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Modern Gas-Power Blower StationsBy Arthur West
IT is the purpose of this paper to describe briefly some recent large power stations for blast furnaces, where the blast is exclusively supplied by gas engines using furnace gas. The stations are give
Jan 6, 1915
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A Precipitation-Hardening Stainless Steel Of The 18 Per Cent Chromium, 8 Per Cent Nickel TypeBy W. W. Gorr, R. Smith, E. H. Wyche
THE combination of high strength and corrosion resistance of cold-worked 18 Cr, 8 Ni steel has been advantageously utilized for some time, particularly in aircraft and rail car structures. There are,
Jan 1, 1946
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Reservoir Engineering - General - The Meaning of the Triple Value in Noncapillary Buckley-Leveret...By J. E. Berry
AII evaluation is made of the acoustic velocity log for measurement of formation porosity. Plots of field-observer1 velocities vs core-measured porosities of sandstones and limestotnes with inter inte
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Rosebud Sidesteps Permit Delays With Scraper StrippingBy John D. Wiebmer
There are those in the Colstrip, Mont., area who can still remember the opening of the Rosebud mine in 1923. For 35 years it was a steady employer of 80 or 90 residents who produced coal for the railr
Jan 12, 1979
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Quantitative Investigation of the Closed Grinding CircuitBy Hans Allenius, R. T. Hukki
This paper describes in quantitative terms the effect of sharpness of classification on the performance of the closed grinding circuit. The analysis is based on a large number of laboratory experiment
Jan 1, 1969
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New York Paper - The Use of Pulverized Coal as a Fuel for Metallurgical Furnaces (with Discussion)By H. R. Barnhurst
It would be a difficult matter to trace from the beginning the very few improvements made in the burning of fuels prior to 1860. Donbtless the crossing of the sticks of wood in building a mood fire ea
Jan 1, 1914
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Carbon in Pig Iron (d5ca755c-92ad-454b-9acc-675eb7206cec)ONE of the features of the annual meeting was a round table conference on carbon in pig iron, on Feb. 16. This was presided over by R. H. Sweetser, and the discussion, which was so interesting as to r
Jan 3, 1927
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Producing–Equipment, Methods and Materials - Burst Resistance of Pipe Cemented Into the EarthBy R. E. Zinkham, R. J. Goodwin
A mathematical study has been made of the amount of support a cement sheath could provide to casing cemented into the earth. Several assumptions were required to make the analysis, but only two of the
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Acid Pressure Leaching of Uranium OresBy F. A. Forward, J. Halpern
A new process is described for extracting uranium from ores containing sulphidic minerals, which comprises treating an aqueous pulp of the ore with air or oxygen at elevated temperatures and pressures
Jan 1, 1956
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Part IV – April 1968 - Communications - Discontinuous Precipitation in Cu-1.79 Wt Pct BeBy Y. Mishima, R. Shiromizu
THE equilibrium y phase in Cu-Be alloys forms by discontinuous precipitation, the new phase nucleating at the grain boundaries and growing into grains on both sides of the boundary. When the alloy is
Jan 1, 1969
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Institute of Metals Division - The Interaction Parameter for Solutions of Carbon and Cobalt in Austenite at 1000°C (TN)By L. C. Brown, J. S. Kirkaldy
AS part of a program to investigate the diffusive properties of dilute ternary austenites, we have made a determination of the effects of cobalt on the activity of carbon in y iron. Samples of pure
Jan 1, 1963
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PART V - Mixed-Control Reaction Kinetics in the Gaseous Reduction of HematiteBy W. O. Philbrook, R. H. Spitzer, F. S. Manning
A generalized mathematical model has been developed to describe the kinetics of gas-solid reactions with special attention given to the hydrogen reduction oj dense spheres of hematite. This reduction
Jan 1, 1967
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The Uniform Nomenclature Of Iron And Steel.By AIME AIME
Report of Committee 24, of the International Association for Testing Materials, presented at the Brussels Congress, 1906. Republished for use at the 94th Meeting of the American Institute of Mining En
Mar 1, 1908
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Institute of Metals Division - Internal Friction of Tungsten Single CrystalsBy R. H. Schnitzel
Internal-friction peaks have been observed in tungsten single crystals at about 300° and 400°C. The characteristics of these peaks are similar to interstitial peaks observed in other bee metals; there
Jan 1, 1965
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Annual Review - Industrial Minerals in 1954By Robert C. Stephenson
In 1954, a year when general industrial production declined, it is significant that industrial mineral products continued in high demand. Phenomenal growth of the cement industry, increase in filler-f
Jan 3, 1955
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Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Energy Balance in Rock DrillingBy R. Simon
The sources of energy dissipation for concentrated loadings on rock are considered in an attempt to account for the experimentally measured magnitude of the work required to break out a unit volume of
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Biographical Notices - Edmund Gybbon SpilsburyEdmund Gybbon SpilsbURy, mining and metallurgical engineer of international reputation, died suddenly of heart failure on May 28, 1920, in the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, following an operation fo
Jan 1, 1922
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Biographical Notices - Edmund Gybbon SpilsburyEdmund Gybbon SpilsbURy, mining and metallurgical engineer of international reputation, died suddenly of heart failure on May 28, 1920, in the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, following an operation fo
Jan 1, 1922
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Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - An Improved Method for Computing Directional SurveysBy G. J. Wilson
Difficulties experienced in correlating vertical and lateral locations of subsurface features that are encountered in directional wells prompted critical review of the tangential method of computing d
Jan 1, 1969
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Reaction of the Living Body to Different Types of Mineral Dusts with and without Complicating InfectionBy Leroy Gardner
EVERY reader of this paper is well aware of the fact that the prolonged inhalation of large amounts of free silica dust results in fibrosis of the lungs, and that other inorganic dusts, except those o
Jan 1, 1938