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Difficulties Met in Differential FlotationBy Carl Lemke
SOME of the principal metallurgical difficulties en-countered in the differential flotation of lead-zinc-iron sulfide ores arise from the following causes: The oxidized, or partly-oxidized, condition
Jan 4, 1927
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Scranton Paper - The Geologic Relations of the Nanticoke DisasterBy Charles A. Ashburner
One of the most unexpected and unusual mining disasters which have ever been recorded in the Pennsylvania anthracite region, or, in fact, in any coal-mining district, occurred in the northern anthraci
Jan 1, 1887
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Iron and Steel Division - Incomplete Mixing in the Deoxidation of Steel (TN)By John Chipman
DESPITE the rapidity of chemical reactions at steelmaking temperatures, deoxidation reactions cannot be expected to reach equilibrium immediately after addition of a deoxidizing agent. A considera
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - Observations on the Ductility and Fracture of Recrystallized Chromium (TN)By Harry A. Lipsitt, Rollins E. Hook, Attwell M. Adair
A necessary condition for a uniaxial stress distribution in compression testing is that the specimen end surfaces make full contact with the apparatus compression plates. In addition all compression
Jan 1, 1962
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St. Louis Paper - Efficiency in Use of Oil as Fuel (with Discussion)By W. N. Best
This paper is not intended as a scientific discussion of the combustion of oil but is written from the standpoint of an operator who has the experience and qualifications necessary to guide others in
Jan 1, 1921
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - An Evaluation of Quenching Oils by Means of the End Quench Test (Metals Tech., April 1948, T.P. 2353) (with discussion)By G. Sandoz, C. A. Siebert
Oil quenching of steel, in good commercial practice, is carried out using a great deal of agitation in the quenching bath. Many of the tests reported in the literature represent the results obtained o
Jan 1, 1949
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Lamellar And Mosaic Structures - X-Ray And Thermodynamic EvidenceBy Helmut Thielsch
DURING the last three decades a great many arguments have been presented on the subject of "mosaic" or "block" structures of metals. Apparently because of insufficient evidence, the "block-structure"
Jan 1, 1945
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Part III - Papers - The Electro-Optic Effect in LiNbO3 and KTNBy P. C. Claspy, P. H. Smakula
The electro-optic coefficients of LiNbO, and KTao.,5Nboe3,O3 (KTN) have been experimentally determined at the HeNe laser wavelengths of 0.6328, 1.15, and 3.39 µ. The coefficients were calculated fronz
Jan 1, 1968
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Anelastic Measurements on the Alloy Cu3AuBy A. S. Nowick, W. A. Goering
INspite of considerable interest in the kinetics of ordering of the alloy Cu3Au there is no direct information available on the activation energy for atom movements in this alloy, such as that obtaina
Jan 1, 1959
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New York Paper - Good Ideas in the Mining Laws of British Columbia and Mexico (with Discussion)By F. L. Sizer
The mining regulations of British Columbia and Mexico present some features which might well be copied in the United States, if we are to have a complete revision of the laws governing mining titles.
Jan 1, 1915
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Slag Control By Introduction Of Flux Through Blast-Furnace TuyeresBy Carl G. Hogberg
DURING recent months, the acute shortage of steel scrap has necessitated the use of higher percentages of hot metal in the open-hearth charge. With these higher percentages, the sulphur content of hot
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division - Observations on the Thermal Etching of Silicon IronBy D. S. Hutton, W. C. Leslie
Thermal etch patterns developed on poly crystalline 3.5 pct Si-Fe by heating in hydrogen or in argon have been examined. The most prominent feature of the etching is the development of striations on g
Jan 1, 1961
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Utilization Problems of Metallurgical Limestone and Dolomite (c96c8831-1fa7-49a5-858d-ec250df94217)By Oliver Bowles
WHILE vast quantities of limestone and dolomite are used in metallurgy, the estimated production in 1926 being 23,860,000 tons, there are many problems connected with their use which have not received
Jan 1, 1928
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Notes on Blast-Furnace Operation with a Turbo BlowerBy S. G. Valentine
BLAST-FURNACE blowing engines are broadly of two main types: either steam- or gas-driven reciprocating engines, or turbine-driven rotary engines. Some results of experience with a furnace blown by an
Jan 2, 1914
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Chicago Paper - Sulfur in Coal, Geological AspectsBy Geo. H. Ashley
The following paper is intended to be suggestive only, and to open the way for discussion and further observation. Its preparation was requested only two days before the time limit set for the submiss
Jan 1, 1920
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Practice Of Omaha District, Corps Of Engineers, War Department, In Recovering Cores Between Two And Ten Inches In DiameterBy John H. Melvin
THE Omaha District, Corps of Engineers, has been doing subsurface exploration work for a number of years, both by contract and with its own forces. Certain practices and procedures concerning the reco
Jan 1, 1947
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Biographical Notice of James DouglasBy Rossiter W. Raymond
It is scarcely necessary to augment or amend the "Appreciation" of Dr. Douglas, from the pen of Dr. Albert A. Ledoux, which appeared in January, 1916, in Bulletin No. 109 of the Institute. The author
Jan 1, 1919
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Biographical NoticesHARRY B. BARREN Harry B. Barren, born in Cleveland, Ohio, May 31, 1888, died in Indiana Harbor, Ind., on Mar. 18, 1918. After graduating from the Case School of. Applied Science of Cleveland, class o
Jan 3, 1919
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New York Paper - Experiments with Sherardizing (with Discussion)By Leon McCulloch
WIIen clean iron and metallic zinc dust, protected from the air, arc heated below the melting point of zinc, the iron takes on a coating that has excellent protective value. This coating is a brittle
Jan 1, 1923
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Northern and Central Pennsylvania during 1941By Arthur C. Simmons
The State of Pennsylvania produces approximately 60 per cent of the total production of Pennsylvania Grade oil, and naturally represents the dominant factor in the area producing that grade. The produ
Jan 1, 1942