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  • AIME
    Engineers Necessary for Continued American Industrial Progress

    By Donald B. Gillies

    WE HAVE come a long way since the time of the old steel master who declared that chemistry would ultimately bring the steel business to ruin. Yet I sometimes doubt whether even now we fully recognize

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Wartime Price Control of Copper, Lead, Zinc

    By JOHN D. SUMMER

    THE Premium Price Plan for copper, lead, and represent, the approach of the Office of Price Administration to the urgent of wartime problem of securing increased output of nonferrous metals. Some of t

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Crystal Structures of Ti2Cu, Ti2Ni, Ti4Ni2O and Ti4Cu2O

    By H. W. Knott, M. H. Mueller

    The crystal structures of Ti2Cu, Ti2Ni, Ti4Ni2O, and Ti4Cu20 have been determined using powder specimens examined by X-ray and neutron diffraction. Lattice constants have been determined for all four

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Experimental Blast-furnace Operation

    THE Johnson award for 1926 was given to T. L. Joseph for his experimental work on blast-furnace operation. When the Bureau of Mines undertook its experimental blast-furnace investigation in 1919, a nu

    Jan 3, 1927

  • AIME
    Possibility of Electrochemical Industries at Hoover Dam

    By Jay A. Carpenter

    IN six years the construction of Hoover Dam and the power plants probably will have reached the operating stage and this vast new source of power will then be continuously available for industry. The

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    New Advances in Brown Coal Handling with a New Generation of Bucket Wheel Excavators, Stackers, and Shiftable Belt Conveyors

    By Erwin H. E. Gaertner

    The brown-coal opencast mines in Germany's Rhineland have to cope with several problems. Predominant are densely populated areas with highly productive farmland, many railroads, highways, and riv

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - Constitution and Metallography of Aluminum and Its Light Alloys with Copper and with Magnesium (with Discussion)

    By P. D. Merica, J. R. Freeman, R. G. Waltenberg

    Contents Page Constitution of Commercial Aluminum.................. 4 Solubility of CuAl2 in Aluminum at Different Temperatures........ 9 Effect of Magnesium on Solubility of CuA12 in Aluminum .

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Meeting

    THE Institute met on Wednesday evening, May 22d, in the parlor of the Stanton House, Dr. T. Sterry Hunt, President, in the chair. The President delivered an introductory address on the Brown Hemati

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Trade Route from the World Ports to the Midland of North America

    By W. L. Saunders

    THE world's greatest producing area is, geographically, in the midland region of North America about the Great Lakes. This area, with but one- third of the nation's population, produces, wit

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Angle Of Polarization As An Index Of Coal Rank

    By L. C. McCabe

    THE object of the present investigation was to discover a physical basis for rank differentiation of coals, particularly the coals of the Illinois basin. Vitrain1 was selected as the most appropriate

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Platinum in the Urals

    By R. S. Botsford

    SPECULATION as to when and under what conditions mining may be resumed in Russia by foreign interests is becoming more interesting. Circumstances have changed so completely that all new projects must

    Jan 12, 1923

  • AIME
    The Rotobelt Filter - New Tool In Minerals Beneficiation

    By C. F. Cornell, R. C. Emmett, D. A. Dahlstrom

    FOR many years the disk-type and cloth-covered drum filters have found widest application in liquid-solids separation, which uses continuous filters. The disk type is less expensive, occupies less flo

    Jan 2, 1958

  • AIME
    Calcination Conditions for Limestone, Dolomite and Magnesite

    By John 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

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Processing Perlite. The Technologic Problems

    By Robert H. Weber

    INCREASING acceptance of perlite products, chiefly in the fields of lightweight structural aggregates and thermal and acoustic insulation, has led to expanding market demands that have encouraged many

    Jan 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Papers - Calcination Conditions for Limestone, Dolomite and Magnesite (T. P. 1037, with discussion)

    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, 1942

  • AIME
    Papers - Calcination Conditions for Limestone, Dolomite and Magnesite (T. P. 1037, with discussion)

    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, 1942

  • AIME
    Part II – February 1968 - Communication - Collapsed Tetrahedra and Stacking Fault Energy in Gold

    By M. A. Quader, D. Kuhlmann-Wilsdorf, R. A. Dodd

    STACKING fault tetrahedra were first observed in quenched and aged pure gold by Silcox and Hirsch1 and identified as defects originating in the collapse of vacancy discs on {111} planes. It was suppos

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Mental Tests in Industry (with Discussion)

    By Robert M. Yerkes

    The following is a brief account of the methods of measuring intelligence especially prepared for use in the U. S. Army, of typical results, and of some of their immediately practical applications. It

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Coal Flotation (Chapter 45)

    By Frank F. Aplan

    INTRODUCTION Coal is a solid, combustible mineral substance resulting from the degradation and alteration of vegetable matter largely in the absence of air. In this natural process of coalificatio

    Jan 1, 1976