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  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - New Type of Blast-Furnace Construction

    By J. E. Johnson

    The general construction of blast-furnaces has undergone no radical change in more than a generation. When the old style of masonry construction was replaced by the steel shell, the masonry piers were

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Note on the Case-Hardening of Special Steels (with Discussion)

    By G. A. Reinhardt, Albert Sauveur

    Although many metallurgists know that some pearlitic special steels can be made troostitic, martensitic, and even austenitic, without quenching, and, therefore, without exposing them to the dangers of

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Notes on Bag-Filtration Plants

    By A. Eilers

    The use of the bag-house for filtering out fumes produced in certain metallurgical operations is not new in America. There are no patents in force at this time, to my knowledge, which might hinder suc

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Notes on Ruff’s Carbon-Iron Equilibrium Diagram (with Discussion)

    By Henry M. Rowe

    Professor Ruff's most illuminating paper' describing his extremely valuable investigation of the carbon-iron equilibrium diagram assigns definite temperatures to certain very important lines

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Notes on Titatnium and on the Cleansing Effect of Titanium on Cast-Iron (with Discussion)

    By Bradley Stoughton

    [Secretary's Note.—TO avoid repetition of foot-notes, references to authorities are made in this paper by means of figures, referring to a numbered list in the appendix.—J. S. 1 Introduction.

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - On the Compression of Gases

    By Charles F. Brush

    The compression of gases to a very high degree, for purposes of scientific research, has long presented serious difficulties to the physicist. Great advances have been made of late years in the con

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Our National Resources and Our Federal Government (with Discussion)

    By R. W. Raymond

    Under the names of Conservation, Social Justice, the New Nationalism, and Progressive Democracy, many earnest reformers are calling for a new system of Federal government to replace the one which they

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Present Conditions of Mining in the District of Vladivostok, Siberia

    By Albert F. J. Bordeaux

    The immediate vicinity of the sea-shore, affording special facility for the exportation of ores, makes it possible to work certain mines in the Vladivostok district, which, in more remote places of Si

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Sampling Ores without Use of Machinery

    By William Glenn

    The taking of proper samples of crude ores seems to he less thoroughly understood, or less carefully practiced, than its impor tance requires. We all know how often we encounter the reports of very ac

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Solid Solutions

    By Walter Rosenhain

    In selecting solid solutions for the subject of this lecture I have been guided by several considerations. The bodies known under that somewhat paradoxical name play a most important part in all types

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - Solid Solutions

    By Walter Rosenhain

    In selecting solid solutions for the subject of this lecture I have been guided by several considerations. The bodies known under that somewhat paradoxical name play a most important part in all types

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Alluvial Tin-Deposits of Siak, Sumatra

    By Charles M. Rolker

    The main tin-producing regions of the world are known to be England, Australia and the Dutch East Indian possessions, chiefly Banca and Billiton. During recent years, the tin of the Malay Peninsula, e

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Alundum Extraction-Thimble Used in the Determination of Copper

    By L. W. Bahney

    The photograph, Fig. 1, shows the apparatus a little less than half size, consisting of a filtering-flask fitted with rubber stopper through which passes a bent glass tube, and an extraction-thimble f

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Concentration of Iron-Ores (with Discussion)

    By N. V. Hansell

    The preparation of low-grade iron-ores by concentration, whether or not followed by an agglomeration of the concentrate, has in the United States only recently been recognized as a metallurgical proce

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Constitution and Melting-Points of a Series of Copper-Slags

    By Charles H. Fulton

    There are comparatively few accurate data on the melting-or the freezing-point temperature of metallurgical slags, or on related physical phenomena, such as fluidity near the melting-point, specific h

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Effect of High Carbon on the Quality of Charcoal-Iron (with Discussion)

    By J. E. Johnson

    Charcoal-iron is quantitively so unimportant compared with coke-iron, that its qualitative importance for many industrial purposes is entirely unkriown to many coke-furnace-men, and to the great major

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The First Iron Blast-Furnaces in America

    By W. H. Adams

    Shortly after becoming one of the van-guard of mine-developers in the State of Virginia, during the year 1883, I called the attention of the Institute to certain deposits of pyrites, which have been l

    Jan 1, 1892

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Influence of Divorcing Appealing on the Mechanical Properties of Low-Carbon Steel

    By Arthur G. Levy, Henry M. How

    The purpose of the investigation on which this paper is based is to determine whether the structural change which occurs in the slow cooling of steel below the transformation range has an important ef

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Mass Copper of Lake Superior Mines and the Method of Mining it

    By William P. Blake

    The occurrence of enormous masses of pure copper has given the mining district of Lake Superior worldwide reputation. The first masses brought from there excited great attention, and directed the noti