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Papers - Fractional Vacuum-fusion Analysis for Determination of Oxygen in Steel (With Discussion)By M. A. Scheil, S. L. Hoyt
About three years ago eight standard steels were prepared for the cooperative investigation of methods for oxygen analysis, sponsored by the Iron and Steel Division of the American Institute of Mining
Jan 1, 1937
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Pelletizing Of Various Iron Ore Concentrates And Natural Ores As Practiced By The Cleveland-Cliffs Iron CompanyBy Roy A. Koski
INTRODUCTION Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company, and its subsidiary companies, operate and manage mining, beneficiation, and pelletizing operations in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, the province of O
Jan 1, 1977
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - The Temperature Dependence of Flow and Fracture in Coated Zinc Single CrystalsBy L. C. Weiner
For zinc single crystals, xo = 3o, a surface coating raises both the cleavage and yield strengths over a large temperature range. The "brittle temperature," associated with slip after completion of tw
Jan 1, 1959
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New York Paper - The Condition and Action of Carbon in Iron and Steel (Discussion, p. 979)By Herbert E. Field
The study of the condition and action of carbon in iron and steel is singularly complicated, because one has to consider, also, many contemporaileous reactions foreign to the one under investigation.
Jan 1, 1904
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Solving Industrial Mineral Flotation Problems at the Mines Branch, Ottawa, Canada (77c27e84-0fba-4df1-a33a-72d4da47aa13)By R. A. Wyman
The overall approach to nonmetallic mineral flotation practiced in the laboratories of the Mines Branch, Ottawa, Canada, is outlined. The use of floatability tests to indicate possible areas of select
Jan 1, 1972
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Part IV – April 1969 - Communications - Creep of Powder Metallurgy Rhenium at 0.43 to 0.72TmBy Peter L. Raffo, Walter R. Witzke
RHENIUM has a melting point of 5750°F, the second highest value among the metals.1 Its refractory nature should thus make it a useful material at high temperatures. The only available data on the hig
Jan 1, 1970
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Oxidation Of Ferrous Ions In Mine Drainage By Iron-Oxidizing BacteriaBy Eizo Yabuuchi, Yukito Imanaga
INTRODUCTION In treatment of mine drainage, it is well known that the neutralization by calcium carbonate is far better than by slaked lime because of cheaper cost and better precipitability of it
Jan 1, 1976
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New York September, 1890 Paper - Latest Developments in Compressed-Air Motors for TramwaysBy D. S. Jacobus
COMPRESSED-air motors are specially desirable, if economically practicable, for underground haulage, because they require no fuel, involve no danger of fire, and not only avoid heating and fouling the
Jan 1, 1891
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Technical Uncertainties In Mined Geologic Disposal Of Radioactive WastesBy Paul F. Gnirk
INTRODUCTION The notion of permanent disposal of high-level radioactive waste in natural salt formations was formally proposed in 1957 by the Committee on Waste Disposal of the National Academy of
Jan 1, 1983
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Stripping Overburden With Nuclear ExplosivesBy Paul L. Russell
Of the potential applications of nuclear explosives to mining, excavation is perhaps the most obvious and the best understood, and probably the most practical for use in the near future. Large quantit
Jan 6, 1964
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Observing Formation of Martensite in Certain Alloy Steels at Low TemperaturesBy O. A. Knight
THE suppression of the austenite-martensite transformation that can be brought about by the addition of certain alloying elements, such as manganese or nickel, to plain carbon steel has been known for
Jan 1, 1934
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Institute of Metals Division - Isothermal Transformation Characteristics of an Iron-Chromium Alloy of Titanium (With Discussion)By C. W. Phillips, D. N. Frey
A commercial Ti-Fe-Cr alloy, Ti-150, exhibits a martensitic transformation on cooling and two nucleation and growth reactions, one above and one below the Mg-Mf region, on isothermal holding below the
Jan 1, 1953
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Geophysics - Scandinavian Electromagnetic ProspectingBy F. C. Frischknecht
Most early development and application of electromagnetic prospecting methods took place in Scandinavia, where geological conditions favor their use. In other parts of the world these methods have aro
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Sigma-Phase in Certain Ternary Systems With VanadiumBy Joseph B. Darby, Paul A. Beck
IN isothermal sections of several ternary systems, the a-phase was found1 to extend in the form of a relatively narrow elongated field, connecting the U-phases that are present in the adjoini
Jan 1, 1958
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Production of Malleable Zirconium on a Pilot-Plant ScaleBy W. W. Stephens, W. J. Kroll, H. P. Holmes
THE only two methods for producing commercial quantities of malleable zirconium, up to now, have been using magnesium reduction of the anhydrous chloride under a neutral gas, and using purification of
Jan 1, 1951
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Institute of Metals Division - Crack Nucleation and Growth in High Strain-Low Cycle FatigueBy A. J. McEvily, R. C. Boettner, C. Laird
The processes leading to fatigue failure in the low-cycle range were studied to obtain an understanding of the basis of Coffin's law. Particular attention was paid to the manner of mack nucleatio
Jan 1, 1965
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Scranton Paper - Mining Developments on the North-western Pacific Coast and their Wider BearingBy Amos Bowman
In the last two years I have had an opportunity to study the conditions of gold-mining in the far northwest of the Pacific coast —in Cariboo district, British Columbia. That country joins Alaska
Jan 1, 1887
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Boston Paper General - Geophysics and the Mining EngineerBy Allen H. Rogers
It has always seemed to me that there is a certain similarity between the work of the mining engineer and that of the doctor of medicine — each has very often to be governed in his actions by conditio
Jan 1, 1929
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A New Reagent For Liquid Ion Exchange Recovery Of CopperBy J. E. House, J. L. Drobnick, R. R. Swanson, D. W. Agers
Since the commercial acceptance of the liquid ion exchange process in the mineral processing industry, it has been predicted that eventually the hydrometallurgist would have a wide selection of commer
Jan 12, 1965
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Part XII – December 1968 – Papers - The Effect of Alloying Elements on the Solubility of Nitrogen in Liquid Iron-Chromium-Nickel AlloysBy R. D. Pehlke, W. M. Small
The effect of added alloying elements on the solubility of nitrogen in a liquid alloy of 74 wt pct Fe. 18 wt pct Cr, and 8 wt pct Ni has been studied. At 1600°C and 1 atm nitrogen pressure, aluminum,
Jan 1, 1969