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Special Methods For Concentrating And Purifying Industrial Minerals (9d377000-ccec-4a93-a8e5-a275f3a9cc85)By G. W. Jarman
THE purpose of this paper is to present briefly a description of some of the special methods of separation or concentration, either singly or in combination with others, and to give certain operating
Jan 1, 1938
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New York Paper - Non-metallic Mineral-filler Industry (with Discussion)By W. M. Weigel
The rapid advance, during recent years, in the manufacture of articles that have been in common use for generations and the development of new materials entering into appliances and devices unheard of
Jan 1, 1923
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Iron and Steel Division - Stability Relations of Calcium Ferrites: Phase Equilibria in the System 2CaO-Fe2 O3-FeO-Fe2O3-Fe2O3 Above 1135° CBy Arnlf Muan, Bert Phillips
The quenching technique has been used for- a study of phase velntiorzs within the composition triangle 2CaO.Fe2O3-FeO.Fe2O3 Fe2O3 of the system Ca-Fe-O. Desired total compositions of sanzples were att
Jan 1, 1961
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Properties of Hydrocarbon Mixtures as Related to Production Problems (With Discussion)By W. K. Lewis
During the last decade the petroleum refinery engineer has made great progress in achieving a better understanding of the physical behavior of hydrocarbon mixtures, with particular reference to their
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - An Experiment in One-piece Gun Construction (with Discussion)By P. W. Bridgman
During the war, the Navy undertook the construction, under my direction, of an experimental gun embodying features designed to lessen the cost and time of production. These experiments were initiated
Jan 1, 1922
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Part II - Papers - On the Fracture of Silicon Particles in Aluminum-Silicon AlloysBy J. Gurland, A. Gangulee
The cracking of silicon particles embedded in an aluminum matrix occurs progressively over the range of plastic deformation of the composite specimen. The fracture probability of the particles increas
Jan 1, 1968
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Papers - Bajada Placers of the Arid Southwest (With Discussion)By Benjamin N. Webber
Many of the auriferous placers of the arid Southwest differ widely from the standard types of stream and eluvial deposits of more humid regions, although exhibiting some of the features of each. This
Jan 1, 1935
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New York Paper - New Roasting Furnace for Zinc Flotation Concentrate (with Discussion)By J. Burns Read, Charles H. Fulton
A previous article1 by the authors contained a general description of the new roasting furnace herein described but it did not go into detail as to the metallurgical behavior or the results obtained.
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - Steelmaking - The Role of Basic Slags in the Elimination of Phosphorus from Steel (Metals Technology, April 1944) (With discussion)By William J. McCaughey, Richard L. Barrett
For sixty years—in fact, ever since the inception of the basic steelmaking process —basic slags have been the subject of study by chemists, metallurgists and petrog-raphers! with the purpose of provid
Jan 1, 1944
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Gypsum and Anhydrite (78928879-dd88-41a0-835c-6ae1b732d403)By Frank C. Appleyard
The two calcium sulfate minerals-gypsum and anhydrite-occur in many parts of the world, and gypsum has long been of economic importance in the family of industrial minerals. Gypsum, the dihydrate form
Jan 1, 1975
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Papers - Effect of Plastic Deformation on the Age-hardening of Duralumin (T. P. 1064, with discussion)By John T. Norton, Robert W. Lindsay
A number of detailed investigations of the physical changes accompanying age-hardening have raised the question as to the possibility of some phenomenon preceding the actual process of precipitation.
Jan 1, 1939
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Institute of Metals Division - The Nature of the Fiber-Texture Component in Extruded Aluminum RodsBy R. A. Vandermeer, C. J. McHargue
The (001) fiber-texture component, found in aluminum rods extruded at subzero temperatures, consists of particles of various sizes having extremely irregular shapes dispersed in a nonuniform way thro
Jan 1, 1964
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Geology and Non-Metallics - Research in Process of Ore Deposition (with Discussion)By Waldemar Lindgren
Fifteen years ago, in his presidential address before the Washington Academy of Sciences,' Alfred H. Brooks said: "Applied geology can only maintain its present high position by continuing the re
Jan 1, 1928
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Physical Changes In Iron And Steel Below The Thermal Critical RangeBy 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 and cooling either rapidly
Jan 2, 1920
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Iron and Steel Division - The Tin-Fusion Method for the Determination of Hydrogen in SteelBy D. J. Carney, J. Chipman, N. J. Grant
SINCE the beginning of this century it has been known that hydrogen contributes to the porosity of steel and that it is harmful to its mechanical properties. The evidence for this has been largely qua
Jan 1, 1951
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Stone Industry Production Problems Call For ResearchBy Nelson Severinghaus
Consolidated Quarries Corp. must conduct operations for an average sales price of $1.25 per ton, about the same price at which stone was sold 25 years ago when the dollar was worth twice what it is no
Mar 1, 1956
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Institute Reports For the Year 1930 (c73b659d-b14f-4cd3-ad4c-44d13b7a7429)GENTLEMEN Herewith are transmitted reports from the Treasurer and of the principal standing committees of the Institute. To these special reports members are referred for details as to the year'
Jan 1, 1923
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Review of the Month (eb10cb9a-977d-4992-a295-9a92fe663e80)APRIL BEGAN with increased disorder in the Ruhr and some blood-shed. The war cloud in the East disappeared, however, with the signifi- cance by the Turks of their intention to return to Lausanne t
Jan 5, 1923
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Some Observations And Theory On Slack-Wind Blast-Furnace OperationBy Francis M. Rich
BEFORE the world-wide depression, the primary purpose of most blast-furnace operators was to produce a maximum tonnage of pig iron per day for each furnace in blast. Some attention was paid to the con
Jan 1, 1935
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Atlantic City Paper - Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, and its Surroundings (Discussion, 808)By George J. Bancroft
Western Australia (often popularly called Westralia) comprises all of the Australian continent west of the 129th meridian. The latest census, that of 1895, gives it a population of 101,235 persons. It
Jan 1, 1899