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Cleveland Paper - Notes on Ruff’s Carbon-Iron Equilibrium Diagram (with Discussion)By Henry M. Rowe
Professor Ruff's most illuminating paper' describing his extremely valuable investigation of the carbon-iron equilibrium diagram assigns definite temperatures to certain very important lines
Jan 1, 1913
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys - Grain Growth in High-purity Aluminum and in Aluminum-magnesium Alloy (Metals Tech., Sept. 1947, TP 2280) With discussionBy I. J. Demer, M. L. Holzworth, J. C. Kremer, P. A. Beck
For alloys which are in practice heat treated to obtain increased strength, such as steels, duralumin, copper-beryllium, and others, the treatment usually involves heating to a relatively high tempera
Jan 1, 1949
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Coal - Coal Gasification and the Coal Mining IndustryBy Henry R. Linden
The demand for natural gas continues to increase at higher than anticipated rates, partly because of its widening price advantage over most other fossil fuels when the cost of air-pollution control is
Jan 1, 1970
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Experience And Use Of Gypsum And Fiberglass As A Mine SealantBy Douglas M. Dwosh
Inland Steel Coal Co.'s system of applying a gypsum/fiberglass rib and roof sealant with standard rock dusting equipment will be outlined. The criteria for use included acceptability of results,
Jan 1, 1978
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Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Deflection of GirdersBy W. S. Ayres
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Colorado Paper - Interpretation of So-called Paraffin Dirt of Gulf Coast Oil Fields (with Discussion)By A. D. Brokaw
The so-called "paraffin dirt" of the Gulf Coast oil fields has been considered an indication of the possible presence of oil and gas, and not a few wells have been brought in solely on the basis of su
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper - The Influence of the Movement in Shales on the Area of Oil Production (with Discussion)By Richard A. Conkling
A shale layer, buried beneath two or three thousand feet of strata, in some instances, will upon folding become thicker in the synelines and thinner on top of the anticlines. This can be accounted
Jan 1, 1917
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PART IV - Communications - The Influence of Deformation Velocity on the Tensile Rupture Ductility of Strain-Aged SteelBy A. Hansson, G. E. Tardiff
WHILE it is generally known that cold-worked low-and medium-carbon steels exhibit substantial increases in tensile rupture ductility with increased deformation velocity172 (up to the von Karman limit)
Jan 1, 1968
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Institute of Metals Division - Quantitative Deformation Textures of Aluminum, Copper, Silver and Iron WiresBy B. D. Cullity, A. Freda
It is well known that deformation by cold drawing or swaging produces a kind of preferred orientation called fiber texture in metal wires. Such textures have been extensively studied by means of X-r
Jan 1, 1960
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St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Ore Deposits of the Boulder Batholith of Montana (with Discussion)By J. A. Grimes, Paul Billingsley
A. Introduction. 1. Association of Ores and Igneous Rocks. 2. Identity of Granite Rocks. B. General Geology. 1. Geologic Events of the Igneous Cycle. 2. Association of Igneous Intrusions with Tec
Jan 1, 1918
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The Beginnings Of Mineral Industry EducationBy Thomas T., Read
THE education of adolescents to perform the duties and assume the responsibilities of maturity has been a characteristic of human society since the dawn of history. In the beginning the members of the
Jan 1, 1941
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Cleveland Meeting Huge SuccessBy AIME AIME
OUR own Institute of Metals and Iron and Steel divisions cooperated with the Iron and Steel Division of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the American Welding Society, and the American Soc
Jan 1, 1929
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Methods of Predicting the Subsidence Factor, Angle of Draw and Angle of Critical DeformationBy D. Y. Geng, Syd S. Peng
This paper analyzes the effects of geology and mining methods on surface subsidence factor, angle of draw and angle of critical deformation based on the results of 40 longwall subsidence profiles in t
Jan 1, 1982
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David D. Irwin – An Interview by Henry CarlisleCarlisle: This is April 19, 1961. My good friend Dave Irwin is sitting on the other side of the tape recorder. We are at Rose Dhu Island, Savannah, Ga. Now, let's begin with your first job, where
Jan 6, 1964
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Institute of Metals Division - Delayed Yielding in a Substitutional Solid Solution AlloyBy J. E. Dorn, L. A. Shepard
LOW and Gensamer' demonstrated a number of years ago that the yield point phenomenon in mild steels was associated with the presence of fer-rite soluble carbon or nitrogen. More recently the yiel
Jan 1, 1957
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Principles Of Flotation-Flotation Of Cassiterite And Associated MineralsBy J. Rogers, H. F. A. Hergt, K. L. Sutherland
IN 1938 Ralston4 reviewed the many attempts to find a satisfactory collector for the separation of cassiterite from its ores and in 1944 Dean and Ambrose2 summarized some further attempts. Generally,
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Relation of Nitrogen to Blue Heat Phenomena in Iron and Dispersion Hardening in the System Iron-nitrogenBy R. O. Day, R. S. Dean
In constructing a theory of the flow and hardening of metals, v necessarily make use of such phenomena as seem to be universal1 observed in metals. It is, therefore, a matter of concern to the con str
Jan 1, 1929
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Postwar Products Planning and Raw Materials SourcesBy Clyde E. Williams
IN planning a postwar program for manufactured products, it is essential that the bases for the plans be wisely chosen. First we must make certain assumptions as to the war's ending. Let us assum
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division - The Elastic Coefficients of Single Crystals of Alpha BrassBy R. W. Fenn, H. A. Lepper, W. R. Hibbard
THIS paper reports the results of static tension and torsion tests made on single crystals of alpha brass for the purpose of determining its elastic coefficients. 70-30 alpha brass was chosen because
Jan 1, 1951
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Reservoir Engineering - General - A Study of Anomalons Pressure Build-up BehaviorBy C. S. Matthews, G. L. Stegemeier
In one field in South Texas, approximately 72 per cent of the pressure build-up results show a characteris-i.rtic "hump" (i.e., the pressure builds up and then falls off) which makes interpretation by