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  • AIME
    Papers - Production - Foregin - Petroleum Developments in Columbia during 1937

    By O. C. Wheeler

    The activity in exploration and in the acquisition of prospective oil lands that reached such a high level in Colombia during 1936 gained momentum and reached unprecedented proportions during 1937. Bo

    Jan 1, 1938

  • 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
    Industrial Minerals - Utilizing and Disposing of Waterborne Industrial Wastes

    By A. A. Berk

    LAGGING technology and the slow spread of information have been the chief obstacles to widespread participation in minimizing the industrial pollution load. These obstacles can be conquered by fact fi

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Nodulizing Blast-Furnace Flue Dust (eb7bc162-7d49-424b-a486-4dfdb66c9f76)

    Discussion of the paper of LAWRENCE ADDICKS, presented at the Salt Lake meet-ing, August, 1914, and printed in Bulletin No. 91, July, 1914, pp. 1671 to 1674. JAMES H. PAYNE, Baltimore, Md. (communica

    Jan 11, 1914

  • AIME
    Part V – May 1969 - Papers - Thermodynamics of Nonstoichiometric Interstitial Alloys. I. Boron in Palladium

    By Hans-Jürgen Schaller, Horst A. Brodowsky

    Activity coefficients of boron in palladium were determined at concentrations up to PdB0.23 by reducing B2O3 between 870" and 1050°C in a controlled H2-H2stream and measuring the resulting weight gain

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Human Resourcefulness Key To Mineral Supplies

    By Max W. Ball

    Our ever-increasing use of minerals has been the outstanding fact in our American economic development. The rise in our standard of living in the past century is without equal in human history. Nowher

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Robert C. Stanley ? First Rand Medalist

    By AIME AIME

    FOUK fields of activity are now recognized by the A.I.M.E. in its award of medals for conspicuous achievement: the Saunders medal for mining, the Douglas medal for non- ferrous metallurgy the Lucai me

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    New Officers of the Institute

    By Robert E. Tally

    A recorded in the account of the Annual Meeting, on another page, the report of the tellers showed that all men nominated by the committee, which included Messrs. Wilber Judson, E. DeGolyer, W. A. Wel

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Further Work on the Boron-Hardenability Mechanism

    By G. K. Manning, A. R. Elsea, C. R. Simcoe

    It was found that a critical boron content exists which yields the maximum boron-hardenability effect in hypoeutectoid steels, as was predicted from the mechanism proposed in a previous paper. The har

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Tungsten Production in China

    THERE are three chief production zones of tungsten ore in China. In the Province of Kiangsi mines are located at Kanchow, East River, and West River. Their combined production is understood to amount

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Coal - Coal Mine Development in Alaska - Discussion

    By Albert L. Toenges

    C. P. HEINER*—I would like to ask Mr. Toenges about the highest rank coal. I did not get that clearly. What kind of coal is that? A. L. TOENGES (author's reply)— The coal in the Matanuska fiel

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - High Speed Quenching Dilatometer

    By R. H. Raring, F. E. Martin

    A high speed gas quenching dilatometer useful in studying phase transformations in low alloy steels is described. Changes in specimen length are measured by means of an electrical micrometer tube. The

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Intermetallic Compounds In Titanium-Hardened Alloys

    By W. C. Hagel, H. J. Beattle

    DURING an earlier examination of high-temperature alloy, A-286, the presence of an unknown intermetallic compound was verified by X-ray diffraction. Owing to its prominent appearance at grain boundari

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Part VIII - The Diffusivity of Carbon in Gamma Iron-Nickel Alloys

    By Rodney P. Smith

    The diffusivity of carbon (0.1 wt pct C) in Fe-Nz alloys (0 to 100 pct Ni) has been determined for the temperature range 860° to 1100°C. As a function of nickel content, the diffusivity has a maximum

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - On the Solution of Diffusion Problems Involving Concentration-Dependent Diffusion Coefficients

    By Carl Wagner

    This paper contains solutions of the differential equation of diffusion in binary alloys if the diffusion coefficient is an exponential function of the concentration of one of the components. THE g

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Grinding Tests on Conical Trunnion Overflow and Cylindrical Grate Ball Mills

    By Jack White

    This paper gives details of the results of careful testing carried out on two types of ball mills, conical trunnion overflow and cylindrical grate discharge, on identical ore. The object of the test w

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Part VII – July 1968 - Papers - Structures and Migration Kinetics of Alpha:Theta Prime Boundaries in AI-4 Pct Cu: Part I-Interfacial Structures

    By H. I. Aaronson, C. Laird

    Although the past results of X-ray experiments indicate that the broad faces of 0' plates are coherent with their matrix, dislocations lying in arrays have frequently been observed at these bound

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals - The Effect of Lead and Tin with Oxygen on the Conductivity and Ductility of Copper (with Discussion)

    By Norman B. Pilling, George P. Halliwell

    The effects of lead and tin up to maximum contents of about 0.1 per cent. each, in the presence of oxygen between 0.04 and 0.30 per cent., have been studied. Tin is retained efficiently in the oxidize

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Precipitation Processes in Copper-Rich Copper-Iron Alloys

    By A. Boltax

    H. Herman and M. E. Fine (Northzcesteriz University)—The author is to be complimented on the quality and completeness of his work. Of special interest to us was the exponent of time in the exponential

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Part VIII – August 1968 - Papers - Iron-Sulfur System. Part I: Growth Rate of Ferrous Sulfide on Iron and Diffusivities of Iron in Ferrous Sulfide

    By E. T. Turkdogan

    The activity of sulfur was determined as a function of composition of ferrous sulfide by equilibrating with hydrogen sulfide-hydrogen gas mixtures at 670° , 800°, and 900". The present results suppl

    Jan 1, 1969