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  • AIME
    Minor Metals - Antimony: Its Metallurgy and Refining in Recent Years

    By Chung Yu Wang, Guy C. Riddle

    There are found in nature upward of II2 minerals containing antimony, but only a few of them, listed in Table I, can be considered as antimony ore-forming minerals. Stibnite (Sb2S3), antimony sulph

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Note on the Case-Hardening of Special Steels (with Discussion)

    By G. A. Reinhardt, Albert Sauveur

    Although many metallurgists know that some pearlitic special steels can be made troostitic, martensitic, and even austenitic, without quenching, and, therefore, without exposing them to the dangers of

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Precipitation Of Copper From Solution At Anaconda

    By Frederick Laist

    Introduction IN a leaching process, having obtained the copper in solution, the choice of the precipitation method is influenced y the following factors: 1. Availability of precipitant. 2. Adaptab

    Jan 7, 1914

  • AIME
    Modern Mining And Beneficiation Of Barite At Cartersville, Georgia

    By David P. Hale

    THE Cartersville barite district is near Cartersville, Ga., in the southeastern part of Bartow County, about 43 miles northeast of Atlanta. The area over which active mining is being done extends abou

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    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

  • AIME
    The Physical Chemistry Of Liquid Steel

    THE metal iron has physical and chemical properties which are somewhat different from those of steels, but a knowledge of the pure metal is a useful starting point in studying the behavior of steels.

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Research With Regard To The Non-Magnetic And Magnetic Conditions Of Manganese Steel (1e473d06-acf0-413a-91a8-5ac26c25099a)

    By Prof. B. Hopkinson

    Introduction.-A short time ago Professor Stoughton asked the writer if he would present a paper for the February meeting of our Institute. In reply to this suggestion, some notes have been prepared re

    Jan 3, 1914

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Discussion; Interpretation of Flow Mechanisms During Rolling in Fcc Metals

    By I. L. Dillamore

    I. L. Dillamore (University of Birmingham)—The different textures developed in various fcc metals have long awaited satisfactory explanation and it has now become clear that these differences are rela

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Collapsible Steel Props in Longwall Anthracite Mining

    By John Buch

    NEARLY 25 years ago operating officials in the northern anthracite field were confronted with the problem of profitably mining virgin beds of thin coal (those 48 in. and under) or destroying them by m

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Reverberatory Furnace for Treating Converter Slag at Anaconda (with Discussion)

    By Frederick Laist, H. J. Maguire

    The ore from the Butte mines of the Anaconda company is quite siliceous; that is, it contains considerably less iron than is needed for the fluxing of the silica. The direct smelting of this ore, ther

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Effect of Reversed Deformation on Recrystallization

    By Paul Beck

    IT is well known that the hardness of metallic single crystals, like that of polycrystalline metals, increases during deformation (hardening by cold-work). It is also known that, as a consequence of d

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Factors Affecting the Strength of Iron Rich Iron- Molybdenum-Boron Alloys

    By H. J. Beattie

    R. L. Stegman and M. R. Achter (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)—In a study of the surface structures developed in the fatigue of nickel at low strains as a function of temperature, we have obtained si

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Mechanism of Fatigue Deformation at Elevated Temperatures

    By R. L. Stegman, M. R. Achter

    R. L. Stegman and M. R. Achter (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)—In a study of the surface structures developed in the fatigue of nickel at low strains as a function of temperature, we have obtained si

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Interpretation of the Rolling Texture of Copper

    By Paul A. Beck, M. N. Parthasarathi

    By determining the (220) pole figure for OFHC copper rolled to 96 pct R. .A., the occurrence of four texture components of the type (135) [211] was confirmed. It was found that the total volume fracti

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Papers - Magnetic Methods - Use of Magnetic Data on Michigan Iron Ranges (With Discussion)

    By C. O. Swanson

    In the iron ranges of northern Michigan, magnetic data have been used as an aid in geologic field work since the time of the earliest surveys. The presence of complex structures containing magnetic fo

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Pittsburg Paper - The Chemical Control of Slimes

    By Harrison Everett Ashley

    Slimes are usually defined as all material passing a certain sized sieve, which is invariably the finest sieve employed by each metallurgist in his tests; 100-mesh and 200-mesh have been taken as the

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Pittsburg Paper - Gaseous Decomposition-Products of Black Powder, with Special Reference to the Use of Black Powder in Coal-Mines

    By Clinton M. Young

    The experiments herein described were carried on in 1908-9 by- the State Geological Survey of Kansas. Some months before taking up work on black powder the Survey had resumed work on an interrupted in

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Preparation at the Face (acf647bf-b5fb-49e2-950a-42037f02c832)

    By M. H. Forester, John D. Cooner

    ALTHOUGH the unmined anthracite will last for approximately A 150 years, most of the thicker and cleaner coal beds have been almost entirely first-mined and pretty well robbed, leaving much of the pre

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Miscellaneous Metals and Alloys - Hydrogen Content of Electrolytic Manganese and Its Removal (Metals Technology, June 1945)

    By E. V. Potter, E. T. Hayes, H. C. Lukens

    Large volumes of hydrogen are liberated at the cathode during electrolytic precipitation of manganese. Most of the gas escapes from the electrolyte, but a considerable amount may be entrapped in the m

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - A Titaniferous Iron-Ore Deposit in Boulder County, Colo.

    By E. P. Jennings

    Large deposits of titaniferous iron-ore occur at Caribou, an old silver-mining camp in Boulder county, Colo., 17 miles west by south of Boulder, and a few miles northwest of the tungsten-mines. Profes

    Jan 1, 1913