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  • AIME
  • AIME
    New York Paper - Action of Hot Wall: a Factor of Fundamental Influence on the Rapid Corrosion of Water Tubes and Related to the Segregation in Hot Meals

    By Carls Benedicks

    It is well known by every one who has had to deal with boiler tubes that these are often seriously affected by a sort of corrosion, occurring as a local pitting, that frequently causes a perforation o

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Personal (50d0f162-11b0-4782-be17-c1b8b402d204)

    The following is an incomplete list of members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period Nov. 10, 1918 to Dec. 10, 1918. Arthur C. Adair, Camp Meade, Md. L. S. Mitchell, Mon

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Kaolin Production and Treatment in the South

    By Paul M. Tyler

    YEAR after year, the kaolin industry of the United States has been setting new production records and making better products. High-grade paper, pottery, and rubber clays are produced in this country m

    Jan 6, 1950

  • AIME
    Important Steps in the Advance of Copper Metallurgy

    By ELTCENE A. WHITE

    WE are all interested in our ou7n lines of endeavor and consider ourselves the center of the universe. The farmer thinks he is the most important man because he feeds us. The doctor knows he is the re

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Salt Lake City Paper - Development of Selective Flotation at Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s Plant at Bauer, Utah

    By R. J. Evans

    The Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s plant is at Bauer, Utah. It was built primarily to treat ore from the Combined Metals mine at Pioche, Nevada. Shortly after its completion, the company acquire

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    The Engineering Curriculum

    By S. C. Hollister

    An evaluation of the function of the engineer, so that means whereby education can best serve his needs can be adopted. THERE has been a steady increase in specialized branches of engineering durin

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Ground Movement and Subsidence, 1929

    By George S. Rice

    THE year 1929 has shown a surprising growth in the attention given by mining men to the subject of ground movement and subsidence from mining, as evidenced by the large number of articles that have ap

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Physical Factors in the Metallurgical Reduction of Zinc Oxide

    By WOOLSEY MCA JOHNSON

    INDEPENDENTLY of the recognized chemical reactions involved in the production of metallic zinc, the process is affected by physical conditions in efficiency, and by commercial as well as technical eco

    Sep 1, 1907

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Notes on the Siemens Direct Process

    By A. L. Holley

    There is a growing demand for pure and cheap material for fine open-hearth steel; a material not only very free from phosphorus, but from carbon and silicon; so that it may he rapidly converted into s

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Workwomen Great Success at a Colorado Mill

    By H. L. Tedrow

    FACED with a scarcity of labor in its operations at Alma, Colo., the London Mines and Milling Co. has been employing women for several months in its sorting and crushing plant. The results so far obta

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    New York Paper February, 1918 - Recent Tests of Ball-mill Crushing (with Discussion)

    By Charles T. Van Winkle

    Until the advent of the porphyry coppers and the introduction of flotation which soon followed, crushing and grinding for many years proceeded along somewhat stereotyped lines, without important alter

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Velocity of Galena and Quartz Falling in Water

    By Robert H. Richards

    The object of this paper is to enlarge the field of settling velocities treated by me in my former papers, Close Sizing Before Jigging, and Sorting Before Sizing.' There seemed need of work both

    Jan 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Fluoride in the Ground Water of Alabama

    By Philip E. LaMoreaux

    Fluoride, generally less than 0.5 ppm, is present in ground water from rocks of Paleozoic age and older, in northern and eastern Alabama. Some of the water-bearing formations in the Coastal Plain area

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Part III – March 1968 - Papers - Growth of Single Crystals of ZnTe and ZnTe1-x Sex by Temperature Gradient Solution Zoning

    By Jacques Steininger, Robert E. England

    Single crystals of ZnTe and ZnTe1-,Sex with x up to 0.13 have been grown from the elements by temperature gradient solution zoning using excess tellurium as a solvent. Best results have been obtained

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    The Treatment Of The Gold-Ores Of Hog Mountain, Alabama.

    By T. H. Aldrich

    (Chattanooga Meeting, October, 1908.) Tars paper is intended only to give a preliminary account of experiments made, and conclusions reached, concerning the treatment of certain refractory low-grade

    Nov 1, 1908

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Oil Development on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec

    By 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

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Oil Development on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec

    By 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

  • AIME
    Part IX - Papers - Reaction Diffusion and Kirkendall-Effect in the Nickel-Aluminum System

    By G. D. Rieck, M. M. P. Janssen

    Chemical diffusion coefficients and heats of activation for diffusion in the NizAh fy), NiAl (6), and Ni3A1 (E) intermetallic phases and the solid solution of aluminum in nickel (( phase) were calcula

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The New Spirit in Industrial Relations (with Discussion)

    By Herbert M. Wilson

    We of the employer class represent labor in the social organization and in industry just as truly as do those who labor only with their hands, and, because our labor is chiefly with our brains, the du

    Jan 1, 1919