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Secondary Recovery - Flooding in South Ward-Analysis of a Lease PerformanceBy A. B. Dyes, P. H. Braun, B. E. Cole
This paper presents a reservoir engineering analysis of the performance data for a waterflooding project in the Johnson Lease, South Ward field. This type of engineering analysis adds to the knowledge
Jan 1, 1958
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Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Smelting And Leaching Of OresBy Frederick Laist
IN the course of the past 75 years the treatment of copper ores has undergone the most profound changes. To a lesser degree, this is true of all the nonferrous metals, but the rapid increase in the de
Jan 1, 1947
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Perlite (06122c65-7386-419a-b1c5-69df7089d72e)By Frederic L. Kadey
Perlite, as a volcanic glass, has been recognized since the Third Century, B.C. (Langford, 1978). The precise details of discovery often become lost in antiquity, and the variations among the stories
Jan 1, 1983
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Reservoir Engineering-General - An Experimental Verification of a Two Dimensional Technique for Computing Performance of Gas-Drive ReservoirsBy P. M. Blair, D. W. Peaceman
The shape and position of the gas-oil transition zone during downdip displacement of oil by gas has been calculated using flow equations which include the effects of gravity, relative permeability, ca
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Corrosion of Tin and Its Alloys. (With Discussion)By C. L. Mantell
Although so common and well known a metal, tin is really a less abundant element than many of those less familiar and usually ranked with the scarce or rare elements, such as cerium, yttrium, lithium,
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Recent Developments in the Tennessee Phosphate Industry (T. P. 1053, with discussion).By Paul M. Tyler, Herbert R. Mosley
Strategically situated in almost the heart of the leading fertilizer-consuming area of the United States, Tennessee long has ranked second only to Florida as a phosphate-producing state. Since 1932 it
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Recent Developments in the Tennessee Phosphate Industry (T. P. 1053, with discussion).By Herbert R. Mosley, Paul M. Tyler
Strategically situated in almost the heart of the leading fertilizer-consuming area of the United States, Tennessee long has ranked second only to Florida as a phosphate-producing state. Since 1932 it
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Corrosion of Tin and Its Alloys. (With Discussion)By C. L. Mantell
Although so common and well known a metal, tin is really a less abundant element than many of those less familiar and usually ranked with the scarce or rare elements, such as cerium, yttrium, lithium,
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Theory of Metallic Crystal Aggregates (With Discussion)By Charles G. Maier
It has long been supposed that when crystalline materials are comminuted the energy used in the production of increasingly smaller grain sizes is not entirely dissipated as heat but that a certain por
Jan 1, 1936
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Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Rate of Infiltration of MetalsBy K. A. Semlak, F. N. Rhines
NFILTRATION is a term used to designate that i- process by which the pores of a metal powder are filled with a relatively low-melting liquid metal through the action of capillary forces. This is accom
Jan 1, 1959
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PART V - An Estimate of Contact and Continuity of Dispersions in Opaque SamplesBy J. Gurland
The wmk is concerned with the estimate of the degee of continuity of a particulate phase dispersed in a matrix. The first section is a verieu: of the parameters nzeasurable by quantitative rnetallogva
Jan 1, 1967
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Some Fuel Problems (Presidential Address at Atlanta)By Joseph D. Weeks
The primary problems of civilization are material ones; their answers are writ in fire. When these problems in their higher aspects have pressed for solution, it has been out of the burning bush that
Jan 1, 1896
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FeldsparBy B. C. Burgess
IN the first edition of this volume,44 feldspar was introduced as "the I commonest mineral of the crystalline rocks," usually in small grains associated with other minerals and commercially produced o
Jan 1, 1949
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New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Development of American Blast-Furnaces, with Special Reference to Large YieldsBy James Gayley
The development of blast-furnace practice in America in the direction of large yields is mainly the history of our working since the year 1880, as the advancement that has been made in the last decade
Jan 1, 1891
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History Of The Institute: One Hundred Years Of AIMEBy Joe B. Alford
Founding of the Institute The advance of population and civilization in the U. S. moved through the woodlands of the East, and reached the edge of the great central plains about the middle of the n
Jan 1, 1971
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Papers - Indium-treated Bearing Metals (With Discussion)By C. F. Smart
Since their comparatively recent development, the alloys of cadmium with silver and copper or nickel, and of cadmium with nickel alone, have been used somewhat extensively as liners for connecting rod
Jan 1, 1938
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Research and Classification - Variables in Coal Sampling (With Discussion)By C. P. Proctor, J. B. Morrow
With numerous plans under consideration for coal classification, and with the advent of the Bituminous Coal Code, the intelligent sampling of coal has become increasingly important. To us it is rather
Jan 1, 1936
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Production Engineering - A Method for Computing Pressure Drop in the Pipe of Flowing Oil wellsBy K. B. Nowels
Data pertaining to pipe line flow for both oil and gas in horizontal or nearly horizontal pipe lines are both extensive and accurate. However, the pipe formulas used to determine pressure drop for flo
Jan 1, 1932
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Production Engineering and Engineering Research - The Killing of Milham Elliott No. 1 and Continental Elliott No. 12-8By R. Silent, N. A. Rousselot
The first producing wells completed in the Kettleman Hills arca were noteworthy for their high gas-oil ratios. As a result they became the object of criticism, and controversies arose based on their a
Jan 1, 1933
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Research and Classification - Variables in Coal Sampling (With Discussion)By C. P. Proctor, J. B. Morrow
With numerous plans under consideration for coal classification, and with the advent of the Bituminous Coal Code, the intelligent sampling of coal has become increasingly important. To us it is rather
Jan 1, 1936