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Institute of Metals Division - A Contribution to the Constitution of the Titanium-Zirconium-Hydrogen SystemBy N. Pessall, A. D. McQuillan
The phase relalionsllips in an isothernzal section of the Ti-Zr-H system at 750°Chave been investigated by measurement of hydrogen equilibrium pressures. The resulting diagram indicates that the hydri
Jan 1, 1962
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Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Effect of Proximity of Permeable and Impermeable Lenses on Well PerformanceBy E. P. Miesch, P. B. Crawford
A study was made of the effect of permeable and impermeable lenses in a reservoir on the production capacity of a well. Both steady-state and unsteady-state data were obtained. An electrical resistivi
Jan 1, 1965
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Industrial Minerals - Occurrence and Exploration of Barite Deposits at Cartersville, GeorgiaBy Thomas L. Kesler
Essentially all of the barite produced in Georgia has come from the Carters-ville district in the northwest part of the state. The earliest recorded shipment of ore, 60 tons, was made in 1894.' W
Jan 1, 1950
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Logging - The Guard Electrode Logging SystemBy Walton J. Greer, System By John E. Owen
The guard electrode system measures the resistivity of formations by employing a thin disk of current which is caused to flow perpendicular to the bore hole. The control of this current disk is obtain
Jan 1, 1951
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Logging - The Guard Electrode Logging SystemBy System By John E. Owen, Walton J. Greer
The guard electrode system measures the resistivity of formations by employing a thin disk of current which is caused to flow perpendicular to the bore hole. The control of this current disk is obtain
Jan 1, 1951
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Internal Friction and Young's Modulus of Hexagonal and Cubic CobaltBy E. H. Greener, M. E. Fine
The internal friction (1/Q) of cobalt Fig. 1 (measured by an electrostatic dynamic method1) near 250°C begins to increase rapidly on heating and continues to increase until 560°C, the highest tem- per
Jan 1, 1959
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Discussion of Mr. Sperry's paper on Nickel and Nickel-Steel (see p. 51)John Birkinbine, Philadelphia, Pa.: Mr. Sperry's paper is certainly a valuable addition to the literature upon alloys with iron, supplementing the data already published concerning the influence
Jan 1, 1896
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Tramming Ore---Shaft to Surface Railroad Bins"The method of conveying ore from the ore-pocket at the shaft collar to the railroad ore bins, whence it is transported to the reduction works, is by cars with electric haulage.The cut shows the car c
Jan 1, 1913
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Asphalts and Related Bitumens (5748dc37-be87-4142-836b-16603bcbde30)"The largest variety of asphalt and related bitumen deposits in this country is found in Utah. Utah is one of the few places in the world where the hydrocarbon minerals, gilsonite or uintaite, wurtzil
Jan 1, 1925
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Copper Precipitation from Mine Water"Copper was first made in Butte by the use of iron for its precipitation from mine water in 1890. In consequence of a fire breaking out in the St. Lawrence mine of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company i
Jan 1, 1913
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Carroll A. Garner, Director, A.I.M.EBy AIME AIME
Few men in the coal-mining industry have had experience in metal mining as well, as has Carroll A. Garner. He went to the Arizona copper country immediately after graduating from Penn State in mining
Jan 1, 1942
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Institute of Metals Division - Intergranular Parting of Brass during AnnealsBy F. H. Wilson, E. W. Palmer
Brass mills are familiar with a recurring problem which reveals itself during deformation of annealed metal as an opening up of cracks which are suggestive of a grain boundary pattern. A typical examp
Jan 1, 1950
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Effect of High Copper Content on the Operation of a Lead Blast Furnace, and Treatment of the Copper and Lead Produced - DiscussionBy A. A. Collins
H. R. BIANCO*—I should like to ask Mr. Collins if that statement he made about the addition of drosses to the blast furnace slowing down the blast furnace is a result of his own experience or a result
Jan 1, 1950
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Institute of Metals Division - Kinetics and Mechanism of the Oxidation of MolybdenumBy A. Spilners, M. Simnad
The rates of formation of the different oxides on molybdenum in pure oxygen at 1 atm pressure have been determined in the temperature range 500° to 770°C. The rate of vaporization of MOO, is linear wi
Jan 1, 1956
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Symposia - Symposium on Recent Developments in Dilatometric Analysis - Contents and IntroductionA High-speed Dilatometer and the Transformational Behavior of Six Steels in Cooling. By Arthur L. Christenson, Edward C. Nelson and Clarence E. Jackson. (With discussion).........................
Jan 1, 1945
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Colorado State Geological SurveyColorado Geological Survey, Boulder, Colo. R D George, State Geologist. The following publications of the Survey may be obtained as long as the supply lasts, at the indicated price. Bulletin 3, Geo
Jan 1, 1933
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A Chemical Explanation of the Effect of Oxygen in Strengthening Cast IronBy Henry M. Howe
HENRY M. Howe, Bedford Hills, N. Y. (communication to the Secretary.) +-Mr. Johnson's explanation, that the rounding of the graphite masses in oxygen-bearing cast iron is clue to their being in p
Jan 1, 1917
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Agglomeration Of Flue Dust By; The Chloride Of Magnesium Method At The Works Of The Société John Cockerill, Seraing, Belgium.By Emile Hiertz
THE first press was installed in June, 1910, and the second in March,1911. They produce 1,000 briquettes per hour, weighing 5 kg. (11.05 1b.) each, under a pressure of about 400 kg. per square centim
Jan 12, 1913
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Cincinnati Paper - Note on the Presence of Lithia in Ohio Fire-claysBy N. W. Lord
Having recently had occasion to make a series of analyses of fire-clays for the present Ohio Geological Survey, I found that the amounts of potash and soda determined indirectly by measuring the chlor
Jan 1, 1884
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Spokane Engineering And Technical AssociationFrom L. K. Armstrong, Secretary of the Columbia Section of the Institute, we have received information as to the activities and plan of the Spokane Engineering and Technical Association, which was rec
Jan 11, 1918