite into Alloyed FerriteBy J. E. Pavlick, W. W. Mullins, H. W. Paxton
The growth of nitrogen-austenite during nitriding of large-gvained ferrite between 650" and 800°C has been studied as a functimz oJ time and nitrogen potential of the atmosphere for a variety of alloy
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - A Study of the Growth of Voids in Copper During the Creep Process by Measurement of the Accompanying Change in DensityBy W. D. Robertson, Raymond C. Boettner
A study was made of the change in density during the first (transient) and second (linear) stages of the creep curve of polycrystalline copper as a function of 1) stress, 2) temperature, 3) plastic st
Jan 1, 1962
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Papers - Effects of Columbium in Chromium-nickel Steels (With Discussion)By Frederick M. Becket, Russell Franks
In a recent article,l which described the softening effect of columbium in plain high-chromium steels, the authors stated that their investigations had shown columbium to be also a particularly valuab
Jan 1, 1934
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Centrifugal Fans and Their Use in Bleeder ApplicationsBy David W. Kennedy, Stephen P. Harrison
In the past few years, a new system has been developed for ventilating longwall panels in some gassy coal mines in the Northern West Virginia area. This system utilizes a five or six foot diameter air
Jan 1, 1982
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Time As A Factor In The Making And Treating Of Steel (c043d547-9b99-45b7-8b2f-519842c8c647)By John Johnston
WHEN I was honored by being invited to give the Howe Memorial Lecture, I decided to read Howe's book, "The Metallography of Steel and Cast Iron," published in 1916-that is, about 25 years ago-in
Jan 1, 1942
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Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - Some Effects of Oxygen on the Tensile Deformation of PolycrystaIIine ZirconiumBy D. H. Baldwin, R. E. Reed-Hill
Six compositions of polycrystalline ZY-0 alloys, containing up to 4.2 at. pct 0, were tested in tension between 77° and 600° K. The data obtained from each of the compositions corresponded closely t
Jan 1, 1969
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Minerals Beneficiation - Infrared Identification of Silica Adsorbed on Thoria SurfacesBy M. E. Wadsworth, J. S. Cho
Colloidal silica dissolved in aqueous suspensions of high surface area thoria was permitted to adsorb on the thoria surface. Silica in three forms was identified by means of infrared spectroscopy and
Jan 1, 1963
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New York Paper - Fine Crushing in Ball-mills (with Discussion)By E. W. Davis
On the eastern end of the Mesabi Range, in Northern Minnesota, is a large formation of siliceous rock which contains bands and fine grains of magnetite. The magnetite comprises about 35 per cent. of t
Jan 1, 1920
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Institute of Metals Division - Alloys of Copper and IronBy C. S. Smith, E. W. Palmer
IN 1934, when Gregg and Daniloffl wrote their excellent monograph on the alloys of iron and copper, the most recent literature on the constitution of the alloys indicated a narrow single-liquid area f
Jan 1, 1951