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Reservoir Engineering - General - Three-Phase Relative Permeability Measurement Using a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Technique for Estimating Fluid SaturationBy I. Fatt, D. N. Saraf
A method is described for measuring two- and three-phase relative permeabilities in sandstones or sand packs using a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique to determine fluid saturations. Two- and
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Reservoir Engineering–General - Temperature Profiles in Underground CombustionBy P. E. Baker
Approximate solutions are presented for the heat-flow equations in a loss-free linear system with a moving source and with heat transfer by convection and conduction, representing in situ combustion i
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Institute of Metals Division - The Absorption and Effusion of Hydrogen in Alpha IronBy J. R. Hornaday, A. E. Morris, N. A. Parlee, D. C. Carmichael
Rates of absorption and effusion of hydrogen in solid iron were measurede by a Sieverts type of apparatus. With clean a iron these rates are diffusion controlled down to 420°C and are represented by t
Jan 1, 1961
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Institute of Metals Division - Intermediate State in the Ductile-Brittle Transition of ChromiumBy W. A. Wood, H. L. Wain, R. I. Garrod
The mechanical behavior of recrystallized chromil~m of high purity has been studied, principally in torsion and to a lesser extent in tension, at temperatures between —196oand 350oC. Depending upon t
Jan 1, 1964
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Producing–Equipment, Methods and Materials - Improved Bentonite Cements Through Partial AccelerationBy H. J. Beach
This paper describes the properties and uses of cementitious mixtures containing 10 to 20 per cent bentonite and 2 per cent or more sodium chloride. Salt additions improve bentonite cement by increasi
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Reservoir Rock Characteristics - Additional Thermal Data for Porous Rocks–Thermal Expansion and Heat of ReactionBy M. A. Selim, W. H. Somerton
Thermal expansions and heats of reaction of three typical sandstones were measured in the temperature range of 25°to 1,000°C. The significance of these data in subsurface heat-transfer calculations is
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Institute of Metals Division - Preferred Orientations in Swaged and Drawn Tungsten WireBy S. Leber
Pole figures and pole distributions were used for the quantitative detevinination of the preferred orientations in swaged tungsten rods and the effect of subsequent wire drawing on the texture. In the
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - Constitution of Iron-Chromium-Molybdenum Alloys at 1200°FBy Pol Duwez, Spencer R. Baen
A LTHOUGH the practical importance of Fe-Cr--iV Mo alloys has long been recognized, constitution studies have been limited to a few alloys within rather narrow ranges of composition. The purpose of th
Jan 1, 1952
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Reservoir Engineering-General - A Model Study of Viscous FingeringBy R. W. Olson, A. L. Benham
Viscous fingering was studied as it occurred in an open Hele-Shaw model (1 ft x 4 ft x 1/16 in.); it was also studied in the same model packed with 80-mesh glass beads during miscible displacements un
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Institute of Metals Division - Thermal and Dilatometric Investigation of the Alloys of Cobalt with Chromium and MolybdenumBy A. G. Metcalfe
Observations at temperature are used to investigate the phase changes in alloys containing more than 50 pct Co and above 1000°C. The nonsuppressible transformations in cobalt above 1120°C and in the i
Jan 1, 1954
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Institute of Metals Division - Compositional Control of Phases Precipitating in Complex Austenitic AlloysBy W. C. Hagel, H. J. Beattie
Phases present at 2200° and 1500°F (1204° and 816°C) were identified in sixty wrought developmental austenitic alloys possessing wide compositional variations. The bases were iron-, cobalt-, and nicke
Jan 1, 1965
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Natural Gas Technology - A Correlation of Dewpoint Pressure With Fluid Composition and TemperatureBy L. K. Nemeth, H. T. Kennedy
The investigation presented in this paper was performd to develop a relationship between the dewpoint pressure of a hydrocarbon reservoir fluid and its composition, temperature and characteristics of
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Mineral Beneficiation - Contact Angles and Surface CoverageBy S. R. B. Cooke, W. Philippoff, Donald E. Cadwell
THE importance of contact angles in flotation has long been recognized, but little has been done to get quantitative relationships between the surface coverage of the mineral by the reagent, the lengt
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - Gallium-Antimony SystemBy R. L. Smith, I. G. Greenfield
The binary system Ga-Sb has been investigated by thermal, X-ray, and metallo-graphic methods. 'The intermetallic compound GaSb melts at 705.9OC and forms a eutectic with antimony at 11.8 atomic p
Jan 1, 1956
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Institute of Metals Division - Measurements of the Activity of Silver in Silver Sulfide Being Reduced by Hydrogen During and After Nucleation of Silver (TN)By Hermann Schmalzried, Carl Wagner
UPON heating a metal oxide or sulfide in H2, first only oxygen or sulfur is removed from the surface. Thus the metal/nonmetal ratio in the oxide or sulfide increases and the thermodynamic activity of
Jan 1, 1963
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Reservoir Engineering–General - A Study of Gravity Counterflow SegregationBy C. D. Stahl, E. E. Templeton, R. F. Nielsen
It has been customary, in predicting saturation changes, to use the Leverett fractional flow formula", obtained by eliminating the unknown pressure gradient from the generalized Darcy equations for th
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Vermiculite (e129e587-97b1-4718-b470-9e567c1c5b9b)By John B. Myers
Vermiculite is the commercial name used to describe a micaceous mineral that expands appreciably when heated. This process, called exfoliation, results in a light weight material. The light weight mat
Jan 1, 1960
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Mineral Beneficiation - Adsorption on Quartz, From an Aqueous Solution, of Barium and Laurate IonsBy A. M. Gaudin, C. S. Chang
Adsorption was measured for barium ion and laurate radical, using radioactively marked agents, over wide range of concentrations. Laurate adsorbed in absence of barium fails to float. With barium, flo
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - A Quantitative Measurement of the Fraction of Tensile Strain Due to Twinning in Polycrystalline Zirconium at 77°KBy E. R. Buchanan, R. E. Reed-Hill, F. W. Caldwell
Poly crystalline zirconium tensile specimens containing a sizable fraction of grains unfavorably oriented for slip were deformed at 77°K to strains as high as 9 pct. The contributions of the various t
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Twinning on the Yield Stress of Polycrystalline Iron at Low TemperaturesBy J. G. Y. Chow, S. B. McRickard
The tensi1e properties of Ferrovac iron have been studied from 4° to 300°K. The stress required for macroscopic yielding was found to he constant below approximately 50°K. The effect of mechanical twi
Jan 1, 1965