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Technical Notes - A Note on the Interrelationship Between Wetting and Non-Wetting Phase Relative Permeability
By M. R. J. Wyllie
In a recent publication1 wetting phase relative permeability was exvressed as: and it was stated that a similar expression applied, mutatis mutandis, to non-wetting phase relative permeability; i.e.,
Jan 1, 1951
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Index
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Sillimanite in the Southeast (correction page 789)
By Kefton H. Teague
Attempts to locate domestic supplies of sillimanite have been unsuccessful until recently. This paper describes recent discoveries of sil-limonite-bearing schists in the Southeastern States, with emph
Jan 1, 1951
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Coal - Some Recent Investigations with the Dutch State Mines Cyclone Separator on Fine Coal Slurries
By S. A. Falconer
This paper deals with the practical application of the Dutch State Mines cyclone separator for fine-coal cleaning. The more important operating variables are discussed, and results of a number of cont
Jan 1, 1951
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Minerals Beneficiation - Automatic Controls on Sand Pumps
By William B. Stephenson
The paper describes efficient and effective methods of automatically controlling sand pump installations. Particular reference is made to liquid-level controls actuating variable speed pump-driv
Jan 1, 1951
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Coal - Low-temperature Coke as a Reactive Carbon
By C. E. Lesher
THIS paper reports a study of the reactivity of 950°F and 1650°F cokes as measured by relative rates of reduction of iron oxides at temperatures up to 2200°F. Previous work cited shows general accepta
Jan 1, 1951
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Minerals Beneficiation - A New Theory of Comminution
By Fred C. Bond, Jen-Tung Wang
Comminution energy is principally energy of deformation before breakage, which appears as heat An empirical equation is presented which covers the entire comminution range. The new strain-energy theor
Jan 1, 1951
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Measurements of Physical Properties - Further Developments in the Laboratory Determination of Relative Permeability
By B. H. Caudle, R. L. Slobod, E. R. Brownscombe
An earlier publication has discussed three methods lor obtaining relative permeability data on small core sample-: and the apparatus and technique for the capillary pressure displacement method. This
Jan 1, 1951
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Miscellaneous - Mineralogical Studies of California Oilbearing Formations, I - Identification of Clays
By P. G. Nahin, A. Grenall, R. S. Crog, W. C. Merrill
A progress report of an experimental investigation into the role of clay in reservoir performance is presented. The Paper gives some of the reasons for considering clay as a significant component and
Jan 1, 1951
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Drilling and Fluids and Cement - Plastic Flow Properties of Drilling Fluids-Measurement and Application
By W. B. Lilienthal, J. C. Melrose
The application of Bingham's law to the behavior of drilling fluids in a rotational viscometer permits the expression of viscometric data in terms of plastic viscosity and yield value, the flow p
Jan 1, 1951
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Drilling and Fluids and Cement - A Modified Low-Strength Cement
By B. E. Morgan, C. K. Dumbauld
The need for a low-strength cementing composition for use in well cementing is reviewed and results are presented of laboratory and experimental field tests of a modified cement having a controlled ul
Jan 1, 1951
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Coal - Organizing and Financing Cooperative Research
By Elmer R. Kaiser
Industry Adopts Research: Seventy-Ave years ago Thomas A. Edison began in a modest way and with limited funds to gather about him men of various talents to form the first industrial research laborator
Jan 1, 1951
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Coal - Operating Data for a Bird Centrifuge
By Orville R. Lyons, A. C. Richardson
THE Coal Division of Battelle Memorial Institute, during the course of an investigation conducted for a coal producer, carried out extensive sampling of the fine-coal section of a preparation plant. T
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Production of Graded Glass Sand by Grinding and Classification
By M. M. Fine
THE problem of producing a uniform, medium-fine sand for glass-furnace feed has been of interest to the glass-container industry for many years. In the present investigation of the problem, conducted
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Resistance of Iron-nickel-chromium Alloys to Corrosion by Acids (With Discussion)
By Donald E. Ackerman, Norman B. Pilling
The solubilities of a series of experimental alloys covering the range 0 to 100 per cent. Ni, 0 to 30 per cent. Cr have been studied under conditions of complete submersion in several fully aerated ac
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Inhibition of Corrosion of Aluminum by Soaps. (With Discussion)
By H. V. Churchill
There are two distinct methods of combating corrosive conditions. The first and most popular method is to choose a surface or material which will give adequate service under the specific and general c
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Correlation of Laboratory Corrosion Tests with Service: Weather-exposure Tests of Sheet Duralumin. (With Discussion)
By Henry S. Rawdon
Any laboratory corrosion test, as judged from the practical point of view, is valuable only to the extent that it foretells what will, in all probability, occur in service. Such a test is most properl
Jan 1, 1929
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Title Page
Jan 1, 1951
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Title Page
Jan 1, 1941
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Foreword. By Charles H. Herty, Jr
Jan 1, 1941