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Iron and Steel Division - Effect of Rare-Earth Additions on Some Stainless Steel Melting VariablesBy R. H. Gautschi, F. C. Langenberg
Rare-earth additions were made to laboratory heats of Type 310 stainless to observe their effect on as-cast ingot structure, nitrogen and sulfur contents, and nonmetallic inclusions. Lanthanum had a
Jan 1, 1961
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Western Pennsylvania: 1832-1885; Mining MethodsIt is always the case with heavy and cheap materials that the area within which they can be economically used depends upon the cost of transportation, and in those days of poor roads and no mechanical
Jan 1, 1942
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Geophysical Exploration Moves Ahead On Two PlanetsBy Robert E. Campbell
Mining geophysics in 1969 marked a year of growth and consolidation in the application of ground and airborne geophysical methods and techniques with a 20% rise in expenditures for world-wide explorat
Jan 1, 1970
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Part IX - Communications - Proportional-Limit Stress of Tungsten Single CrystalsBy M. Garfinkle
LITERATURE data1'3 have suggested that the resolved shear stress necessary to initiate slip in a particular slip system in tungsten single crystals is strongly dependent on the tensile orientatio
Jan 1, 1967
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Iron and Steel Division - Desulphurization of Pig Iron with Pulverized LimeBy Ottar Dragge, C. Danielsson, Bo Kalling
THE desulphurizing of pig iron has been accomplished with a number of different additions. The oldest and still most commonly used agent is soda, the extensive use of which commenced about 1925, when
Jan 1, 1952
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Gas Transportation - Design of High-pressure Gas Pipe LinesBy Ralph E. Davis, Lyon F. Terry
The rapid expansion of the natural gas industry in this country during the past three or four years has necessitated the construction of a number of long and comparatively large diameter high-pressure
Jan 1, 1929
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Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - A Modern Plant for the Precipitation of Gold from Chlorine Solution by Sulphurous Acid and Hydrogen SulphideBy Werner Langguth
The modern process and plant for the precipitation of gold from chlorine solutions, by sulphurous acid gas and hydrogen sulphide, differ materially from the older methods of precipitating with sulphat
Jan 1, 1893
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Oil Exploration Offshore ChinaBy Anthony G. Reid
INTRODUCTION At the time of the death of Mao Tse-tung in 1976, China was a major oil producing country with a daily oil flow in the order of 1.735 million barrels. This position had been achieved w
Jan 1, 1982
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A Hapid Polarographic Method For The Determination Of Copper, Zinc, And Lead In Flotation TailingsBy G. A. Crowe, W. T. Bishop
WHILE the literature in the United States on general polarographic technique is extensive, very little appears to be directly applicable to the analysis of flotation tailings. For this reason, it seem
Jan 1, 1946
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Use Of The Coercimeter In Grinding Tests (3dcb5edf-aafb-4682-9468-0136918dd293)By Will H. Coghill, Fred D. DeVaney
THE coercimeter, as its name implies, is an instrument for measuring the coercive force[+] of magnetic substances. It was developed by Davis and Hartenheim in the Special Studies Section, Metallurgica
Jan 1, 1938
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Part VIII – August 1969 – Papers - On Spherical Phase Growth in Multicomponent SystemsBy J. Szekely, G. P. Martins
A formulation is given and a general analytical solution is presented for the problem of spherical phase growth in multicomponent systems. The results are valid for describing the rate of bubble growt
Jan 1, 1970
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Oil Resources Of PeruBy V. F. Marsters
Peru has produced petroleum since the early seventies, the first work being in the Zorritos field, in the Province of Tumbes, adjoining Ecuador. In the early nineties, the Negritos field, in the Depa
Jan 7, 1922
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Effects Of Tin On The Properties Of Plain Carbon SteelBy J. W. Halley
THE effects of tin on steel have become increasingly important because of the necessity of using poorly detinned scrap, tin cans, and terne plate, in the open hearth. Since a tin can contains about 1.
Jan 1, 1942
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Institute of Metals Division - Observations on Twinning in Zone-Refined TungstenBy H. B. Probst
Mechanical twins were produced in zone-refined tungsten single crystals by explosive working at room temperature. These twins are parallel to (112) planes and have irregular boundaries rather than the
Jan 1, 1962
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Concentration - Calculations - A Short-cut Method of Metallurgical Accounting (Mining Tech., July 1947, TP 2193)By E. H. Crabtree, Neil S. Parker
The custom milling plant of the Eagle-Picher Mining and Smelting Co. is at Sahuarita, Arizona, approximately 20 miles south of Tucson. It is connected by a 2-mile railroad spur to the main line of the
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - Phase Diagram and Thermodynamic Properties of the Yttrium-Zinc SystemBy K. J. Gill, P. Chiotti, J. T. Mason
Thermal, metallographic, and vapor pressure data were obtained to establish the pkase boundaries and the standard free energy, enthalpy, and entropy of formation for the compounds in the Y-Zn system.
Jan 1, 1963
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Part V – May 1968 - Papers - The Densities of Some Liquid Lead-Antimony and Lead-Antimony-Tin AlloysBy A. F. Crawley
The densities of some liquid Pb-Sb alloys up to 11 wt pct Sb and Pb-Sb-& alloys up to 10 pct Sb/10 pct Sh have been determined by a pycnometric technique over a temperature range of about 130°C above
Jan 1, 1969
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Producing-Equipment, Methods and Materials - A New Jet Perforating Charge Eliminates Carrot PluggingBy R. L. Robinson, P. DeFrank, R. F. Hatfield
Production equal to or greater than open-hole completions is possible through perforated completions if the flow paths throughout the perforations are free of obstructions.' Previous investigatio
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Mining Methods Of The American Zinc Co. Of TennesseeBy H. A. Coy
THE Mascot mines of the American Zinc Co. of Tennessee are situated in the Holston River valley, in Knox County, Tennessee, about 13 miles (20.9 km.) east of the city of Knoxville, and form a property
Jan 9, 1917
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep-Rupture Characteristics of Al-Mg Solid-Solution AlloysBy N. J. Grant, A. W. Mullendore
Three aluminum alloys of 0.94, 1.92, and 5.10 pct Mg, prepared from very high purity metals, were tested at 500°, 700°, and 900°F in creep rupture. The degree of strengthening through solid-solu-tion
Jan 1, 1955