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  • AIME
    X-ray Study of the Action of Aluminum during Nitride Hardening

    By John Norton

    IN spite of the very general employment of nitride hardening, there is still considerable doubt as to the real nature of the mechanism involved. Experience has shown that the addition of small amounts

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    High Blast Heats in Mesaba Practice

    By Walther Mathesus

    INTRODUCTION THE use of high blast heats on furnaces melting Mesaba ores is still the exception, the average blast temperatures carried on Mesaba stacks seldom reaching 1,100° F. Some 15 years ago, w

    Jan 3, 1915

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Decomposition of Cementite in Steels at Subcritical Temperatures

    By J. E. Harris, J. A. Whiteman, A. G. Quarrell

    The graphitizing reaction has been studied in a number of Fe-C-Si alloys in the temperature range 550° to 725°C. The TTT relationships exhibit "C" curve behavior except where nuclei, either foreign or

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Crystal Structure of Solid Solutions

    By Edgar Bain

    OF THE important phenomenon of the hardening of steel, Professor Sauveur1 says: "It would seem as if the methods used to date for the elucidation of this complex problem have yielded all they are cap

    Jan 2, 1922

  • AIME
    Coal - Mt. Union Sand-flotation Plant for Preparing Bituminous Coal (with Discussion)

    By T. M. Chance

    The first bituminous coal cleaning-plant to use the sand-flotation process1 was placed in operation on Oct. 1, 1925, at the tipple of the East Broad Top Railroad & Coal Co., at Mt. Union, Pa. The g

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Milling Plant Of The Alaska-Gastineau Mining Co.

    By E. V. Daveler

    THE milling plant of the Alaska-Gastineau Mining Co. is located at the town of Thane, Alaska, on Gastineau Channel, 4 mi. south of Juneau and directly across the channel from the Ready Bullion mine of

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Dry Cleaning of Coal (with Discussion)

    By Ray W. Arms

    DRY cleaning, or pneumatic separation, is not, strictly speaking, a recent discovery. Among the archives of the Patent Office may be found many patents dating back as far as 1850 which cover early att

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - Concrete in Mining and Metallurgical Engineering (Discussion, p. 965)

    By Henry W. Edwards

    Concrete is not a new, nor even a modern substance. Important structures built by the old Romans before the commencement of the Christian Era are to-day sound and solid— for example, the dome of the P

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Effects of Sample Surface and X-Ray Diffraction Camera Geometry on the Determination of Retained Austenite in Hardened Steels

    By D. P. Koistinen, K. E. Beu

    THE application of the integrated intensity X-ray diffraction method to the measurement of retained austenite concentrations in hardened steels has been fully described.'-' In developing thi

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    A Study Of The Flotative Properties Of Gypsum

    By W. E. Keck, Paul Jasberg

    THERE is a considerable tonnage of iron ore in the Menominee Range of Michigan that is unsalable only because it has too large a content of sulphur. Beneficiation of such ore is economically desirable

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Part I – January 1968 - Communications - The Pseudobinary Section of PbTe and Gold

    By D. J. Mottern, F. Wald

    SEVERAL systems have been investigated by Bates, Wald, and weinstein' to determine the compatibility of pure PbTe with various metals. This was accomplished by experimentally determining the dire

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Refining - Developments in Refinery Engineering in 1936

    By Walter Miller

    With returning prosperous conditions in all industries, oil-refinery engineering has found opportunity for the more extensive application of improvements developed during the several years of depressi

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Tulsa Paper - The Electrical Dehydration of Cut Oil (with Discussion)

    By F. D. Mahone

    Much crude oil, as produced from the well, carries varying amounts of water, which may be present as free water in globules sufficiently large to settle out, in time, if the fluid is allowed to stand,

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Part IX – September 1968 - Communications - On the Mechanism of Creep in Alpha Iron

    By C. Y. Cheng

    THE purpose of this note is to show that the dislocation mechanism controlling the creep of Fe-4 pet Si alloy1 may equally account for the behavior of a-Fe2 over the same temperature range. A recent s

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Cleaning - Dust Collection in Pneumatic Cleaning Plants

    By Charles H. J. Patterson

    When coal is deposited on the decks of pneumatic tables, all fine particles clinging to the larger pieces are blown free by the air. Inasmuch as the air retains an appreciable residual velocity after

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Metals And Alloys From A Colloid-Chemical Viewpoint

    By Jerome Alexander

    IT is an outstanding fact of Nature that many of the practical properties of substances are dependent, not on their ultimate chemical composition, but on the kind and degree of aggregation of their co

    Jan 2, 1919

  • AIME
    Crude Petroleum - Loss Ratio Method of Extra olating Oil Well Decline Curves

    By A. L. Bollens, R. H. Johnson

    The appraisal of oil wells, now that we have the age-size method of making composite decline curves, and the present worth of successive time units method of valuation, has its greatest remaining unce

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Manufacture of Steel Rails - Discussion (45adf69b-90ce-486e-9635-07e18226a7d8)

    G. B. WATERHOUSE,* Buffalo, N. -Y. (written discussion?).-One of the most essential features of rail manufacture is the production of rails that will give good service and be free from failures. To th

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    A Small Experimental Flotation Cell

    By Geoffrey Purcell

    For anyone contemplating flotation research with only a very limited amount of mineral available for testing, the choice of suitable experimental equipment is by no means obvious. Hallimond's ori

    Jan 11, 1965

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Low-temperature Carbonization of Coal

    By S. W. Parr, T. E. Layng

    The low-temperature carbonization of coal involves the carrying out of the coking process under conditions wherein neither the coal mass nor any of the passageways through which the volatile products

    Jan 1, 1920