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What is Steel?By Albert Sauveur
As THE years go by, names of distinguished metallurgists will be added to the list of Henry Marion Howe lecturers, and now and then an illustrious one, for to be chosen to deliver the Howe lecture wil
Jan 5, 1924
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The Cyanide-Plant At The Treadwell Mines, Alaska.By W. P. Lass
(San Francisco Meeting, October, 1911.) TEE purpose of this article is not only to describe the plant and method of cyaniding the Treadwell concentrates, but to present some of the results of the e
Feb 1, 1912
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Part IX - Surface Self-Diffusion of Gold(l): Analysis of the Scratch-Flattening ProcessBy N. A. Gjostein
The formal descnption of the decay of an isolated scratch can be written in terms of an appropriate Fourier integral. With the application of certain approximations, this description leads to the seco
Jan 1, 1967
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Effect Of Sulfur And Oxides In Ordnance SteelBy William Priestley
IN THE manufacture of gun forgings and other steel parts that, in service, are subject to sudden high stresses and shocks, it is most desirable to use steel possessing the greatest toughness and ducti
Jan 12, 1921
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Papers - Some Things We Don't Know about the Creep of Metals (T. P. 1087)By H. W. Gillett
Unlike most previous Howe lecturers, I had not the good fortune to be associated with Henry Marion Howe, nor to be directly one of his students. Yet, through his writings, he has been my teacher, as h
Jan 1, 1939
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PART XI – November 1967 - Communications - Visual Observations of Crystallization from Aqueous Solution under Enforced Fluid MotionBy G. S. Cole, G. F. Bolling
ThIS note accompanies a study of grain structure changes in metal ingots produced by the alteration of fluid motion.1 Although the Prandtl Number of aqueous solutions is much higher than that for meta
Jan 1, 1968
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Laboratory Evaluation of Prospective Enriched Gas-Drive ProjectsBy M. H. Gaskell, D. M. Kehn, G. T. Pyndus
A correlation of the bubble point pressure for black oil systems is developed using the standard physical-chemical equations of soiutions. The correlation is based on 158 experimentally measured bubbl
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Inference Between Oil FieldsBy W. Hurst
What is entailed here is the extension of the sinzplified material balance formulas to encompass interference between oil fields. As previously reported, the ex-plicitness as so revealed for the cunzu
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Magnesium and Magnesium Alloys - Factors Affecting the Tensile Notch Sensitivity of & Magnesium Alloy Extrusions (Metals Tech., Aug. 1948, TP 2419)By I. Cornet
With the greatly expanding use of magnesium during the war, it appeared necessary to the War Metallurgy Committee that the notch sensitivity of magnesium alloy extrusions be further investigated and t
Jan 1, 1949
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New York Paper - Distribution of Tensile Strength in hard Drawn Copper Wire (with Discussion)By Frank W. Harris
The strength of hard drawn copper wire is a question of considerable importance to both manufacturer and consumer. Unlike steel and alloy wires, in which strength is governed by both chcniical and phy
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Crushing-Machines For Cyanide Plants.By MARK H. LAMB
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) THE recent growth of a sentiment among cyanide-plant designers against the use of gravity-stamps for the crushing preliminary to cyanidation may be said to date
Jul 1, 1910
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Coalesced Copper-Its History, Production and CharacteristicsBy H. H. Stout
IN the early fall of 1925, the writer was conducting, in the Ledoux and Co. labora-tory, New York, experiments directed to-ward ascertaining the effect on its impurity content when cathode copper was
Jan 1, 1940
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Minerals Beneficiation - On the Normal Interaction Between Adsorbed Species and Adsorbing SurfaceBy J. M. Cases
Study of the normal interaction between flotation collectors and the silicates through measurement of the electrokinetic potential carried out by the streaming potential and flotation recovery methods
Jan 1, 1971
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Chattanooga Paper - The Geology and Mineral Resources of Sesquachee Valley, TennesseeBy W. M. Brown
SEQUACHEE Valley includes portions of the counties of Marion, Sequachee, Bledsoe and Cumberland. It extends in a general direction parallel with the Great Valley of East Tennessee, some 75 miles north
Jan 1, 1886
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A Limestone Mine in the Birmingham DistrictBy C. E. Abbott
THE Birmingham district, Alabama, is distinctive in the proximity to one another of its deposits of iron ore, coal and flux. These three basic requisites for the making of iron and steel are found wit
Jan 1, 1936
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Institute AnnouncementsBy AIME AIME
The Bulletin. The Bulletin of the Institute will be issued hereafter monthly instead of bi-monthly as heretofore. Among other reasons for this change, it is desired to effect thereby the earlier tran
Jan 1, 1909
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The Barometric and Temperature Conditions at the Time of Dust-Explosions in the Appalachian Coal-MinesBy N. H. Mannakee
SINCE the publication of the paper of Mr. Scholz, The Effect of Humidity on Mine-Explosions,' I have undertaken a study of the meager available data of barometric and temperature conditions it ti
Nov 1, 1909
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Theoretical MetallurgyBy Robert F. Mehl
EXTENSION of physical and chemical methods of research in the study of metallic behavior continues rapidly, particularly in the correlation of behavior with crystal structure, and in the analysis of e
Jan 1, 1934
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Effect of Composition on Mechanical Properties and Corrosion Resistance of Some Aluminum-alloy Die Castings PRIPRINTBy E. H. Jr. Dix
A LACK of experimental data illustrating the effect of composition, particularly in respect to impurities, on the mechanical properties and corrosion resistance of aluminum-alloy die castings induced
Jan 1, 1935
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Fuel-Gas, and the Strong Water-Gas SystemBy Henry Wurtz
HERACLITUS, a sage of antiquity, called the dark philosopher, who refused a throne, preferring a hermit's cell, propounded, twenty-four centuries since, the maxim : [ ] War (or strife) enge
Jan 1, 1880