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Flash Drying And Calcining As Developed From Mill DryingBy William B. Senseman
FOR reasons well known to mining engineers, wet grinding is quite universal in plants having to do with the extraction of metallic values from crude ores. In the processing of the nonmetallic and indu
Jan 1, 1945
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Institute of Metals Division - Activation Energies for Diffusion in Pure Metals and Concentrated Binary AlloysBy Louis E. Toth, Alan W. Searcy
A modification of Le Claire's microscopic model for self-diffusion is developed in a form suitable for prediction of activation energies for diffusion in disordered substitutional solutions as we
Jan 1, 1964
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Production - Texas - Development and Production East and East Central in 1943By D. V. Carter, C. Williams
During 1943 five oil fields and two gas-condensate fields were discovered in the East and East Central Texas district. The New Hope field, discovered by Tide Water-Seaboard in Franklin County, is the
Jan 1, 1944
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Michigan during 1943By Theron Wasson
The oil and gas fields of Michigan that have been under development since 1925 are in an area that extends across the middle of the lower peninsula from northeast to southwest, a distance of about 200
Jan 1, 1944
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Preface To DiffusionBy Robert F. Mehl
THE purpose of a symposium, I take it, is to gather together a group interested in a common intellectual field, in order to exchange views, and to appraise the state of knowledge. Symposia are the mor
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Self-diffusion of Copper (T.P. 1419, with discussion)By Martin S. Maier, H. R. Nelson
The diffusion of metals plays an important role in many metallurgical processes,lJ as, for example, the formation of alloys by the annealing of mixed powders, the homogenization of segregated alloys,
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Control of Solids in a Closed Washery Water System (Contribution 128)By J. A. Younkins. J. P. Proctor, E. D. Hummer
Comparatively little has been published relating practical experience with the control of the solid content of washery water systems that must be "closed." A "closed" system is one that for some reaso
Jan 1, 1942
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Drilling and Production Equipment, Methods and Materials - Bottom Hole Flow Surveys for Determination of Fluid and Gas Movements in WellsBy C. R. Dale
The need for instruments to measure the movement of fluids and gas in wells has been recognized by engineers for many years. Information regarding flow in the producing interval has a direct bearing o
Jan 1, 1949
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Metal Mining - Classification of Block Caving and Draw MethodsBy F. S. McNicholas
IN the writer's opinion the term "block caving" has been rather loosely applied to a general principle of mining, and therefore detailed classification of caving methods and draw, together with t
Jan 1, 1952
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Production - Texas - Oil and Gas Development and Production in North Texas for the Year 1943By R. B. Gilmore
The North Texas district, as herein defined, includes the counties of Archer, Baylor, Clay, Cooke, Foard, Hardeman, Jack, Kiiox, Montague, Wichita, Wil-barger, and Young. Jack and Young Counties are i
Jan 1, 1944
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Chalk And WhitingBy Wallace W. Key
Chalk is a natural calcium carbonate occurring as the remains of soft, friable, minute marine organisms. Whiting can be either finely ground calcium carbonate prepared from chalk, marble, or limestone
Jan 1, 1960
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Papers - Rock Properties - Determination of Magnetic Susceptibilities of Rocks in Situ (T. P. 1298, with discussion)By R. G. Patterson
The usual procedure in determining the magnetic susceptibilities of rocks and formations has been to take samples in the field and measure their volume susceptibilities in the laboratory, using one of
Jan 1, 1946
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Solubility Of Iron In Solid AluminumBy J. K. Edgar
FOR a number of years the production and use of super-purity aluminum (better than 99.99 pct) has been steadily increasing. High-grade lots of such aluminum show certain outstanding characteristics no
Jan 1, 1948
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The Engineering Foundation (3f13f314-b516-469d-8610-08132f38c9d5)September 20, 1917. As this meeting terminates the year's agreement under which the Engineering Foundation has appropriated its income to the National Research Council, a brief summary of what h
Jan 12, 1917
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Minerals Beneficiation - Magnetic and Chemical Analyses of Ores and Mill Products Containing Magnetite and IlmeniteBy O. Jantti, Erkki Laurila, R. T. Hukki
INVESTIGATION of the methods of analyses for magnetite and ilmenite in the Otanmaki iron-titanium ore and respective mill products has resulted in certain improvements in the methods conventionally em
Jan 1, 1952
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Some Problems Of Horizontal Steady Flow In Porous MediaBy John A. Putnam, Morrough P. O’Brien
DATA on the physical and thermodynamic properties of hydrocarbons have been made available in recent years but the formal method of applying these data to flow in porous media appears not to have been
Jan 1, 1941
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Engineering Research - Density of Natural Gases (T. P. 1323)By Marshall B. Standing, Donald L. Katz
Density data are reported on 16 saturated hydrocarbon vapors at Pressures ranging from 1000 to 8220 Ib. per sq. in. and at temperatures ranging from 35° to 250°F. These data have been used to extend
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Grinding - Developments in Ball-mill Grinding Practices at New Cornelia (Mining Technology, Sept. 1941)By E.G. Lewis, l.M. Barker
The literature of milling is replete with papers devoted to the subject of ball milling, all of which no doubt have contributed in one way or another to progress in that art. In this paper reference w
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Production of Pig Iron in the Electric Furnace (T.P. 1230)By Charles Hart
The art of electric smelting came with the turn of the present century and owes its existence to the introduction of alternating current, which found its first wide use in the establishment of the gre
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Basic Factors Involved in Bloating of Clays (T. P. 1486, with discussion)By J. D. Sullivan, Chester R. Austin, J. L. Nunes
It is characteristic of most shales and surface clays that a bloated or vesicular structure is produced by burning to a sufficiently high temperature, usually about 150° to 200°F. above the normal mat
Jan 1, 1942