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  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - The Solubility of Oxygen in Liquid Iron Containing Aluminum

    By D. C. Hilty, W. Crafts

    The solubility of oxygen in iron containing aluminum has been determined at 1550°, 1600°, and 1650°C and found to be much higher than predicted from theoretical considerations, possibly due to equilib

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Taxation Of Mineral Properties

    By Granville S. Borden

    The fruits of industry are divided between capital, labor, and governments. Capital takes its redemption and remuneration through profits or dividends; labor takes its share through wages; governments

    Jan 1, 1959

  • AIME
    Electro-Metallurgical Industries As Possible Consumers Of Electric Power

    By Dorsey Lyon

    I. INTRODUCTION THE utilization of hydro-electric power in electro-metallurgical indus¬tries, aside from purely mechanical operations, may he of two kinds. The electric energy may be used to supply t

    Jan 8, 1915

  • AIME
    Florida Paper - Assays of Copper and Copper Matte (see Discussion, p. 1000; also Trans, xxiv 575)

    In response to Dr. Ledoux's paper, a large number of metallurgical establishments and individual assayers expressed their willingness to co-operate in the plan he proposed. The necessary samples

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Part II – February 1968 - Papers - Influence of a 3.28 pct Nickel Addition on the Yield and Fracture Behavior of Alpha Iron

    By W. Jolley

    Decarburized iron and Fe-3.28 pct Ni alloys were impact and tension tested in the temperature range of ambient to 4°K. It was found that alloying with nickel improves the fracture properties of the fe

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Papers - Crystallography of Austenite Decomposition (T.P. 1212, with discussion)

    By Alden B. Greninger, Alexander R. Troiano

    Metallurgists have long believed that martensite in steel forms as plates along the octahedral {111} planes of austenite. Much has been written about mechanisms whereby units of the austenite lattice

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Papers - Crystallography of Austenite Decomposition (T.P. 1212, with discussion)

    By Alden B. Greninger, Alexander R. Troiano

    Metallurgists have long believed that martensite in steel forms as plates along the octahedral {111} planes of austenite. Much has been written about mechanisms whereby units of the austenite lattice

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Brittle Fracture Of Rocks

    By J. C. Jaeger

    The study of brittle fracture of rocks has been a much neglected subject until quite recently and now is in a state of transition and rapid development. Historically, three methods of testing were u

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    The Mineral Resources of Wisconsin

    By R. D. Irving

    THE object of the present paper is to give an outline account of the mineral resources of the State of Wisconsin, so far as they are now known, including both metallic ores and non-metallic useful min

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Electricity

    By Wayne P. Myers

    Electricity, as normally thought of by a layman's definition, is a manmade force that has no color, no odor, is not visible, cannot be heard, yet man can control it and make it perform his work f

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    List Of Members, Associates And Junior Associates - Geographically Arranged - Index

    [United States PAGE Alabama 181 Alaska 181 Arizona 181 Arkansas 182 California 182 Colorado 185 Connecticut 186 Delaware 186 District of Columbia 187 Florida 187 Georgia 187 I

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Duluth Paper - Experiments Illustrating the Descent of the Charge in an Iron Blast-Furnace

    By Robert H. Richards, Richard W. Lodge

    A great deal of speculation, as well as actual experiment, has been devoted to ascertaining the changes in the materials (luring their descent in an iron blast-furnace, affecting (1) the chemical cons

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Occlusion and Evolution of Hydrogen by Pure Iron

    By George Moore

    IN spite of many investigations of the occlusion of hydrogen in iron, the nature of the process and the reasons for the accompanying effects upon the metal are still open questions. This is in large p

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
  • AIME
    New York Paper - Action of Hot Wall: a Factor of Fundamental Influence on the Rapid Corrosion of Water Tubes and Related to the Segregation in Hot Meals

    By Carls Benedicks

    It is well known by every one who has had to deal with boiler tubes that these are often seriously affected by a sort of corrosion, occurring as a local pitting, that frequently causes a perforation o

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Mining Engineering Annual Review 1975 - Industrial Mineral Commodities

    Inflation, fuel shortages, environmental restrictions, and a worldwide recession that sharply curtailed the demand for goods and services, were the main causes for the poor performance & virtually all

    Jan 3, 1976

  • AIME
    The Manufacture of Silica Brick

    By H. Le Chatelier

    SILICA brick are indispensable in the manufacture of steel because they alone are able to withstand the high temperature of regenerative furnaces. All attempts to replace silica brick by other refract

    Jan 9, 1918

  • AIME
    Estimation of Petroleum Reserves in Prorated Limestone Fields

    By P. P. Gregory

    ESTIMATION of re- serves in prorated sand fields has been discussed by S. A. Judson, H. D. Easton, Jr., and W. A. Schaeffer, Jr., in a paper that appears in Vol. 114 (1935), of the A.I.M.E. TRANSACTIO

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Institute Representatives on Boards (ace01a52-108c-4404-8727-7c349725df70)

    United Engineering Society WALTER H ALDRIDGE J VIPOND DAVIES I V N DORR Engineering Societies Library Board SYDNEY H BALL ALEXANDER C HUMPHREYS GEORGE C SLONE JOHN H JANEWVAY Engineering Foundati

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    General - Aluminum-silicon-magnesium Casting Alloys

    By L. W. Kempf, R. S. Archer

    The binary aluminum-silicon alloys have certain characteristic advantages which are now well known, and these alloys have come into considerable use during the past several years.' Their field of

    Jan 1, 1931