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Secondary Recovery - Miscible Slug ProcessBy H. A. Koch, R. L. Slobod
This paper discusses a new oil recovery process called the "miscible slug process." This process involves the injection of propane or LPG into the reservoir prior to gas injection. The operating condi
Jan 1, 1958
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Performance Predictions for Low Productivity ReservoirsBy G. W. Tracy, R. D. Carter
Numerical calculations were made to determine the behavior of reservoirs with high-pressure drawdown and wide well spacing where the initial productivity is low and the wells are completed by hydrauli
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Pittsburg Paper - The Girod Electric Furnace, and the French Works Using the Paul Girod Steel-ProcessBy Wilhelm Borchers
In all special branches of the chemical and metallurgical industries, in which large electric furnaces became necessary for carrying out new processes or for the improvement of old ones, the developme
Jan 1, 1911
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Solubility of Nitrogen in Liquid Fe-Cr and Fe-V AlloysBy R. M. Brick
AN increased demand for information in regard to the effect of gaseous elements in steel has accompanied the recognition of the importance of grain size. Attempts to correlate grain-size characteristi
Jan 1, 1940
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Canadian Production of Minerals and MetalsBy R. B. Toombs
The national and international importance of Canada's minerals and metals producing industry is reported. The growth of the Canadian industry is traced from 1945, through the period of rapid deve
Jan 8, 1964
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A Mining Company Balance SheetBy George Wolff
To THE average person, the purport of the items and figures on the balance sheet of a mining company are hazy and the real financial condition of the company is cloaked in obscurity. It is also likely
Jan 1, 1928
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Diffusion In Metal Accompanied By Phase ChangeBy L. S. Darken
THE manufacture and treatment of metals comprises operations whose effectiveness depends in large measure upon diffusion phenomena. The significance of such phenomena has, for a few simple cases, long
Jan 1, 1942
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Methods of Analysis for Rock Slopes and Abutments - A Review of Recent Developments (5053a1e6-d97f-4696-b423-b67331ca6462)By Goodman, Richard E.
A complete rational analysis for design of excavation slopes and loaded rock masses is a desirable but perhaps unattainable goal. Irregular external and internal boundary conditions, poor understandin
Jan 1, 1969
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Institute of Metals Division - Crystallography of Cubic-Tetragonal Transformation in the Indium-Thallium SystemBy L. Guttman, C. S. Barrett, J. S. Bowles
THE transformation from the face-centered cubic (Al) to the face-centered tetragonal (A6) structure in certain alloys of the indium-thallium system reported in the preceding paper1 exhibits many inter
Jan 1, 1951
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Institute of Metals Division - Melting of High Purity UraniumBy Bernhard Blumenthal
A melting process was developed by which high purity electrolytic uranium crystals can be converted into sound ingots without serious contamination. Careful preparation of the crystals, melting in a h
Jan 1, 1956
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Institute of Metals Division - Nonplanar Interfaces in Two-Phase Ternary Diffusion CouplesBy J. S. Kirkaldy, D. G. Fedak
The extra degree of freedonz introduced by a second independetzt concentration in a tenzary system gives rise to the possibility of unstable planar phase interfaces in semi-infinite diffision layer co
Jan 1, 1962
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Paper - Gravity Methods - The Eötvös Torsion Balance Method of Mapping Geologic Structure (With Discussion)By Donald C. Barton
The theory of gravitation is based on Newton's law that any two bodies exert a mutual attraction which is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of t
Jan 1, 1929
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Technical Notes - A Note on the X-Ray Absorption Method of Determining Fluid Saturation in CoresBy T. M. Geffen, R. E. Gladfelter
Lipson1 has recently presented a technical note wherein theoretical considerations were used to demonstrate. that the adsorption us saturation relation for a linear absorption method is not necessaril
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Causes of Cuppy Wire (With Discussion)By W. E. Remmers
The defect in wire known as "cuppiness" has appeared and disappeared from time to time but the exact cause of its appearance or disappearance has not heretofore been known definitely. This defect is n
Jan 1, 1930
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Electrostatic PrecipitationBy O. H. Eschholz
THE electrostatic process of fume precipitation is an excellent example of the successful application of scientific knowledge to an industrial operation. Originally proposed for the precipitation of s
Jan 8, 1918
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Thermal Conductivity of Copper Alloys.-I. Copper-zinc AlloysBy Cyril Smith
ALTHOUGH not of the same importance as electrical conductivity, the capacity for conducting heat is nevertheless a very important property of metals and alloys. A knowledge of thermal conductivity is
Jan 1, 1930
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The Low-Temperature Gaseous Reduction Of A MagnetiteBy M. C. Udy, C. H. Lorig
THROUGH the years much interest has been centered in attempting to develop a direct method of iron-ore reduction, to replace or supplement the present indirect blast-furnace process. It would not be d
Jan 1, 1942
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Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Experimental Tests of a Method for Drilling With ExplosivesBy L. H. Robinson
A proposed method of drilling utilizes sequential detonation of two types of explosive charges delivered to the hole by a conventional drilling fluid through pipe. A shaped charge first produces a lon
Jan 1, 1966
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ChromiteBy Harry M. Mikami
Chromite is the only ore mineral of metallic chromium and chromium compounds and chemicals. Because of this fact, chromite and chrome ore are used synonymously in trade literature. In commercial marke
Jan 1, 1975
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Institute of Metals Division - Preferred Orientation in Alpha PlutoniumBy S. E. Bronisz, R. E. Tate
s-plutonium samples possessing a strong growth texture have been produced by allowing them to transform under pressure from p to a. A fiber texture with [010] parallel to the pressure axis results. Th
Jan 1, 1965