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  • AIME
    Discussion Of Theory Of Mine Ventilation

    By A. C. Callen

    This, report represents the comments of the individual members of the A. I. M. E. Sub-committee on Physics of Mine Ventilation on the proposals of a special committee of the Institution of Mining Engi

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    The Effect Of Annealing Upon The Hardness Of Cold-Worked Ingot Iron

    By Charles Clayton

    A study of the literature shows that the greater part of research work on annealing of cold-worked iron has been for the purpose of studying the effect on grain-size and properties other than hardness

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Annealing Of Commercial Copper To Prevent Embrittlement By Reducing Gases

    By Susasn Leiter

    THAT oxygen in copper has been a source of trouble is well known and that that trouble has been real in the commercial world has been shown by Fuller.1 Moore and Beckinsale's paper2 at the annual

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Equilibrium Relations in Aluminum-copper Alloys of High Purity

    By E. H. Jr. Dix

    OF all the alloying elements used in commercial aluminum alloys, copper stands out as by far the most important, and it is perhaps for this reason that the constitution of the aluminum-copper system h

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    A Process For The Prevention Of Embrittlemerit In Malleable Cast-Iron

    By L. H. Marshall

    MALLEABLE-IRON castings frequently are made brittle by hot-dip galvanizing. The castings may be and usually are perfectly normal before the hot-dip treatment, in that they will stand a remarkable amou

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    A Preliminary Study Of Magnesium-Base Alloys

    By Bradley Stoughton

    THE importance of magnesium alloys as engineering materials has increased rapidly in the past few years. The most important properties of magnesium alloys are their lightness and strength, which resul

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Estimation Of Oxygen And Sulfur In Refined Copper

    By W. H. Basssett

    THE amount of oxygen present in refined copper bears an important relation to the effects of various impurities on physical properties of copper, as well as the effects of reducing gases at higher tem

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Geology of the Yoquivo, Chihuahua Mining District

    By C. W. Hall

    Owing to its isolation and comparatively small tonnage, the Yoquivo district is not widely known; though financially important and, geologically, quite interesting. San Francisco dc Yoquivo, the cent

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    A Photomicrographic Study Of The Process Of Re-Crystallization In Certain Cold Worked Metals

    By Vsevolod Krivobok

    THE re-crystallization of metals has been the subject of much scientific investigation, some of which has resulted in a better understanding of this extremely important and interesting phenomenon. Unf

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    The Relation Between Metallurgy And Atomic Structure

    By Paul Foote

    MOST of the treatises on metallurgy intimate that simultaneously with the development by the atomic physicist of a really satisfactory theory of the atom will be inaugurated a new epoch in the science

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    The Conductivity Of Electrolytes Used In The Electrolytic Separation Of Silver And Gold

    By F. F. Colcord

    THE electrolytic separation of silver and gold has been practiced by the refineries in the United States for a good many years; and probably because of frequent visiting between officials of plants an

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Borate Deposits Near Kramer, California

    By Hoyt Gale

    RECENT work on borate deposits near Kramer, in the extreme southeast corner of Kern County, California, is of special interest to those who are making a study of the mode of origin of the borate miner

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Subsidence Around A Salt Well

    By C. M. Young

    WHEREVER salt is extracted from the ground as an artificial brine produced by pumping down fresh water to dissolve the salt, subsidence of the overburden is a possibility, though apparently few cases

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Mechanism of Filtration

    By Arthur Hixson

    ALTHOUGH a few engineers have recognized the problem of the mechanism of filtration it has never been studied in a quantitative way. A background for a better understanding will be afforded by a surv

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Influence Of Temperature, Time And Rate Of Cooling On Physical Properties Of Carbon Steel II

    By Francis Foley

    INTRODUCTION DURING the summer of 1919, the late Dr. Henry M. Howe, then Chairman of the Division of Engineering of the National Research Council, organized a committee to obtain a better insight int

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    The Lead-Antimony System And Hardening Of Lead Alloys

    By R. S. Dean

    THE first attempt to establish an equilibrium diagram of the lead-antimony series was made by Roland-Gosselin1 in 1896. This investigation classified the system as a purely eutectiferous one, with the

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Effect Of Air Gap In Explosion System On Production Of Neumann Bands (6a28af5e-cb31-47e8-9dcd-d1c12f3d416e)

    By Francis Foley

    IN THE first report1 disks of steel of- known composition and history were exposed, under carefully prescribed conditions, to impacts of explosion products resulting from the explosion of 50-gm. charg

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Washing and Sizing Sand and Gravel

    By Edmund Shaw

    IN THE year just past there were produced in the United States about 170,000,000 tons of sand and gravel. Much of this was pit-run material used for gravelling roads and as railroad ballast on lines t

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Embrittlement Of Copper By Hot Reducing Gases

    By T. S. Fuller

    VARIOUS phases of the embrittlement of solid copper containing oxygen by the action of reducing gases at high temperatures through the work of many experimenters are familiar to readers of metallurgic

    Jan 2, 1926

  • AIME
    Effect Of Reheating On The Al-Cu-Ni-Mg And The Al-Cu-Fe-Mg (Pisteon) Alloys

    By Samuel Daniels

    THE Al-Cu-Ni-Mg alloy is much benefited by heat treatment and, in such con¬dition, is preferable to the Al-Cu-Fe-Mg alloy either as cast or as heat-treated, when both are reheated to temperatures of f

    Jan 2, 1926