Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Extractive Metallurgy Division - Cadmium Recovery Practice in Lead SmeltingBy H. E. Lee, P. C. Feddersen
Greenockite is the only known cadmium mineral of importance. It occurs rather universally, in minor concentrations, as a secondary mineral in sphalerite deposits. The world's cadmium output is ob
Jan 1, 1950
-
Extractive Metallurgy Division - Preparation and Arc Melting of High Purity IronBy G. W. P. Rengstorff, H. B. Goodwin
A method is described for purifying iron in batches of 150 Ib or more. Oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and sulphur are removed from flakes of electrolytic iron by treatment in wet and then dry hydrogen. A s
Jan 1, 1956
-
Iron and Steel - Desulfurizing Action of Manganese in Iron (with Discussion)By J. M. Gaines, C. H. Herty
It is a matter of frequent record in the literature that manganese will desulfurize molten iron under proper conditions. Particularly has much been written with regard to this action in the mixer, and
Jan 1, 1927
-
ClayBy H. Ries
THE term "clay" is applied usually to certain earthy rocks whose most prominent property is that of plasticity when wet. This permits them to be molded into almost any shape, which they retain when dr
Jan 1, 1949
-
Transformational Characteristics of Iron-manganese AlloysBy Scott Howard
MANGANESE being perhaps the least expensive of the metallic alloying elements that can be advantageously added to iron in considerable quantities, the basic characteristics of its alloys with iron are
Jan 1, 1931
-
Papers - Solid Solubilities of the Elements of the Periodic Subgroup Vb in CopperBy J. C. Mertz, C. H. Mathewson
Accurate knowledge of the solid solubilities of the elements that dissolve in the important base metals is needed for guidance in the preparation and heat-treatment of the alloys derived from these co
Jan 1, 1937
-
Alumina From Clay By The Lime-Sinter Method IIBy F. R. Archibald, C. M. Nicholson
THE present paper may be considered complementary to an earlier contribution on the same subject by F. R. Archibald and C. F. Jackson.1 It is particularly concerned with engineering and technological
Jan 1, 1948
-
Application Of Closed-Circuit TV To Conveyor And Mining OperationsBy G. H. Wilson
INTRODUCED in 1946 to serve a need in power- plant operation, closed-circuit TV has been used by well over 200 organizations in approximately 25 different industries. Known as industrial television, o
Jan 7, 1954
-
Recovery Of Gold From Balbach-Thum Slimes At Copper Cliff, OntarioBy Frederic Benard
THE treatment of Balbach-Thum slimes at Copper Cliff by the Ontario Refining Co, is of interest because it differs considerably from methods usually employed for the recovery of fine gold from parting
Jan 1, 1938
-
Utah - The ProspectFEW whose good fortune it has been to gaze on the Utah Copper mine but will agree that it is one of the two or three most magnificent man-made spectacles in the world. Skyscrapered Manhattan Island pe
Jan 1, 1933
-
The Chemistry Of Activation, Deactivation And Depression In The Flotation Of Zinc Sulfide: A ReviewBy S. A. Allison, N. P. Finkelstein
After a brief consideration of the properties of zinc sulfide minerals, their flotation characteristics, and their reactions with thiol collectors, the literature on the activation of the minerals by
Jan 1, 1976
-
Copper and Copper Alloys - Mechanism of Precipitation in a Permanent Magnet Alloy (Metals Tech., Aug. 1948, TP 2444)By J. B. Newkirk, A. H. Geisler
Certain of the permanent magnet alloys provide ideal systems for the study of the kinetics of the precipitation reaction and the correlation of structure with properties. One such system, Cu-Ni-Fe, wa
Jan 1, 1949
-
Part VIII – August 1968 - Papers - Iron-Sulfur System. Part I: Growth Rate of Ferrous Sulfide on Iron and Diffusivities of Iron in Ferrous SulfideBy E. T. Turkdogan
The activity of sulfur was determined as a function of composition of ferrous sulfide by equilibrating with hydrogen sulfide-hydrogen gas mixtures at 670° , 800°, and 900". The present results suppl
Jan 1, 1969
-
Reservoir Engineering-General - A Review of Diffusion and Dispersion in Porous MediaBy T. K. Perkins, O. C. Johnston
Because of the influence of dispersion on miscible-displacement processes, diffusion and dispersion phenomena in parous rocks are of current interest in the oil industry. This paper reviews and summar
-
Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of an Electric Field Upon the Solidification of Bismuth-Tin AlloysBy John D. Verhoeven
A technique has been developed for carrying out normal freezing experiments with a current density of 2000 amp per sq cut passing through the solid-liquid interface. The equation relating the effectiv
Jan 1, 1965
-
Reservoir Engineering–General - The Linear Displacement of Oil from Porous Media by Enriched GasBy E. F. Johnson, F. H. Brinkman, H. J. Welge, S. P. Ewing
This paper presents a method for predicting the manrler in which oil will be displaced from a porous body by enriched gas. The calculations apply to a gas rich enough to give a partially, but not a co
-
Institute of Metals Division - Zone Purification of Reactive MetalsBy R. L. Smith, J. L. Rutherford
ZONE refining, as developed by W. G. Pfann,1 has been used extensively for the purification of semiconductors. This method has made it possible to obtain the extremely high purity material necessary f
Jan 1, 1958
-
Thermochemistry Of The Open Hearth. II - Thermal Changes In Melting And RefiningATHOUGH the open-hearth charge contributes CO, CO2, and water vapor to the combustion gases and absorbs oxygen from them, in the main the thermal effects in the melting charge and molten bath can be c
Jan 1, 1944
-
Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - A Theoretical Analysis of Water-flooding Networks (With Discussion)By M. Muskat, R. D. Wyckoff
The general problem of the simultaneous movement of water and oil in a connected sand is of considerable practical interest from two points of view. First, there is the situation usually described as
Jan 1, 1934
-
Geology and Non-Metallics - Mining and Preparation of St. Peter Sandstone in Arkansas (with Discussion)By D. D. Dunkin
Sandstone has been prepared for glassmaking purposes, and marketed from the White River Valley in Arkansas at Guion, Izard County, since about 1910—soon after the completion of the White River Branch
Jan 1, 1928