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  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Tempering Characteristics of Some 0.4 Pct Carbon Ultra-high-Strength Steels

    By B. G. Reisdorf

    This paper describes the microstructural changes that occur when quenched ultrahigh-strength steels containing OA pet C and various amounts of nickel, silicon, and cobalt are tempered. The changes

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Buckling of Tubing in Pumping Wells, Its Effects and Means for Controlling It

    By Arthur Lubinski, K. A. Blenkarn

    It is explained why the bottom portion of freely suspended tubing in a pumping well buckles and straightens in succession during the pumping cycle. Field evidence of resulting rod-on-tubing wear, exce

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Coal - Cleaning Various Coals in a Drum-Type Dense-Medium Pilot Plant

    By M. R. Geer Olds, H. F. Yancey

    THE increase in the number of coal-cleaning plants employing dense-medium processes occurring since 1946 is especially interesting when viewed historically. Both sand and magnetite were introduced

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    The Coke Industry Today

    By C. S. Finney, John Mitchell

    On December 31, 1959, there existed in the United States 15,993 slot-type coke ovens capable of producing 81,447,700 net tons of coke. These ovens were concentrated in 74 coke plants in 21 different s

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel - An Introduction to the Iron-chromium-nickel Alloys (with Discussion)

    By Edgar C. Bain, William E. Griffiths

    The results of an inquiry into the structural nature of some 70 iron alloys containing both nickel and chromium over a considerable range of concentration are briefly described in this paper. This stu

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Mining Geology - Mining Districts and Their Relation to Structural Geology (with Discussion)

    By J. J. Beeson

    For the past fifty years or more, the structural features of the Cordil-leran mountain system of western United States have presented some most interesting problems. Any geologist or engineer living i

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Coal - Selection of Coals for the Manufacture of Coke (with Discussion)

    By H. J. Rose

    Sixty-five million net tons of coal were carbonized in the by-product and beehive coke ovens1 of the United States during 1924. This tonnage represented 13.4 per cent. of the bituminous coal which was

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel - Some Characteristics of Low-carbon Manganese Steel

    By V. N. Krivobor

    The study and use of low-carbon manganese steels have been curiously neglected in the general history of developments in alloy steels. Hadfield1 made an extensive study of manganese-iron-carbon alloys

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    California Asbestos Goes To Market

    By Paul C. Merritt

    Chrysotile asbestos producers in Quebec may soon experience a unique situation-i.e., strong competition from American ore sources for the short fiber market west of the Mississippi River. This com- pe

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    Deleterious Coatings of the Media in Dry Ball Milling

    By Fred Bond

    WHEN some materials are ground dry in a ball mill, a stage of comminution is reached at which the finely divided particles begin to adhere to the balls and to the mill lining. As grinding progresses,

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Cause of Cleavage: Fractures in Ductile Materials

    By A. E. Gorum, J. Washburn, E. R. Parker

    Experimental evidence was obtained in support of the idea that cleavage fracture can be initiated by dislocation pile-up. The high ductility of MgO crystals when tested in bending comPared to their re

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    AIME Annual Meeting Program, February 18 To 21, 1952

    [SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16 10 am to 5 pm Council of Section' Delegates SUNDAY, FEBRUARY .17 1 pm Student Relations Committee 2 pm Board of Directors 2:30 pm MIED-Mineral Economics Instr

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Magnetic Susceptibilities of Titanium-Rich Titanium-Oxygen Alloys

    By Y. L. Yao

    The solubility limit of oxygeu in a titanionn at 850°C has been determined by magnetic measurements as 12.5 + 0.5 pct (29.0—30,9 at. pct). Also in the susceptibility-co~centmtion curve, there is n d

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Exploration On The Stillwater Chromite Deposits, Stillwater And Sweetgrass Counties, Montana

    By Paul T. Allsman, E. W. Newman

    TRENCHING, sampling, and core drilling in Stillwater and Sweetgrass Counties, Mont., by the Bureau of Mines have delimited over 5,000,000 tons of chromite ore containing more than 20 per cent chromic

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Where are We?

    By Arthur A. Brant

    Let us start back as far as possible, to the beginnings of this universe, some 5 billion or more years ago. This is a time interval that can be crudely underestimated by the moon-earth tidal friction

    Jan 4, 1964

  • AIME
    Paul F. Kerr Memorial Symposium Dinner

    Andy H. Vassiliou – Introduction Ladies and gentlemen,.good evening and welcome to the Paul F. Kerr Memorial Symposium dinner. I believe we are all here to honor the memory of a great teacher and a

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    Model Studies on the Resistance of Airways Supported with Timber Sets

    By G. B. Misra

    Though resistance to flow offered by mine airways supported with timber sets has been an object of study over the last half century, no accurate relation has yet been established from which prediction

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Radiography Of Metals

    By P. Davey Wheeler

    San Francisco meeting, September, 1915) IN an article in the General Electric Review, January, 1915, reference was made to the X-ray examination of a steel casting 9/16 in. thick. Fig. 1 shows one of

    Jan 8, 1915

  • AIME
    Diatomite

    By Arthur B. Cummins, Henry Mulryan

    DIATOMITE is a hydrous or opaline form of silica, commonly known as diatomaceous earth, diatomaceous silica or kieselguhr. The term "infusorial earth" has lost its original meaning and today is incorr

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    The Great Falls System Of Concentration.

    By Albert Wiggin

    THE copper-bearing sulphide ores from the mines in Butte, Mont., which are for the most part concentrated at the Boston & Montana duction Works in Great Falls and at the Washoe Reduction Works in Anac

    Jan 8, 1913