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Production of Graded Glass Sand by Grinding and Classification (f50ff9fd-cdce-4350-b00e-d0603e84dcc4)
By M. M., Fine
In a laboratory study of grinding and classification' of silica sand, a satisfactory means of producing the medium-fine specification sand desired by producers of flint-glass containers was devel
Jan 1, 1950
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Production of Gray Iron from Steel Scrap in the Electric Furnace
By T. F. Baily
DURING the period of the War, in both this country and Canada, a number of attempts were made to make pig iron from steel scrap in the FIG. 1.-EXPERIMENTAL FURNACE. 5000 KW. CAPACITY: 150 TONS 2 PE
Jan 1, 1930
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Production Of High-Alumina Slags In The Blast Furnace
By T. L. Joseph
IN connection with its investigations of the blast'-furnace process, the Bureau of Mines, in coöperation with the Minnesota School of Mines Experiment Station, developed a 6-ton experimental furn
Jan 1, 1928
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Production of High-Density Parts by Powder Metallurgy Increases
By Charles Hardy, George D. Cremer
POWDER metallurgy has been established for some time as a novel method for manufacturing a great variety of articles generally specialties that could not be made conveniently by any other method. In t
Jan 1, 1942
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Production Of High-Grade Blast-Furnace Coke
By H. M. Chance
RECENT research work has shown that coal can be produced, at reasonable cost, from almost all coal-mining districts containing not more than 3 to 8 per cent. of ash. From coal so produced, an abundant
Jan 6, 1924
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Production of High-grade Concentrate from Butte Copper Ores-Results of Laboratory Investigations
By Bayard Morrow
THE copper-bearing ores concentrated at the Anaconda plant of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. are principally a mixture of copper and iron sulfides associated in a gangue consisting of quartz, lightly
Jan 1, 1933
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Production of High-silica Cement by Santa Cruz Portland Cement Company
By Robert Kinzie
WHEN Mr. Cameron, the President of the Santa Cruz Portland Cement Co., returned from Europe in 1929, he brought first-hand infor-mation about a very versatile type of hydraulic cement. It was not a ne
Jan 1, 1934
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Production Of Iron
No phase of the steel industry is more typical of its remark- able progress than is the evolution and development of the modern American blast furnace. The founding of the Institute in 1871 also marke
Jan 1, 1948
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Production Of Iron Of And Pig Iron In 1917
Statistics compiled by the United States Geological Survey show that the iron ore mined in the United States in 1917 reached a total of 75,288,851 gross tons, exceeding the former record output of 191
Jan 12, 1918
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Production Of Low-Sulphur Sponge Iron
By R. C. Buehl, J. P. Riott, E. P. Shoub
PILOT-PLANT tests have demonstrated that it is possible to produce low-sulphur sponge iron (0.03 to 0.05 per cent sulphur) as a continuous process in an internally fired rotary kiln from iron ore or m
Jan 1, 1946
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Production of Low-temperature Coke by the Disco Process
By C. E. Lesher
Low-TEMPERATURE carbonization needs no introduction to the literature on coal. This paper will attempt no review of that literature; it tells the story of the commercial development of one of the proc
Jan 1, 1940
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Production Of Magnesium At Painesville, Ohio
By R. F. Evans, J. M. Avery
MUCH has been written of the glamour of magnesium from sea water, the Aladdin-like creation of a huge magnesium plant in the Nevada desert using cheap hydroelectric power from Boulder Dam; the marvels
Jan 1, 1945
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Production Of Magnesium By The Carbothermic Process At Permanente
By T. A. Dungan
THE thermal processes for the production of metallic magnesium can be divided into two general classifications, the direct reduction of magnesia with carbon and the indirect reduction of compounds of
Jan 1, 1944
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Production of Magnetic Superconcentrates by Cationic Flotation (073b35a3-4c0b-44a1-8f54-a03cb013f518)
By R. B. Tippin
Laboratory and pilot plant studies showed that supergrade iron ore concentrates (containing less than 2% SiO2) can be made from standard grade magnetic iron ore products by cationic silica flotation.
Jan 1, 1973
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Production of Pellets at CVRD, Brazil
By Roberto Pimentel de Souza, Helder Zenóbio
VRD started producing pellets in 1969 with one 2-million-t straight grate plant. In the beginning of April 1973, the second unit came on stream with an additional capacity of 3 million t/a of pellets
Jan 1, 1981
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Production of Pig Iron in the Electric Furnace
By Charles Hart
THE art of electric smelting came with the turn of the present century and owes its existence to the introduction of alter-nating current, which found its first wide use in the establishment of the gr
Jan 1, 1940
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Production of Self-Fluxing Pellets in the Laboratory and Pilot Plant
By K. E. Merklin, F. D. DeVaney
Students of the modern blast furnace seem unanimously agreed that they are observing a major revolution in practice. Rather than changing construction and operation of the furnaces, most of the great
Jan 3, 1960
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Production Of Sound Billet-Type Ingots
By B. C. Blake
IN general, billet-type or long slender ingots are used when it is desired to produce directly from the ingot in one conversion a product of medium or small cross-sectional area. They are designed to
Jan 1, 1947
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Production of Super- Grade Iron Ore Concentrates at LKAB
By Per-Martin Sandgren, Alrik Anttila
LKAB's ores have specific mineralogical properties that make them especially suitable for the production of supergrade concentrates. Conditions are particularly good for this purpose at Malmberge
Jan 1, 1983
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Production of Synthetic Gypsum and its Uses in Japan
By T. Kusakawa
In Japan, natural gypsum is rarely mined for industrial use and almost all gypsum is synthetic, that is desulphogypsum, produced from waste sulphur dioxide gas from metal smelters and power plants and
Jan 1, 1984