Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - A Study of Induced Fracturing Using an Instrumental ApproachBy T. O. Anderson, E. J. Stahl
Tests to increase knowledge concerning the process of hydraulic fracturing have been performed on three wells in the Allegheny field in western New York. The fracture orientation and its physical appe
-
Institute of Metals Division - Compositional Control of Phases Precipitating in Complex Austenitic AlloysBy W. C. Hagel, H. J. Beattie
Phases present at 2200° and 1500°F (1204° and 816°C) were identified in sixty wrought developmental austenitic alloys possessing wide compositional variations. The bases were iron-, cobalt-, and nicke
Jan 1, 1965
-
New York September, 1890 Paper - The Thies Process of Treating Low-Grade Auriferous Sulphides at the Haile Gold Mine, Lancaster County, South CarolinaBy A. Thies, Wm. B. Phillips
1. Introductory Remarks.—The Haile Gold Mine is in Lancaster county, South Carolina, 3 1/2 miles east of Kershaw station on the Charleston, Cincinnati and Chicago Railway. It was first opened about, t
Jan 1, 1891
-
New York Paper - The Work of the Testing Department of the Watertown Arsenal, in Its Relation to the Metallurgy of SteelBy James E. Howard
At the request of the Council of the Institute, I have the honor to submit the following remarks upon the Program of Tests under which the current work of the Watertown Arsenal Testing Laboratory is c
Jan 1, 1909
-
New York Paper - A Volute Aging BreakBy H. M. Howe, E. C. Groesbeck
Fig. 1 shows a volute aging break which developed spontaneously in a hardened and tempered steel helmet between 19 and 38 days after it had been tested ballistically. A similar break, shown in Fig.
Jan 1, 1920
-
Cobalt (ad1d2c0f-82e2-44b7-9d49-96d4acd9181b)By W. A. Wissler, B. E. Field
COBALT is a silvery white metal with a slight bluish cast. It strongly resembles nickel in its appearance and properties, notably its resistance to corrosion, although its alloys with other metals dif
Jan 1, 1953
-
The Copperbelt Of Northern RhodesiaWE must begin by defining what we mean by the Copperbelt. This term is generally used to denote that region of Northern Rhodesia in which the copper mines of that territory are situated. The first pub
Jan 5, 1957
-
Differential Production of Soluble Sulfates from Mixtures of Metallic OxidesBy Carl Floe
THE possibility of separating the various constituents of mixed ores or metalliferous products by differentially producing their soluble sulfates has not received the consideration that it deserves. T
Jan 1, 1936
-
The New Look in The Syncrude Canada Tar Sands ProjectBy F. K. Spragins
Growing demand for conventional crude oil in North America in the face of diminishing sup- ply is bringing about increased interest in synthetic fuels. With one commercial plant already in full produc
Jan 10, 1972
-
New York Paper - Coal and Oxygen (with Discussion)By S. W. Parr, F. B. Hobart
Studies relating to the behavior of coal toward oxygen may have for their purpose the determination of the fundamental factors that underlie spontaneous combustion, weathering and deterioration, and t
Jan 1, 1925
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Manganese Upgrading at Three Kids Mine, NevadaBy S. J. McCarroll
Fig. 1—The belt shown at right carries filter cake to mixing station over calciner. Crude ore conveyors appear in right background. THE Three Kids mine, some six miles east of Henderson, Nev., is i
Jan 1, 1955
-
New York Paper - February, 1918 - The Effect of the Presence of a Small Amount of Copper in Medium-carbon Steel (with Discussion)By Arch. B. Johnston, Carle R. Hayward
The effect of copper on steel has been studied by numerous investigators. Before modern testing methods had been developed, blacksmiths noted red shortness in iron, the cause for which was ascribed to
Jan 1, 1918
-
New York Paper - Metals and Alloys from a Colloid-chemical Viewpoint (with Discussion)By Jerome Alexander
It is an outstanding fact of Nature that many of the practical properties of substances are dependent, not on their ultimate chemical composition, but on the kind and degree of aggregation of their co
Jan 1, 1919
-
New York Paper - The Commercial Analysis of Furnace GasesBy T. Egleston
The importance of making analyses of gases in furnaces which are used for metallurgical purposes is every day growing more and more evident. It is the only method of understanding the reactions that t
-
New York City Paper - A Theory to Explain the Cause of Hard Centers in Steel IngotsBy R. Gatewood
The solution here offered is at once simple and important in its direct and indirect bearings. According to the principles of surface-tension, which will be found sufficiently enlarged upon for pre
Jan 1, 1885
-
A New Flotation OilBy Maxwell Adams
CONSIDERABLE interest has recently been developed in sage-brush oil because of its possible utilization as a flotation agent in the mining industry. A list of some of its physical properties, together
Jan 9, 1916
-
New York City Paper - Biographical Notice of Sidney Gilchrist ThomasBy George W. Maynard
In the Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute for the year 1878, in the account of the proceedings of the annual meeting in March of that year, when Mr. Bell read his paper On the Separation of Phosp
Jan 1, 1885
-
New York Paper - Tensile Properties of Boiler Plate at Elevated Temperatures (with Discussion)By H. J. French
At the request of a committee of the Engineering Division,' National Research Council, a study of the properties of boiler plate at various temperatures up to about 900' F. (482" C.) has bee
Jan 1, 1922
-
New York Paper - Tensile Properties of Boiler Plate at Elevated Temperatures (with Discussion)By H. J. French
At the request of a committee of the Engineering Division,' National Research Council, a study of the properties of boiler plate at various temperatures up to about 900' F. (482" C.) has bee
Jan 1, 1922
-
The New Industrial Development And Exploitation Of Metals And AlloysBy Zay Jeffries
IMAGINE a spinning sphere of hot matter about 8000 miles in diameter, rushing through space at a velocity measured in miles per second, and you have a rough idea of what our earth is supposed to have
Jan 1, 1953