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Arizona Paper - Features of the New Copper Smelting Plants in Arizona (with Discussion)By A. G. McGregor
During the past 5 years, five new copper-smelting plants have been built and put into operation in the State of Arizona. The monthly copper output from these plants averages from 5,000,000 to 18,000,0
Jan 1, 1917
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Open-hearth Operation from the Chemical ViewpointBy C. H. Herty
The reactions that occur in the basic open-hearth process are complicated and are subject to many different factors such as temperature, slag composition and rate of boiling of the bath. It is difficu
Jan 1, 1929
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New York Paper - Physical Changes in Iron and Steel Below the Thermal Critical Range (with Discussion)By Zay Jeffries
It has been known for centuries that iron and steel could be hardened by cold hammering and that the metal could be restored to the normal condition by heating to a red heat arid cooling, either rapid
Jan 1, 1922
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Papers - Some Effects of Copper in Malleable Iron (With Discussion)By Cyril Stanley Smith, Earl W. Palmer
A study of the precipitation-hardening of copper steels1 led the authors to investigate malleable iron containing copper, for the low-carbon ferritic matrix in malleable iron should lend itself admira
Jan 1, 1935
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Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Pilot Gas Injection - Its Conduct and Criteria for EvaluationBy Lincoln F. Elkins, John T. Cooke
Injection of gas to increase oil recovery has been considered for almost all important discoveries during the past ten or fifteen years. However, the number of gas injection projects having sufficient
Jan 1, 1949
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Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Pilot Gas Injection - Its Conduct and Criteria for EvaluationBy John T. Cooke, Lincoln F. Elkins
Injection of gas to increase oil recovery has been considered for almost all important discoveries during the past ten or fifteen years. However, the number of gas injection projects having sufficient
Jan 1, 1949
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Repressuring in Depleted Oil ZonesBy C. M. Nickerson
IT is apparent that repressuring of the oil measures is becoming increasingly important to the oil industry, and is a matter that warrants the best efforts of the petroleum engineer charged with apply
Jan 1, 1929
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Physical Chemistry of Frozen CoalBy J. O. Glanville, L. H. Haley
Ice frozen from a dilute chemical solution is mechanically weaker than ice frozen from pure water. This phenomenon is the basis of a practical method for reducing the strength of a mass of frozen coal
Jan 1, 1983
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A New Approach to Taconite UtilizationBy John J. Howard
WE are approaching the depletion of our principal source of iron ore-the Great Lakes deposits, which have provided 85% of the nation's requirements for the past fifty years. This situation presen
Jan 5, 1950
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Staurolite (74197ec6-f26a-4737-a52c-486aa7283ac8)By Robert B. Fulton
Staurolite, an iron aluminum silicate mineral, is used industrially as a high value-in-use sand-blasting agent, as a premium grade foundry sand, and as the source of aluminum in portland cement manufa
Jan 1, 1983
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Technical Notes - Chemical Polishing of Pure ZincBy V. J. Decarlo, J. J. Gilman
POLISHING pure zinc differs somewhat from polishing less reactive metals. The problem is not that of finding a suitable reagent, but rather of producing the polish in such a way that the surface remai
Jan 1, 1957
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Iron and Steel Division - Calculation of Oxygen, Silicon, and Manganese in Iron Melts from Slag Activity DataBy G. W. Healy
Activities of oxides in the ternary FeO-MnO-SiO system are calculated from data on the binaries, using the Gibbs -Schuhmann method. These activity data are used, together with thermodynamic relations
Jan 1, 1963
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Salt Lake Paper - Economy and Efficiency in Reverberatory SmeltingBy C. D. Demond
In reverberatory smelting, fuel is the chief item of expense, as it commonly is in processes using large percentages of it. Hence the most suitable supply is eagerly sought; that is, the supply which,
Jan 1, 1915
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Positions Vacant (3b17ad23-221b-43b5-aee9-39a2cf368d92)Correspondent. Must be able, by virtue of, connection, to forward; daily ands weekly, reports, outlining, conditions affecting economics of. industries, particularly the metallurgical, and chemical, i
Jan 12, 1919
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New Haven Paper - The Development of the Modern By-Product Coke-OvenBy Christopher G. Atwater
The object of this paper is to describe and discuss the progress that has been made, up to the present date, in the development of the modern by-product coke-oven. There are few members of the Institu
Jan 1, 1903
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The Application Of Electric Motors To ShovelsBy H. W. Rogers
THE first steam shovels used in this country were built by the Otis Company, of Boston, about 50 years ago, but as they were of very crude construction and rather unsuccessful only a few were built.
Jan 2, 1914
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Non-ferrous Metallurgy and Metallography - The Waelz Process (with Discussion)By R. Hoffmann
The Waelz process produces oxides of volatilizable metals from ores, metalliferous products and residues. The process was originally used for recovering zinc and lead, where tailings and residues cont
Jan 1, 1928
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Efficiency of the Blast-furnace Process (6ad7ef59-61c6-49bf-b359-664d21e99610)By J. B. Austin
IN considering so complex a process as the smelting of iron in the blast furnace, there is obviously no single method of calculating efficiency that gives a complete appraisal of the performance of th
Jan 1, 1938
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Heat Treatment on the Hardness and Microstructure of U-Ti AlloysBy Lyle L. Marsh, David L. Douglas
CORRELATION was made between the heat treatment and hardness of three U-Ti alloys ranging in composition from 8.5 to 50 atomic pct Ti. The following important observations were made: 1) A direct qu
Jan 1, 1958
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Porphyry Copper Deposits Of The Appalachian OrogenINTRODUCTION Conditions for formation of porphyry copper deposits appear to have been propitious in the Appalachian orogen from the end of Precambrian into Middle Ordovician, and again from Middle D
Jan 1, 1978