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  • AIME
    Great Falls Reduction Works

    "The reduction works of the Boston & Montana Reduction department, near the north end of this dam is one of the reduction plants belonging to the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, the other being at Ana

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cement and Cement Raw Materials

    By John A. Ames

    Webster's dictionary nearly equates portland cement with its current primary definition of cement. While such equation may be a triumph of common usage, the confusion between the terms cement and

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    London Paper - The Design of Blast-Furnace Gas-Engines in Belgium

    By H. Hubert

    The first attempts at direct utilization of blast-furnace gas in engines were made in 1895. For a considerable time the gas had been burnt in Cowper stoves for heating the blast for the furnace, and u

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Composition of Atmospheres Inert to Heated Carbon Steel

    By R. W. Gurry

    In a series of charts this paper presents the composition of all gas mixtures, composed of the elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, which at temperatures from 1000° to 1800°F are in equilib

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Crushed Limestone Aggregates for Concrete

    By Katherine Mather

    This paper is an attempt to put together petrographic, physical, and chemical data about the large and varied group of rocks generally called limestones. Results of the properties of these rocks on th

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Sterling, Ringwood, And Greenwood

    By R. W. Shearman, F. Weston Starratt

    A new center for mining and metallurgical research is developing at Sterling Forest, N. Y., under the auspices of Union Carbide Corp. Here is to be located the Union Carbide Nuclear and Ore Research L

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals - Exudations on Copper Castings (with Discussion)

    By W. H. Bassett, J. C. Bradley

    Beads of metal frequently appear at the ends of cast-copper wire bars and on the sides of wedge cakes near the top. These are richer in cuprous-oxide than the rest of the casting. A micrographical stu

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - The Efficiency of Miscible Displacement as a Function and Pressures

    By B. Habermann

    Artificially consolidated sand models, representing one-quarter of a five-spot, have been developed and used to study factors aflecting misciblt. displacrmenr. Sweep efficiency at breakthrough, size o

  • AIME
    Rock Bursts – A Symposium

    By Philip B. Bucky

    [ ] FOREWORD THIS symposium brings together points of view, experiences and ideas on rock bursts from a goodly portion of the globe. Some conceptions, particularly those regarding the necessity

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Isothermal Mode of the Martensitic Transformation

    By E. S. Machlin, Morris Cohen

    The isothermal formation of martensite in a 71 pct Fe, 29 pct Ni alloy is found to take place mainly by the nucleation of new plates rather than by the growth of existing ones, and is dependent on the

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Nepheline Syenite (cdf1e7ef-5012-4f5e-9fe8-3b8ba8f80ad8)

    By D. Geoffry Minnes, Ray Blair, Stanley J. LeFond

    Nepheline syenite is a silica deficient crystal-line rock consisting of albite and microcline feldspars and nepheline, together with varying but small amounts of mafic silicates and other accessory mi

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    A Metallographic Study of Tungsten Carbide Alloys

    By J. L. Gregg

    RECENTLY there has been considerable interest in the production and use of, extra hard alloys composed primarily of tungsten and carbon. Dr. Hoyt's recent paper1 gives a good description of these

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Discussions - Institute of Metals Division

    A. Blainey (Ministry of Supply, Atomic Energy Research Establishment. Hnrtoell. England)—With ref- erence to the published work of Hausner et al. on the powder metallurgy of zirconium, it will b

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Part X – October 1968 - Papers - Internal Void Formation in Powder Metallurgy Tungsten

    By G. Das, S. V. Radcliffe

    The substructural features developed in tungsten as a function of annealing temperature (up to 2200°C) and type of material [undoped and doped powder metallurgy (PM) tungsten and electron beam melted

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Mining Methods at Bawdin Mine

    By A. B. Calhoun

    These mines, which belong to the Burma Corporation, Ltd., formerly a London company now incorporated in Rangoon, Burma, are situated in the semi-independent state of Tawng-Peng, one of the small divis

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Papers - Structure of Iron after Compression (T. P. 977, with discussion)

    By Charles S. Barrett

    The experiments reported in this paper have been fruitful in disclosing the mechanism of the deformation of iron in compression. They have established the nature of "deformation bands," "etch bands,"

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Structure of Iron after Drawing, Swaging, and Elongating in Tension (T. P. 1038, with discussion)

    By L. H. Levenson, Charles S. Barrett

    Plastic flow in metal crystals and the changes in orientation resulting from it are generally understood to take place by the following fundamental mechanisms: (1) slip on crystallographic planes, (2)

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Mining - Stripping Pitching Beds in Pennsylvania's Anthracite Region (T. P. 1601 with discussion)

    By C. E. Brown, D. C. Helms, O. W. Shimer

    The early history and progress of anthracite stripping, from the first known operation at Summit Hill in 1821 through 1917, was covered in 1917 in a paper by J. B. Warriner,1 then chief engineer, now

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Effect Of Cyanogen Compounds On Floatability Of Pure Sulfide Minerals

    By E. L. Tucker

    IN THE metallurgy of precious metals, it has been standard practice for years to use cyanogen compounds, so it was but natural that early investigators in the field of flotation should consider these

    Jan 8, 1925

  • AIME
    Part V – May 1969 - Papers - Solubility of Nitrogen in Vanadium

    By Frank M. Monroe, James R. Cost

    The solubility of nitrogen in vanadium is determined from 275" to 575°C by measuring the height of the nitrogen internal friction peak of equilibrated V-N alloys. The proportionality constant at 275°

    Jan 1, 1970