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Papers - Philadelphia Meeting – October, 1929 - Diffusion of Zinc into Copper (With Discussion)By Samuel L. Hoyt
This paper gives a brief description of an investigation made several years ago on the diffusion of zinc into copper. The material for that study was furnished in the form of thin copper strips coated
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Philadelphia Meeting – October, 1929 - Diffusion of Zinc into Copper (With Discussion)By Samuel L. Hoyt
This paper gives a brief description of an investigation made several years ago on the diffusion of zinc into copper. The material for that study was furnished in the form of thin copper strips coated
Jan 1, 1929
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Petroleum Hydrology Applied To Mid-Continent FieldBy Roy Neal
THERE are two main sources of the water that floods productive oil or gas sands. The water may rise from the lower depths of the producing stratum, or it may come from beds above or below the oil-bear
Jan 1, 1919
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What Bankers Look For In Project Loan ApplicationsBy Norman J. Gibbs, John Sroka
INTRODUCTION At the point a company decides to begin mine development and wishes to convince lending institutions that the proposed operation will return their borrowed funds, plus interest, over t
Jan 1, 1985
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Barium MineralsBy Donald A. Brobst
The minerals barite (BaSO4 barium sulfate) and witherite (BaCO3 barium carbonate) are the chief commercial sources of the element barium and its compounds whose many uses are nearly hidden among the t
Jan 1, 1975
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion of The Mechanism of Boundary Migration in RecrystallizationBy W. C. Leslie
W. C. Leslie (Edgar C. Bain Laboratory for Funda mental Research)—This investigation, with its com bination of high-purity metal, calorimetry, and metallography, will serve as a model for annealing st
Jan 1, 1963
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Institute of Metals Division - Some Observations on the Tertiary Stage of Creep of High Purity AluminumBy G. R. Wilms
A study has been made of the structural changes in polycrystalline high purity aluminum during the tertiary stage of creep under conditions of constant tensile load. It appears that there is no basic
Jan 1, 1955
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Institute of Metals Division - Dendritic Crystallization of AlloysBy F. N. Rhines, B. H. Alexander
MUCH attention has been directed to the effects of grain size upon the properties of alloys, but there has been scant study either of the conditions that determine the pattern and dimensions of den-dr
Jan 1, 1951
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PART III - Fabrication Considerations for Monolithic EIectroopticaI MosaicsBy William F. List, Marvin A. Schuster
Monolithic electrooptical mosaics of 2500 photo-transistor elements with internal row and surface column interconnections have been fabricated by epitaxial-planar diffsion techniques. Unique access to
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - A Re-Evaluation of the Iron-Rich Portion of the Fe-Ni SystemBy R. E. Ogilvie, J. I. Goldstein
The a and y solubility limits in the Fe-Ni phase diagram have been redetermined at temperatures above 500°C. Both a diffusion-couple and a quench and anneal technique were used. The solubility limits
Jan 1, 1965
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The Genesis of Asbestos and Asbestiform MineralsBy Stephen Taber
JOHN C. BRANNER, Stanford University, Cal. (communication to the Secretary *).-Wideawake teachers of geology are constantly on the lookout for good illustrations of veins, especially where the process
Jan 3, 1917
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Papers - - Refining - Review of Refinery Engineering for 1945By Walter Miller
BY the beginning of 1945 the output of petroleum products for war had reached a volume and a rate of growth which practically assured all requirements so long as war continued. The programs for mak
Jan 1, 1946
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Rotary Kilns For Desulphurization And AgglomerationBy Samuel Doak
THE utilization of rotary kilns, of the well-known cement type, for the preparation of iron ores, for the blast furnace, has become of considerable economic importance within the past 10 years in cert
Jan 9, 1915
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Papers - - Refining - Review of Refinery Engineering for 1945By Walter Miller
BY the beginning of 1945 the output of petroleum products for war had reached a volume and a rate of growth which practically assured all requirements so long as war continued. The programs for mak
Jan 1, 1946
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Geophysics Education - The Place of Observational Geology, Past and Present (T. P. 1378)By Benjamin L. Miller
The essential differences expressed by the different speakers participating in this symposium concern merely the relative emphasis placed on the subjects that are commonly included under the term "geo
Jan 1, 1946
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Part I – January 1969 - Communications - Computer Generation and Automatic Plotting of Electron Diffraction PatternsBy John D. Meahin
THE use of digital methods for generating crystallo-graphic data is well-established and many programs are now available. Transmission electron microscopy usually requires a knowledge of the electron
Jan 1, 1970
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Geophysics Education - The Place of Observational Geology, Past and Present (T. P. 1378)By Benjamin L. Miller
The essential differences expressed by the different speakers participating in this symposium concern merely the relative emphasis placed on the subjects that are commonly included under the term "geo
Jan 1, 1946
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Kentucky in 1944By C. W. Donnelly, Louise B. Freeman, Coleman D. Hunter
It is with pride that the authors of this paper report. that during 1944 the production of petroleum in Kentucky passed its all-time peak, 9,496,985 bbl. being contributed. The delivery of natural gas
Jan 1, 1945
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Model Studies of the Inverted Nine-Spot Injection PatternBy B. H. Caudle, R. E. Watson, I. H. Silberberg
The production history of an inverted nine-spot injection pattern was studied with a porous plate model similar to Habermann's. Colored fluids were used so the boundary movements could be photogr
Jan 1, 1965
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Are You Going to "Present a Paper"?By S. Marion Tucker
THE aggregate number of "papers" read within any one year before more or less bored and bewildered audiences is simply appalling. We have seventy to eighty engineering societies alone, not to speak of
Jan 1, 1940