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  • AIME
    Coal - Rheolaveur System of Fine Coal Cleaning

    By John Griffen

    This paper records over twenty years' experience with the use of the Rheolaveur system in the United States, showing its ability to meet changing conditions caused by the dirtier mine output of p

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    PART IV - Papers - A Model for Concentrated Interstitial Solid Solutions; Its Application to Solutions of Carbon in Gamma Iron

    By Thomas L. Garrard, James A. Sprague, Rex B. McLellan, Samuel J. Horowitz

    A simple rnodel for interstitial solid solutions has been devised in which each solute atom interacts with the solzlent lattice in such a way as to exclude an integral number of nearest-neighbor sites

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Technical Note - Critical Surface Tension Of Wetting Of Sulfide Minerals

    By B. Yarar, J. Kaoma

    [Introduction The critical surface tension of wetting of hydrophobic materials has been investigated extensively by Zisman et al. (1973) and relates the spreading of a liquid on a solid to the surf

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    With My Husband in Soviet Russia

    By Sallie McCabe Johnson

    LIFE IN RUSSIA for the foreign woman is hard. It is up to her whether her days are spent in tearful longing for ironic or whether she :hakes the real effort to ferret out the interesting or amusing si

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Reduction of Cupric Salts in Aqueous Perchlorate and Sulfate Solutions by Molecular Hydrogen

    By E. R. Macgregor, J. Halpern

    The kinetics of the reduction of cupric salts in aqueous solution by molecular hydrogen to metallic copper are described. The rate of reduction appears to be homogeneously determined and shows a marke

    Jan 1, 1959

  • AIME
    World's Longest Oil Pipe Line, Calcutta to Kunming, China ? Though Not as Large as America's "Big Inch? It Was Vital to Successful Fighting in the East

    By AIME AIME

    NAPOLEON'S dictum that an Army travels on its stomach has not changed in this present war, but the things an Army's stomach calls for would be more than strange to Napoleon. Today one of the

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Discussion of Thermodynamic Properties of Titanium-Oxygen- Hydrogen Alloys

    By Kenneth A. Moon

    Kenneth A. Moon (U.S. Army Materials Research Agency)—The authors are to be congratulated for a very interesting and valuable paper. Their discussion of the structural implications of the results sho

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Institute Publications

    By PERCY E. BARBOUR

    TWO YEARS after its organization, the Institute issued its first volume of TRANSACTIONS, covering activities that began in May, 1871, and continued through February, 1873. The preface of this first v

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Minerals In Man's Future (2c80c11d-6d0a-4134-909b-0d42a870bf1b)

    By Zay Jeffries

    From the title of this chapter the reader could expect an attempt to out- line the anticipated shape of things to come, mineralwise. We have no crystal ball and if we possessed one we could claim no e

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    The Problem of Mineral Sanctions

    By C. K. Leith

    WE face the postwar problem of the use of minerals as sanctions to control the armament and the re-armament of the Axis powers at the source, minerals being the raw material of armaments. That is the

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Economical Results of Smelting in Utah

    By Ellsworth Daggett

    THE ore smelted in the Winnamuck furnace during the year 1872 consisted, for the most part, of oxidized ores from the Winnamuck mine, only sixty tons of outside ore (from the Spanish mine) having been

    Jan 1, 1874

  • AIME
    Health and Safety Program Short but Stimulating

    By T. T. Read

    TWO papers on health and safety were given Thursday afternoon when a joint session of the Health and Safety Committee and the Mining Methods Committee was held. T. T. Read presided and the first paper

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Lead Metallurgists Work for Economies

    By G. E. Johnson

    LEAD SMELTERS AND REFINERS in 1932 were confronted with the problem of adjusting operations and costs to curtailed production and consumption at reduced prices, a problem which has been partially solv

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Interest Continues to Increase in Eastern Magnetite

    By Arthur T. Word

    STANDING room only seemed to be the order at the annual session and luncheon of the Eastern magnetite committee. Gatehouse check at the former indicated at least 80, with 33 attending the luncheon - a

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Precision In Creep Testing

    By J. A. Fellows, Earnshaw Cook, H. S. Avery

    THE increased use of heat-resistant alloys (26 per cent Cr, 12 per cent Ni, 16 per cent Cr, 35 per cent Ni, 12 per cent Cr, 60 per cent Ni, etc ) in recent years has been accompanied by continued dema

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Kennecott Copper Corporation - Ray Mines Division - Ray, Arizona

    Prospectors were digging silver in the Ray mine area in 1873, and by 1880 high-grade copper ore was feeding a 30-ton copper furnace. In 1910, D. C. Jackling and his associates organized the Ray Consol

    Jan 1, 1978

  • AIME
    The Low-Temperature Gaseous Reduction Of Magnetite Ore To Sponge Iron

    By O. George Specht, Carl A. Zapffe

    IN recent print, some remarkably contradictory statements have appeared regarding the importance to be attached to sponge iron,1-6 a metallurgical commodity whose history goes back at least to the tim

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Discussions - Properties of Metals; Sponge Iron - The Low-temperature Gaseous Reduction of Magnetite Ore to Sponge Iron (Metals Tech., June 1946, T. P. 1960 with discussion)

    By O. George Specht, Carl A. Zapffe

    In recent print, some remarkably contradictory statements have appeared regarding the importance to be attached to sponge Iron,1-6 a metallurgical commodity whose history goes back at least to the tim

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Discussions - Properties of Metals; Sponge Iron - The Low-temperature Gaseous Reduction of Magnetite Ore to Sponge Iron (Metals Tech., June 1946, T. P. 1960 with discussion)

    By O. George Specht, Carl A. Zapffe

    In recent print, some remarkably contradictory statements have appeared regarding the importance to be attached to sponge Iron,1-6 a metallurgical commodity whose history goes back at least to the tim

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Ferrous Physical Metallurgy ? Progress Reported in Studies of Hardenability, Graphitization, Embrittlement, and Dilatometry

    By Francis M. Walters

    IN spite of the war and the preoccupation of many physical metallurgists with work on secret or confidential problems, definite progress was made during 1944 in our understanding of the behavior of st

    Jan 1, 1945