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Screening (096d6eb5-a5b9-4866-a8e3-634c43eb3df7)By W. E. Foreman, James A. Redding
INTRODUCTION Screening is a mechanical process that separates particles by size. Modern coal preparation is made possible by efficient sizing. Sizing of coal is defined in terms of the opening
Jan 1, 1979
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Part VII - The Effect of Temperature on the Dihedral Angle in Some Aluminum AlloysBy J. A. Bailey, J. H. Tundermann
The dihedral angles of the solid-liquid interfaces were measured at various temperatures above the solidus and the interfacial energies calculated when small additions of copper, indium, lithium, magn
Jan 1, 1967
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The Southern Cross Mine, Georgetown, Mont.By Paul Billingsley
Introduction. THE Georgetown mining district is located in Deerlodge county, Mont., about 20 miles west of Anaconda. It lies along the divide between the headwaters of Warm Springs creek, draining
Jan 9, 1913
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Institute of Metals Division - Fluid Flow Control During Solidification. Part I: Magnetic Stirring in the Plane of the Solid-Liquid InterfaceBy W. A. Tiller, W. C. Johnston
The solute distribution ahead of an advancing solid-liquid interface is controlled by varying the momentum boundary layer thickness in the liquid adjacent to the interface. Single pass zone-melting e
Jan 1, 1962
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Steelmaking - A Completely Automatic Control of Open-hearth Reversal (Metals Technology, June 1945)By B. M. Larsen, W. E. Shenk
This paper describes a method of reversal control of the open-hearth furnace that obtains in practice those effects considered below as essential to a completely automatic control, without appreciable
Jan 1, 1945
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Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods, and Materials - Corrosion of Oil Well Casing by Earth CurrentsBy Leendert de Witte, Fred J. Radd
In many areas caring failures can be directly related to electrical currents observed in the casings. It is the thesis of this paper that the observed casing currents are mainly due to electrochemical
Jan 1, 1956
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PART III - Evaluation of the Photomask-Photoresist Method of Cryotron Thin-Film FabricationBy J. P. Pritchard, J. T. Pierce, O. G. Slay
This paper discusses the results of a technology-evaluation program to ascertain the feasibility of a piotornask-photoresist technology developed for fabrication of multiple-layer thin-film supercondu
Jan 1, 1967
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Mechanical Properties Of The Aluminum-Copper-Silicon Alloy As Sand Cast And As Heat TreatedBy Samuel Daniels
In this paper are given the mechanical properties, determined by the Engineering Division, Air Service, U. S. A., of the 94 per cent. aluminum, 5 per cent. copper, 1 per cent. silicon alloy as sand-ca
Jan 7, 1925
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Oklahoma in 1944By Raymond D. Sloan
During 1944, substantial gains were recorded in practically every phase of the petroleum industry in Oklahoma. With the spotlight of activity focused on other states during the more recent years, the
Jan 1, 1945
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Semiautogenous Grinding of Copper OresBy N. J. Themelis, A. W. Last
Autogenous grinding, broadly defined as the self-comminution of ore in a cylindrical tumbling mill without using auxiliary grinding media, was first applied in the early 1930s in the so-called Hadsel
Jan 1, 1981
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Institute of Metals Division - Dispersion Strengthening in the Copper-Alumina SystemBy N. J. Grant, K. M. Zwilsky
A series of copper-alumina dispersion strengthened alloys were prepared using three different copper and two different alumina powder sizes. Improvements in strength of up to ten times that of pure co
Jan 1, 1962
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Ottawa Paper - The Treatment of Fine Gold in the band; of snake River, IdahoBy Thos Egleston
The sands of Snake River, Idaho, have long been known to contain gold. They were worked by some of the first prospectors who came to Idaho, and on the banks still stand the ruins of camps abandoned fo
Jan 1, 1890
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Phosphate Rock (5e08b75e-77a3-4082-b9bf-5f2b50392875)By James A. Beck
Phosphorus is essential to all life processes and therefore to the existence of man. In this role, there are no substitutes for phosphorus. In a commercial sense, phosphorus and its compounds are impo
Jan 1, 1976
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Phosphate RockBy G. Donald Emigh
Nothing is more important to life-plant and animal-than phosphate. Its compounds are essential to the energy functions of all living systems and for the formation of bones and teeth. Animals get their
Jan 1, 1975
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AsbestosBy E. L. Mann
Asbestos is the generic name given to a group of fibrous mineral silicates found in nature. They are all incombustible and can be separated by mechanical means into fibers of various lengths and cross
Jan 1, 1983
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Grain-Size Inheritance In Iron And Carbon SteelBy Zay Jeffries
THIS paper will include a brief discussion of Prof. Howe's paper on The Supposed Reversal of Inheritance of Ferrite Grain Size from that of Austenite.1 The general subject of grain refining in st
Jan 11, 1917
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European Fluorspar SuppliesBy H. R. Hose
Total crude fluorspar reserves in western Europe, containing more than 35 pct CaF*, are estimated at 12 million metric tons, while reserves in the USSR and Soviet sphere may exceed 5 million metric to
Jan 4, 1955
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Arizona Paper - The Advent of Flotation in the Clifton-Morenci District, ArizonaBy David Cole
At the time flotation appeared upon the metallurgical horizon in Arizona, the writer, under the direction of Dr. Ricketts, was engaged in remodeling and enlarging the No. 6 Concentration Plant of the
Jan 1, 1917
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Trona In Wyoming (3b9e370f-a1a5-46cc-87d4-ad5e4f2e8a1a)By Howard I. Smith
THE mineral trona was discovered on Government land in 1938, about 18 miles west of the town of Green River, Wyo., in the core of the John Hay, Jr., well, a test well drilled for oil by the Mountain F
Jan 1, 1942