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Part III – March 1968 - Papers - Epitaxial Growth of GaSb from the Liquid PhaseBy James W. Burns
Thin, heavily doped n-type layers of GaSb have been grown on p-type GaSb substrates. Techniques have been developed for the growth of the n-type layers from a tellurium-doped gallium-rich solution.
Jan 1, 1969
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Papers - Use of Pulverized Coal as Fuel for Open-hearth Furnaces Melting Steel for Castings (T.P. 1119, with discussion)By Joseph P. Kittredge
At the time this matter first came up in 1912, the National Malleable and Steel Castings Co. had seven basic-bottom open-hearth furnaces in its plant at Sharon, Fa., using fuel oil, then costing about
Jan 1, 1940
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General - Forming Properties of Thin Sheets of Some Nonferrous Metals (With Discussion)By C. R. Fischrupp, M. D. Helfrick, W. A. Straw
In the manufacture of telephone apparatus a number of nonferrous sheet metals arc blanked and formed to produce a wide variety of parts, which are generally small in size because of space and weight r
Jan 1, 1931
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Process Of Thermal Spalling Behavior In Rocks-An Exploratory StudyBy K. Thirumalai
Although the term "spalling" has long been known, Norton l first referred to its usage for the fracture or disintegration of materials subjected to rapid temperature changes. Spalling of ceramic mater
Jan 1, 1970
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New York Paper - Contribution to the Study of the Pre-Cambrian Rocks of the Harney Peak District of South DakotaBy Gordon S. Duncan
The U. S. Geological Survey, I believe, has almost completed a study of the Harney Peak quadrangle, preliminary to the publication of a report on that district. As I was engaged for some months on an
Jan 1, 1913
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Salt Lake Paper - Effects of the Bag House on the Metallurgy of LeadBy L. Douglass Anderson
For some years past the annual reviews of the metallurgy of lead have almost uniformly stated that there have been no great changes, such as there were being more particularly noticeable in the refine
Jan 1, 1915
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Papers - The Teziutlan Copper-zinc Deposit, Teziutlan, Puebla. Mexico (T.P. 858)By H. E. Lee, A. W. Edelen
The Teziutlan copper-zinc deposit is supposed to be of late Cambrian or early Paleozoic age. The country rocks are a series of schists or phyllites, flat lying and in the form of a plunging anticline.
Jan 1, 1941
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Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1956 - Structural and Stratigraphic Control of Ore Deposition in the West Shasta Copper-Zinc District, CaliforniaBy A. R. Kinkel
Robert T. Walker and Woodville J. Walker (Walker Engineering Corp., Salt Lake City)—Mr. Kinkel's article embodies, in condensed form, the results of the first detailed and complete geological sur
Jan 1, 1957
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New York Paper - Fire-Clay Deposits of CanadaBy Heinrich Ries
With the rapid development of Canadian industries calling for the use of fire-brick for the lining of furnaces or cement-kilns, for constructing brick-kilns or coke-ovens, for lead-furnaces, etc., the
Jan 1, 1914
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New York Paper - Safeguarding the Use of Electricity in Mines (with Discussion)By H. W. Clark
Electricity must be safeguarded everywhere that it is used. The conditions that exist underground make the use of safeguards more essential there than almost anywhere else. Electric Shock Electr
Jan 1, 1915
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Computer Control Of Grinding CircuitsBy K. C. Carriere
INTRODUCTION The purpose of this section is to introduce the reader to the concepts of computer control of grinding circuits, and to flag some of the opportunities to be encountered, but without be
Jan 1, 1982
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Applications of the Hot Springs or Fumarolic Model in Prospecting for Lode Gold Deposits (MINING ENGINEERING JANUARY 1980 )By P. E. Chapman, J. E. Worthington, I. T. Kiff
Increases in the price of gold starting about six years ago, and rapid fluctuations since then, have created a substantial popular interest in the noble metal. Gold prospecting had been at a low ebb s
Jan 1, 1981
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San Francisco Paper - Factors Controlling the Capacity of Rock Crushers (with Discussion)By Ernest A. Hersam
The rate of output of a rock crusher is based upon a certain space relation, the calculation requiring that the size and position of the jaws, the principle of motion, and the speed of the machine be
Jan 1, 1923
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Papers - - Production Engineering - Structure of Clay GelsBy W. K. Lewis, Lombard Squires, W. I. Thompson
The authors presented an article2† last year on colloidal properties of clay suspensions in which they attempted to sustain the position that the behavior of clay suspensions is due primarily to the m
Jan 1, 1936
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Gas-Turbine Fuel From A Pressurized Gas ProducerBy Herbert H. Kouns, Harlan W. Nelson, Bruce O. Buckland
GASIFICATION of coal under pressure produces a gas that may be used as the fuel in a gas turbine. The pressure produced by a gas-turbine compressor (5 to 9 atm) should allow the use of high firing rat
Jan 1, 1953
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Mining Operations At Pine Point MinesBy William H. R. Gibney
Pine Point Mines is located in the Canadian Northwest Territories about 1,200 kilometers north of Edmonton, Alberta, close to the south shore of Great Slave Lake. Originally staked in 1898 by prospect
Jan 1, 1970
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PART V - Communications - A Metallographic Technique for Lanthanum and CeriumBy C. C. Koch, M. L. Picklesimer
PHYSICAL metallurgists interested in the alloying behavior and phase transformations in rare-earth metals and alloys require a strain-free polished and etched surface for both metallographic and X-ray
Jan 1, 1968
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Institute of Metals Division - The Cerium-Copper SystemBy P. A. Tucker, T. B. Rhinehammer, D. E. Etter, J. E. Selle
The Ce-Cu phase diagram was investigated by differential thermal analysis and rnetallography. Two congruent melting compounds, CeCu2 (817°C) and CeCua (938°C), and three incongruent cornpounds, CeCu (
Jan 1, 1964
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Papers - - Production Engineering - Structure of Clay GelsBy Lombard Squires, W. K. Lewis, W. I. Thompson
The authors presented an article2† last year on colloidal properties of clay suspensions in which they attempted to sustain the position that the behavior of clay suspensions is due primarily to the m
Jan 1, 1936
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San Francisco Paper - Factors Controlling the Capacity of Rock Crushers (with Discussion)By Ernest A. Hersam
The rate of output of a rock crusher is based upon a certain space relation, the calculation requiring that the size and position of the jaws, the principle of motion, and the speed of the machine be
Jan 1, 1923