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Reservoir Engineering–General - The Development of Stability Theory for Miscible Liquid-Liquid DisplacementBy R. L. Perrine
A stability theory is developed for miscible liquid-liquid displacement within a porous medium. In the usual case considered, a high-density high-viscosity "oil" is displaced downdip by a low-density
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Fine Coal Preparation - State Of The Art, Problems And Preductions For The FutureBy F. F. Aplan
INTRODUCTION The production of coal is a major part of the mining industry. In recent years the production of clean coal has exceeded 600 million tons per year and is reported to have reached 660
Jan 1, 1979
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St. Louis Paper - An Improvement in Apparatus for the Manufacture of Sulphuric AcidBy W. H. Adams
At the present time all the larger and better chemical works of Europe and the United States have introduced, as essential factors in the economical manufacture of sulphuric acid, both Glover towers a
Jan 1, 1887
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Stability During Shaft Sinking (A Design Guideline for Ground Support of Circular Shafts)By J. C. Konopka, S. A. G. Poppen, E. K. Roesner
Many shafts have experienced stability problems during shaft sinking because the designer failed to fully appreciate the conditions he would encounter. Some shafts have failed during construction beca
Jan 1, 1983
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Geology And Rock Slope Stability--Application of a "Keyblock" Concept for Rock SlopesBy Gen-Hua Shi, Richard E. Goodman
In hard, discontinuous rocks, failure modes and stability are controlled to a great extent by the intersection of discontinuities with the excavated surface. We have solved the general problem of find
Jan 1, 1983
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Use of Two-Dimensional Methods for Calculating Well Coning BehaviorBy A. G. Weber, H. J. Welge
A published calculation method for predicting incompressible, multidimensional fluid displacement has been adapted to the problems of water and gas coning in oil wells. Since depth and radial distance
Jan 1, 1965
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Chattanooga Paper - A Labor-Chart for the Management of Mining and Milling OperationsBy Joseph Mac Donald
Stripped of its romantic possibilities, mining is a commercial business, carried on for the profit there is in it; and the business of the manager, in its ultimate analysis, is to make the profit as l
Jan 1, 1909
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London Paper - A Device for Regulating the Discharge of Water from a ReservoirBy P. Bouéry
This account of a contrivance which has been found serviceable in practice may be of interest to engineers, and especially to those engaged in hydraulic mining. In that process, one feature which s
Jan 1, 1907
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Basic Data for Oil and Gas WellsBy Eugene A. Stephenson, Leon J. Pepperberg
The natural gas industry is essentially a byproduct of the oil industry. When first discovered the gas was usually regarded as a nuisance, and even when found immediately associated with oil, or suspe
Jan 1, 1934
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Manuscripts For The Arizona Meeting Of The Institute (2980ff81-a19e-4f4d-a036-c4a6e8b5a8b9)The next meeting of the Institute, the 113th meeting, will he held in Arizona in the latter part of September, 1916. All papers to be presented at this meeting must be published in the September Bulle
Jan 4, 1916
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Process For Manufacture Of Dead-Burned Magnesite And Precipitated Calcium Carbonate From DolomiteBy Robert D. Pike
IN November 1939, on behalf of the Harbison-Walker Refractories Co., the author undertook the study of the problem of utilizing the dolomite of northwestern Ohio for the manufacture of calcined magnes
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Notes - Binary Chart for Interconversions of Mol, Weight, and Volume Per CentBy J. B. Seabrook
The accompanying Fig 1 is a graphical scheme of intermediate accuracy for expediting interconversions of mol, weight, and volume percents. This chart consists of a family of curves of mol or atomic or
Jan 1, 1950
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Chicago Paper - Electric-resistance Furnace of Large Capacity for Zinc Ores (with Discussion)By Charles H. Fulton
Experimental work on the process was begun on a laboratory scale at Cleveland, Ohio, in 1914, and transferred to East St. Louis, Ill. in 1916, where a commercial sized furnace was in technical operati
Jan 1, 1921
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PART X – October 1967 – Communications - A Metallographic Technique for Polishing and Etching BerylliumBy C. W. Price, G. A. Wheeler
BERYLLIUM has always been a difficult material to prepare for metallographic examination. Severe surface deformation occurs during mechanical grinding and polishing, and a suitable bright-field etchan
Jan 1, 1968
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Detector for Discrimination of Combustion Reactions and the Prevention of Coal Mine ExplosionsBy W. L. Grose, J. E. Nealy
A device developed by the U.S. Bureau of Mines for the detection and quenching of coal mine explosions suffers from the inability to discriminate between the light emitted from hydrocarbon combustion
Jan 1, 1972
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Minerals Beneficiation - Laboratory Procedures for Determining the Pelletizing Characteristics of Iron Ore ConcentratesBy L. J. Erck, T. E. Ban
A discussion of laboratory procedures used to determine pellet quality and to simulate handling and firing conditions. Strength-temperature relationships in pelletizing; effect of chemical additives o
Jan 1, 1954
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - A Basket Cathode Electrolytic Cell for Production of Titanium MetalBy W. R. Opie, O. W. Mole
By confining the electrolytic reduction of TiCl4 to the interior of a porous basket-cathode the electrolyte between the anode and the cathode can be kept free of reduced chlorides of titanium eliminat
Jan 1, 1961
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Comparison Of Spherical Elastic, Voigt, And Observed Wave Forms For Large Underground ExplosionsBy George B. Clark, Edward E. Hornsey
Pulses from large underground explosions which traverse the rock beyond the "fracture" and "plastic" zones do not behave as a spherical elastic model. Observed attenuation is greater than that predict
Jan 1, 1972
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A Computer Based System For The Geological Evaluation Of A Surface Coal MineBy K. B. McQuillin
The increasing volume of data produced by the Anglo American Corporation of South Africa, Limited, during the course of coal exploration prompted the establishment of a computer based processing syste
Jan 1, 1977
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A Computerized System for Using Response Surface Methodology to Evaluate Phosphate Flotation VariablesBy J. E. Lawver, B. J. Clingan, R. E. Snow
Response surface methodology is a well-known and powerful technique for determining optimum conditions in flotation systems. One disadvantage is the onerous task of the numerical calculations and curv
Jan 8, 1979