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Notes on Blast-Furnace Operation with a Turbo BlowerBy S. G. Valentine
BLAST-FURNACE blowing engines are broadly of two main types: either steam- or gas-driven reciprocating engines, or turbine-driven rotary engines. Some results of experience with a furnace blown by an
Jan 2, 1914
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Chicago Paper - Review of American Blast-Furnace Practice, (See Discussion, p. 577)By E. C. Potter
It is not the purpose of this paper to enter into the minutiae of a subject so vast, upon which volumes have already been written and volumes more might still be written, but simply to pass in review
Jan 1, 1894
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Refinery Products and Problems - Acid-sludge Problem in Oil Refining (with Discussion)By J. B. Rather
The use of sulfuric acid in refining illuminating oils antedates the beginning of the petroleum industry in America by many years. It was used as early as 1792 by Tower in refining "coal oil" in the B
Jan 1, 1928
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Boston Paper - Certain Conditions in the Manufacture of Steel Rails, which may Greatly Influence their Life in ServiceBy Frederic A. Delano
In adding one more to the list of papers that have been presented on the subject of steel rails, I wish to explain at the beginning that in enumerating the steps in the manufacture which, I think, hav
Jan 1, 1888
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Clays (3.15.4B)By B. F. Buie
Included in the general category of clays is a large and varied assemblage of nonmetallic silicate minerals which characteristically occur as fine-grained particles having flaky, sheetlike, or rod-sha
Jan 1, 1976
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New York Paper - Application of Colloid Chemistry to Production of Clean Steel (with Discussion)By H. W. Gillett
Many of the parts of motor cars, aircraft, etc., that require strong light construction, hence must be made of high-quality steel, are stressed to the maximum limit only in a very small volume. In par
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Oil Development on the Isthmus of TehuantepecBy Stirling Huntley
With the threatened falling off in production of the lighter oil pools of the Tampico embayment in Mexico, a general search of that country for oil-producing regions has resulted in renewed activity i
Jan 1, 1923
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Papers - Equilibria in Liquid Iron with Carbon and Silicon (T. P. 1163, with discussion)By L. S. Darken
In the study of reactions occurring in liquid iron, alone or in contact with a liquid oxide or slag phase, it has been found that the experimental data over a limited range of concentration can in som
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Measurement of Irreversible Potentials as a Metallurgical Research Tool (T.P. 1234, with discussion)By W. L. Fink, M. S. Hunter, R. H. Brown
Early workers attempted to study the structure of alloys by measurement of equilibrium electrode potentials in aqueous solutions containing ions of the metals from which the alloy was made.' The
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Description of Mills - Metallurgy and Milling Practice at Getchell Mine (Mining Technology, Nov. 1940)By C. W. Wark, Fred Wise
The Getchell mine, a comparatively recent gold discovery, is in the old Potosi mining district, Humboldt County, Nevada. All ore is mined from open pits using Diesel shovels and gasoline trucks. Two t
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Gravitational Methods - Use of Astatized Pendulums for Gravity Measurements (T. P. 828, with discussion).By Gustaf Ising
For relative gravity measurements, the author in 1918 described an instrument1 of which the essential part consists of a highly astatized, standing pendulum turning about a horizontal elastic axis. Th
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Some Notes on Blue Brittleness (With Discussion)By Leland Russell van Wert
In 1888, Howard,1' working at the Watertown Arsenal on the tensile properties of ferrous materials at various temperatures, noted the curious fact that the stress-strain diagrams of low-carbon st
Jan 1, 1931
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Papers - Safety - Safety Considerations for Flame-resisting Trailing Cables (T.P. 2288, Coal Tech., Nov. 1947By F. E. Griffith
Several disastrous and a great number of near-disastrous mine fires have been started by igniting the combustible conductor insulation and outer covering of trailing cables. Those who have had experie
Jan 1, 1949
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New York Paper - Requirements of Refractories for Open Hearth (with Discussion)By G. A. Bole, F. W. Davis
The purpose of this paper is not to report, to the Institute, the results so far obtained in the survey, by the Bureau of Mines, of the metallurgical requirements for open-hearth refractories, but to
Jan 1, 1924
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Capillarity-Permeability - Differences in Behavior of Fresh and Aged East Texas Woodbine CoresBy J. S. Osoba, J. G. Richardson, F. M. Perkins
Laboratory experiments have shown profound diffcrences in the behavior of so-called "fresh cores" from the East Texes field and of the same cores after ex~ractio~l with organic solvents. The residual
Jan 1, 1956
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Institute Reports for the Year 1925TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING AND METALLURGICAL ENGINEERS Gentlemen -The Institute was founded 54 years ago "with the object of promoting the arts and sciences conn
Jan 1, 1923
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Chicago, Ill Paper - The Pocahontas Mine-ExplosionBy Stuart M. Buck, J. H. Bramwell, Edward H. Williams
The Southwest Virginia Improvement Company began operations in the Bluestone Flat-Top coal-field, situated in Tazewell County, Virginia, in the fall of 1881. In May, 1883, the company had built 200 co
Jan 1, 1885
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Papers - Cleveland Meeting – September, 1929 – Experimental Data on, the Equilibrium of the System Iron Oxide-carbon in Molten Iron (With Discussion)By J. J. Egan, A. B. Kinzel
Much work has been done recently in an attempt to analyze the physicochemical mechanism involved in the production of steel by the open-hearth process. This has resulted in reducing the process to a s
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Non-Metalic Minerals - Economic Notes on the Nonmetallic Mineral Industries (With Discussion)By Paul M. Tyler, Oliver Bowles
The extensive employment of nonmetallic minerals antedates the use of metals, but only within the last two decades has the production of nonmetals begun actually to keep pace with the complicated acti
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Variations in Reservoir Pressure in the East Texas Field (With Discussion)By Ralph J. Schilthuis, William Hurst
The nature of the forces that are important in producing the oil in the East Texas field and the manner in which these forces are affected by the rate of production have always been problems of outsta
Jan 1, 1935