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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Modern Baghouse Practice for the Recovery of Metallurgical FumesBy A. L. Labbe, J. J. Donoso
Hard-won experience in the operation of smelting plants has pointed the way to the most efficient design and economical operation of a baghouse system for recovery of metallurgical fumes. This paper t
Jan 1, 1951
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Mexican Paper - The Mexican Railroad-SystemBy Victor M. Braschi
The railroad history of Mexico began with the first presidential term of General Diaz. Concessions for the building of railroads had been granted in former years; indeed, an exclusive privilege was gr
Jan 1, 1902
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Electric Truck Haulage At CrestmoreBy Peter B. Nalle
Over a period of years the Crestmore plant of the Riverside Cement Co. has been supplied with limestone from the Chino limestone bed. The limestone bed dips about 40º and extends 1500 ft along the str
Jan 4, 1959
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Monoalkyldithiocarbamates As Promoters For Copper Carbonate Minerals (2b9bc6e3-6cf9-41cf-8cd7-26724b57124c)By M. F. Werneke, J. A. Jones
The use of a unique class of sulfhydryl collectors, the monoalkyldithiocarbamate salts (RNHCS2M) as direct collectors for malchite and azurite is presented. Microflotation and laboratory scale flotat
Jan 1, 1979
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Oil-Shale MiningBy Tell Ertl
THE term oil shale is defined. Foreign oil-shale developments are outlined briefly, The richest and most extensive oil-shale deposits in the United States lie in Western Colorado. The Bureau of Mines
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Induction Furnaces for Rotating Liquid Crucibles (T. P. 986, with discussion)By W. F. Holbrook, C. E. Wood, E. P. Barrett
The high-frequency laboratory induction furnace with a rotating liquid crucible enables research workers to conduct certain investigations heretofore very difficult or impossible to realize because ve
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Induction Furnaces for Rotating Liquid Crucibles (T. P. 986, with discussion)By W. F. Holbrook, C. E. Wood, E. P. Barrett
The high-frequency laboratory induction furnace with a rotating liquid crucible enables research workers to conduct certain investigations heretofore very difficult or impossible to realize because ve
Jan 1, 1939
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Calcination Conditions For Limestone, Dolomite And Magnesite (035b41bb-33b8-4e36-9ea8-d51e21c0c4c0)By John E. Conley
THE production of lime by the burning or calcination of limestone, including all varieties from true dolomites and magnesian limestones to high-calcium types, continues as one of the essential basic i
Jan 1, 1939
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Meeting Of Board Of Directors, May 28,1919There were present eight Directors, the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary of the Institute, and seventeen guests. Messrs. John V. N. Dorr and George D. Barron were appointed members of the Founde
Jan 7, 1919
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Energy Conservation in the Electrolytic Zinc ProcessEfficient energy utilization in the electrolytic zinc process, relative to other zinc processes, is one of the reasons for its wide adoption in recent years, says John D. Siddle, zinc plant superinten
Jan 11, 1977
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Mathematical Model for Batch Grinding in a Ball MillBy D. J. Freeh, W. E. Horst, R. C. Kellner
This paper is concerned with the description of grinding characteristics in a batch grinding system. A mathematical model was developed and used for simulating the system on an analog computer. A gene
Jan 1, 1968
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Estimates of Moisture Increases Due to Water-spraying Coal for Dust ControlBy T. W. Guy
THE increased moisture due to water¬spraying for coal dust control is of interest even for mines from which the coal is to be wet-washed before screening, because in many cases wet coal dust materiall
Jan 1, 1948
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Minerals Beneficiation - Hydrolytic and Ion Pair Absorption Models for Collectors in FlotationBy M. A. Cook
Sutherland used an ion-pair adsorption model to derive the author's hy-drolytic pee-acid) adsorption equation for the contact bubble curves of Wark and Cox. To do so it was necessary to postulat
Jan 1, 1961
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Iron and Steel Division - Evaluation of Methods for Determining Hydrogen in SteelBy J. F. Martin, L. M. Melnick, R. Rapp, R. C. Takacs
Recent studies on the determination of hydrogen in steel have shown that the hot-extraction method for removing hydrogen from a solid sample is preferable to its removal from a molten sample by vacuum
Jan 1, 1964
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Institute of Metals Division - Anisotropy of the Surface Diffusion Coefficient for CopperBy Jei Y. Choi, P. G. Shewmon
Using a scratch smoothing technique, the magnitude and the ratio of the surface diffusion coefficients (D,) in two orthogonal directions have been measured on copper for over 100 different surface or
Jan 1, 1963
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Instrumentation And Monitoring For Pillar Extraction In A Deep, Faulted Uranium MineBy Thomas R. Scotese
A rock mechanics instrumentation and monitoring program was implemented during pillar extraction at Gulf Mineral Resources' Mt. Taylor Mine, the deepest uranium mine in the U.S. Three types of mo
Jan 1, 1984
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New York Paper - Reaction between Manganese and Iron Sulfide (with Discussion)By O. S. True, C. H. Herty
It is well known that manganese will desulfurize molten iron through the formation of manganese sulfide, which, being only slightly soluble in the metal, rises to and enters the slag where it remains
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - Grinding - Wear and Size Distribution of Grinding Balls (Mining Technology, May 1940.) (with discussion)By Fred C. Bond
The process of comminution by grinding is properly classified as an art, rather than as a science. Like most other operations concerned in ore dressing, or in the treatment of nonmetallic minerals, th
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Grinding - Wear and Size Distribution of Grinding Balls (Mining Technology, May 1940.) (with discussion)By Fred C. Bond
The process of comminution by grinding is properly classified as an art, rather than as a science. Like most other operations concerned in ore dressing, or in the treatment of nonmetallic minerals, th
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division - Phosphorus Nitride as a Diffusion Source for SiliconBy H. B. Heller, T. J. LaChapelle
Phosphorus nitride has been used as a diffusant for introducing phosphorus into silicon under various conditions. It has a temperature -dependent rate of decomposition beginning in the 500°C range, in
Jan 1, 1964