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  • AIME
    New York Paper - Blast-furnace Flue Dust (with Discussion)

    By R. W. H. Acherson

    Blast-furnace flue dust is one of the most troublesome operating factors in the iron and steel industry. It is usually involved in all the unpleasant phases of blast-furnace operations. It adds to our

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - The Determination of Phosphorus

    By Josef Westesson

    No question in the metallurgical chemistry of the present day seems to be so difficult to agree upon as the determination of phosphorus in iron and steel. To my knowledge, there are at present at leas

    Jan 1, 1885

  • AIME
    How Stepwise Financing Can Your Prospect into an Operating Mine

    By Robert M. McGeorge, Edward S. Frohling

    Most mining engineers and metallurgists who get out of school usually wind up working for a large or medium-sized company and are seldom heard of again. The enterprising few who decide to go into busi

    Jan 9, 1975

  • AIME
    Proration in Texas in 1931

    By David Donoghue

    EFFORTS made in the year 1930 and in previous years restricted pro-duction in most of the fields of Texas to a point that was satisfactory, at the beginning of 1931, to the majority of producers and b

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Milwaukee Meeting, October 8 To 11, 1918

    A special meeting of the Institute, at which the Institute of Metals Division will join with those members who are most interested in iron and steel, and in coal and coke, will be held in Milwaukee, W

    Jan 9, 1918

  • AIME
    Drilling Fluids and Cement - A Ten-Pound Cement Slurry for Oil Wells

    By Roscoe C. Clark, Henry F. Coffer, J. J. Reynolds

    A cement slurry lightweight additive has been adapted in the Conoco laboratories for use in oil well cements. This additive makes possible the use of air to lighten oil well cement slurries. Specifica

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Milwaukee Paper - Symposium on the Conservation of Tin

    Page Bronze Bearing Metals. By G. H. Clamer............... 162 Pennsylvania Railroad Anti-friction and Bell Metals. By F. M. Waring .. 166 The Tin-plate Industry. By D. M. BUck. Discussed by G. H. C

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Approximate Calculation of the Change in Solubility of Nitrogen in Molten Iron Alloys as a Function of Temperature

    By E. C. Nelson

    An equation is derived for calculating approximately the solubility of nitrogen in an alloy steel over a temperature range from 1200" to 1900°C using data on the effects of alloys on the activity coef

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Treating Antimony Ores

    By George P. Hulst

    Prior to 1914, there was little demand for antimony in this country; its use was limited almost entirely to the manufacture of type and bearing metals. Practically no antimony ore was mined here, the

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Papers - Smelting - Reverberatory Smelting Practice - History of Reverberatory Smelting in Montana, 1879-1933

    By Frederick Laist

    This paper is a review of Montana reverberatory smelting practice covering a period of approximately fifty years, during which time the small furnaces that had been in use elsewhere for a century or m

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Experiments with Slime-coatings in Flotation (Mining Technology, Nov. 1941)

    By S. G. Bankoff

    Ince1 proposed that electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged particles was responsible for slime-coating. Del Giudice2 postulated the metathetic formation of a cementing compound. Wark3 sug

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Martensite Habit Plane in Quenched Ti-Mn Alloys

    By Y. C. Liu, H. Margolin

    Investigation of martensite habit plane in water-quenched Ti-Mn alloys was carried out in the range of manganese contents between 4.35 and 5.25 pct. On the basis of 22 measurements, the poles were obs

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Grain Growth in Alpha Brass- Discussion

    F. G. SMITH.-Probably someone will ask whether I discovered why the bottoms of the large shells broke out. I did not, as a result of this investigation. An experiment was made along the lines indicat

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    Absorption Of Sulfur From Producer Gas In Open-Hearth Furnaces

    By J. H. Nead

    The subject of this paper is one to which there are many references in the literature but on which few actual data have been published. Such data are here presented showing the absorption of sulfur fr

    Jan 2, 1924

  • AIME
    Papers - Combustion and Research - Angle of Polarization as an Index of Coal Rank (T. P. 791, with discussion)

    By T. T. Quirke, L. C. McCabe

    The object of the present investigation was to discover a physical basis for rank differentiation of coals, particularly the coals of the Illinois basin. Vitrainl was selected as the most appropriate

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Search for the Causes of Injury to Vegetation in au Urban Villa Near a Large Industrial Establishment

    By Persifor Frazer

    For various reasons I have not specified the locality where the research indicated in the following pages was undertaken. It will suffice to say that it was on the grounds of a villa once remote from,

    Jan 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Ground Water Control In Underground Mining

    By R. C. Mahon

    THE importance of ground water control in glacial drift overlying mines is widely recognized. Adequate handling of the problem results in consider- able saving in overall pumping costs, as the cost of

    Jan 6, 1954

  • AIME
  • AIME
    The Possible Occurrence of Oil and Gas Fields in Washington (f4e9b7a1-1409-48f5-a506-69ad05490e58)

    By Charles E. Weaver

    Discussion of the paper of CHARLES E. WEAVER, presented at the San Francisco meeting, September, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 103, July, 1915, pp. 1419 to 1427. MILNOR ROBERT, Seattle, Wash.-A y

    Jan 12, 1915