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  • AIME
    Use Of Oxygenated Air In Metallurgical Operations (d61a5a47-729a-47d6-b581-1caa67f7b15c)

    R. H. SWEETSER, Columbus, Ohio.-My experience with oxygen in the blast is limited to the use of one tank of oxygen in melting out a chilled anthracite furnace. The oxygen was introduced through the pe

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Proposed Use of Oxygen in the Open-hearth Furnace

    By Sidney Cornell

    THE technical- advantages of adding oxygen to air and producer gas, or using it as a reactive agent, producing 400 B.t.u. gas instead of. the present 150 B.t.u., with higher flame temperatures and a r

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Cheap Oxygen In Metallurgy

    By Edmund Kirby

    THE results to come from the application of cheap oxygen to industry in general will be so great that it is not possible to enumerate them beforehand and still less to estimate them. We naturally thin

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Use of Oxygenated Air in the Blast Furnace

    By Arthur McKee

    As HEAT is the controlling factor in all smelting operations, it will be .most helpful to make a new set of calculations on the basis of a .unit of fuel burned at the tuyeres to carbon monoxide. This

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Use Of Oxygenated Air In Metallurgical Operations

    THERE was presented for discussion at the February (1924) meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers a report of a committee named by the United States Bureau of Mines on

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Summary Of Committee's Report

    IN THE past, we have, perhaps, been somewhat careless in our furnace practice, in the use of high-grade material, lowering the production costs through demanding high-grade ores, increasing the size o

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Production Of Ferrophosphorus In The Electric Furnace

    By Theodore Swann

    DURING recent years, there has been a material increase in the use of ferrophosphorus in the steel industry. It has been observed, when rolling sheets, that those made of Southern iron did not have to

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Manufacture Of Ferrophosphorus At Rockdale, Tenn.

    By James Barr

    The process of manufacturing ferrophosphorus lies not alone in smelting a mixture of phosphates, silica, iron ore, with coke as fuel, but upon smelting this mixture with coke and air as chemical agent

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Ducktown, Tennessee, Copper District

    By Wilbur Nelson

    ALL of our accounts of the discovery of copper ore at Ducktown, Tenn., state that the discovery was made in August, 1843, yet it would appear that samples of copper from this district were found by th

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Oil Geology Of Northern Venezuela

    By A. Hamilton Garner

    Northern Venezuela has been divided into three provinces, as follows: The Llanos, the Andean, and the Maracaibo Basin and Falcon. The first and third are large sedimentary basins offering, possibiliti

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    A New Roasting Furnace for Zinc Flotation Concentrate

    By Charles Fulton

    This paper describes experiments carried on at the Case School of Applied Science, together with their results. Their success led to the design of the larger furnace herein described, but which has no

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Notes On The Clinton Group In Alabama

    By Truman Aldrich

    THE Clinton group of the Silurian holds the red or fossiliferous ore; its outcrops have been mapped by the State or U. S. Geological Survey. This group is from 100 to 500 ft. thick in Alabama. There a

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Blast-furnace Practice in Alabama

    By H. E. Mussey

    WHEN the American Institute of Mining Engineers visited the Birmingham district in May, 1888, the four Ensley furnaces (Fig. 1) then FIG. 1.-BLAST-FURNACE DEVELOPMENT IN ALABAMA. completed were

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Increasing Production Of Petroleum By Increasing Diameter Of Wells

    By Lester Uren

    Beginning with theoretical concepts of oil drainage, this paper demonstrates that the flow of petroleum into a well from a stratum of oil-saturated sand of uniform texture increases with the diameter

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Mascot, Tennessee, Zinc Area

    By Wilbur Nelson

    IN 1839,1 Gerard, Troost, the first, State Geologist of Tennessee, reported the occurrence of zinc ores in East Tennessee, in connection with the iron ores at Embreeville; in 1844,2 he refers to the z

    Jan 10, 1924

  • AIME
    Red Iron Ore Mining Methods In- The Birmingham District

    By W. R. Crane

    MINING of the red iron ores of the Birmingham district has been carried on energetically during the past 50, years, and their development has created a large iron and steel manufacturing, center, the

    Jan 9, 1924

  • AIME
    Alabama Coal Mining Practices

    By Milton Fies

    ALTHOUGH pig iron from iron ore and red cedar charcoal preceded the mining of coal by many years, for tradition says that Alabama iron was used to shoe the horses of Andrew Jackson's soldiers, co

    Jan 9, 1924

  • AIME
    Smelting Copper Concentrates In A Converter

    By F. J. Longworth

    For a number of years an intensive study has been made to improve the blast-furnace practice at Copperhill not only as to costs but to provide a good grade of gas for the acid plants. This study, took

    Jan 9, 1924

  • AIME
    Manufacture Of Cast-Iron Pipe In The South

    By Richard Moldenke

    The author discusses some economic conditions which have made the career of the cast-iron pipe industry in the United States a checkered one. He next describes the two new developements in the manufac

    Jan 9, 1924

  • AIME
    Roof Support In The Red Ore Mines Of The Birmingham District

    By W. R. Crane

    THE support of roof in mines is dependent largely on the character of the top rock and its occurrence. The formations overlying the orebed in the Birmingham district are sandstone and slate. The sands

    Jan 9, 1924