Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization
  • AIME
    Pittsburg Paper - The Volatilization of Silver in Chloridizing-Roasting

    By L. D. Godshall

    The latest revised edition of Mr. C. A. stetefeldt's book on the Lixiviation of Silver-Ores, which appeared very recently, contains no mention of the volatilization of silver in chloridizing-roas

    Jan 1, 1897

  • AIME
    SME Fall Meeting and Exhibit to Focus on ‘Minerals in Transition’

    "Minerals in Transition" is the timely theme of this year's SME-AIME Fall Meeting and Exhibit, to be held September 10-12 at the Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah. Approximately 2000 members and

    Jan 8, 1975

  • AIME
    Economics of Coal for West Coast Power Generation

    By Claude P. Heiner

    While the title of this paper embraces the entire West Coast, the author, in the interest of simplification. has confined the discussion to California-particularly the central section. California&apo

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Metallurgy in 1929

    By G. B. WATERHOUSE

    THE year 1929 was exceedingly busy and prosperous for the iron and steel industry in the United States. The lake shipments of ore were approximately 65,000,000 tons, steel ingots produced were about

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Experience With The Gayley Dry Blast At The Warwick Furnaces, Pottstown, Pa.

    By Edward B. Cook

    INTRODUCTION. THE installation of the Gayley Dry-Air process appealed specially to the management of the Warwick Iron & Steel Co., for the. reason that for fifteen years records had been kept at the

    Nov 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Alloying Behavior of Ni3 Al (V' Phase)

    By J. H. Westbrook, R. W. Guard

    The influence of a number of alloying additions on the structure and hardness of Ni3Al (?') has been studied. Three general effects have been observed.. solid-solution hardening, strain aging, a

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Why Do Minerals Float?

    By S. Frederick Ravitz

    JUDGING from the inquiries that are constantly being received by the Utah Engineering Experiment Station as to the "Why," so to speak, of the flotation process of concentrating minerals, it occurred t

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Part IX - Discussion of "The Thermodynamic Behavior of Oxygen in Liquid Binary-Metallic Solvents--A Simple Solution Model"

    By J. V. Gluck

    In the present paper," as in earlier publications, V1'2"1 the authors present experimentally obtained relations for the free energy of solution of oxygen in various metals as a function of temper

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - Effect of Humidity on Mine-Explosions

    By Carl Scholz

    During November and December, 1907, four serious mine-explosions occurred in the Appalachian coal-field, which resulted in the loss of nearly a thousand lives and caused an eliormous damage to propcrt

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Bellamy Field Tests: Oil From Tar by Counterflow Underground Burning

    By J. C. Trantham, J. W. Marx

    From 1955 to 1958 the Phillips Petroleum Co. conducted a series of small scale counterflow combustion field tests in a tar sand about 60-ft deep and 6 to 12-ft thick near Bellamy, Mo. A total of seven

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Vicalloy - A Workable Alloy For Permanent Magnets

    By E. A. Nesbitt

    THE important permanent-magnet alloys 15 years ago contained carbon and depended upon it for their permanent- magnet properties. In recent years great, advances have been made in a number of new alloy

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments (0b4089c4-0072-407b-a1ca-899dad8dba04)

    By Kenneth R. Hancock

    Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after being pulverized to pigmentary size. The current world product

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Phase Transformations In Titanium-Rich Alloys of Nickel and Titanium

    By J. Gordon Parr, D. H. Polonis

    The formation and subsequent decomposition of metastable phases in Ti-Ni alloys containing up to 11 pet (atomic) Ni have been studied. The decomposition of a completely retained ß phase and of a compl

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    The Annealing of Cold-Rolled Copper

    By Earl Bardwell

    THE determination of suitable and safe annealing temperatures is one of the most important problems arising in the operation of a copper rolling mill. Certain of the larger mills have worked this prob

    Jan 8, 1914

  • AIME
    The Petroleum Industry?Foreword

    By Eugene A. Stephenson

    NUMBER of noteworthy events in the petroleum industry may be reported for 1941, of which the most spectacular was doubtless the rise in the daily rate of crude-oil production to a peak of approximatel

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Waterflood Performance in a Stratified, Five-Spot Reservoir-A Scaled-Model Study

    By D. C. Lindley, D. H. Gaucher

    The displacement of oil by water in a waterflood project is accomplished by the action of transient viscous, gravitational and capillary forces which drive fluid through interconnecting pore spaces to

  • AIME
    Drift of Things

    By E. H., Edwerd H. Robie

    WILLIAM CHURCH was one of the founders and the first president of the Detroit Copper Mining Co. and was the first man to interest the Phelps Dodge company in the possibilities of the Morenci district,

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Part XII – December 1969 – Papers - 1969 Institute of Metals Lecture Impurities, Interfaces and Brittle Fracture

    By John R. Low

    A number of cases of low-temperature, intergranu2ar brittle fracture of metals containing small amounts of certain impurities, have now been identified. Some degree of understanding of this phenomenon

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Valuation Of Mineral Property

    By L. C. Raymond

    Valuations in the mineral industry differ from those of other enterprises because mines and oil wells have a definite life so cannot be considered a perpetuity. This requires that in any mineral-prope

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Reaction of Pure Tantalum with Air, Nitrogen, and Oxygen

    By W. M. Albrecht, W. D. Klopp, R. I. Jaffee, B. G. Koehl

    Kinetic studies were made of the reactions of tantalum with oxygen, nitrogen, and air at 400o to 1500°C. The tantalum-oxygen reaction is linear from 500° to 1250°C. The tantalum-nitrogen reaction

    Jan 1, 1962