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Producing-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Permeability Reduction Through Changes in pH and SalinityBy N. Mungan
Formation damage, i.e.. reduclion in permeability, has been generally attribuled to clay minerals which expand or disperse upon contact with water that is less saline than the connate water. Luborator
Jan 1, 1966
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Part VII - Steady-State Creep Behavior of Cadmium Between 0.56 and 0.94 TmBy J. E. Flinn, S. A. Duran
The steady-state creep behavior of poly crystalline cad mi inn was studied over a temperature range of (1.56 to 0.94 Tm. Two distinct mechanisms were found to occur over this temperature range. They w
Jan 1, 1967
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PART VI - The Heat Effects Accompanying the Solution in Liquid Bismuth of Tellurium with Cadmium, Indium, Tin, or LeadBy P. M. Robinson, J. S. LI. Leach
The heats of solution oj' indiurrr, tin, lend, nrzd tellurium have been calculated from the measured heat effects when mechanical mixtres of indium and telLuium tin and tellurium, and lead and te
Jan 1, 1967
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Papers - Activity Measurements in Pt-Pb and Pd-Pb Melts in the Temperature Range 800° to 1200°CBy Klaus Schwerdtfeger
Activities of lead in Pt-Pb and Pd-Pb melts in the temperature range of 800° to 1200°C have been detev-mined from electromotive-. force measurements 202th the cells Both systems display strong nega
Jan 1, 1967
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Minerals Beneficiation - Zeta Potential of Quartz in the Presence of Nickel (II) and Cobalt (II)By R. T. O’Brien, J. M. W. Mackenzie
A microelectrophoresis technique has been used to measure the zeta potential of quartz over a range of pH and Ni (11) and Co (Ilj concentrations. Results have been discussed in terms of adsorption of
Jan 1, 1970
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Institute of Metals Division - Hydrogen Embrittlement of Steels (Discussion page 1327a)By W. M. Baldwin, J. T. Brown
The effect of hydrogen on the ductility, c, of SAE 1020 steel at strain rates, i, from 0.05 in. per in. per rnin to 19,000 in. per in. per rnin and at temperature, T, from +150° to —320°F was determin
Jan 1, 1955
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Reservoir Inhomogeneities Deduced From Outcrop Observations and Production LoggingBy L. H. Reiss, J. Groult, L. Montadert
Many fields, where the reservoir is composed of sandy layers, show great complexity because of the lack of continuity which results from a particular type of seditnentation. This complexity may be a f
Jan 1, 1967
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New York Paper - Intercrystalline Brittleness of lead (with Discussion)By Henry S. Rawdon
The relation between the course, or path, of the fracture of metals and alloys, produced in service or as a result of certain laboratory tests, and the crystalline units of which such materials are co
Jan 1, 1921
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Institute of Metals Division - Self-Diffusion in Magnesium Single CrystalsBy P. G. Shewmon
Radioactive MgZA has been used to study the rate of self-diffusion in oriented single crystals of magnesium in the temperature range 468O to 635OC. The diffusion coefficients parallel and perpendicula
Jan 1, 1957
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Creep And Fracture Tests On Single Crystals Of LeadBy John B. Baker, Bernard B. Betty, H. F. Moore
Fox several years there has been in progress in the Materials Testing Laboratory of the University of Illinois an investigation of creep and fracture of lead and lead alloys. In the course of this inv
Jan 1, 1938
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Part II - Papers - The Microstructural Characterization of Cold-Rolled Zircaloy-4 SheetBy E. N. Aqua, C. M. Owens
The microstructure in cold-rolled Zircaloy-4 sheet has been characterized by transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction line-broadening techniques. The rate of work hardening is measured i
Jan 1, 1968
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Montreal Paper - Silver IsletBy Thomas MacFarlane
AMONG the industrial enterprises which have, from time to time, been undertaken in our Dominion, few have been more uniformly unsuccessful than those which have had for their object the develop ment o
Jan 1, 1880
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Part V – May 1968 - Papers - Thermal Conductivity and Electrical Resistivity of Beryllium Copper FoilBy T. W. Watson, D. R. Flynn
Measurements have been made of the thermal conductivity and electrical resistivity of two specimens of 0.005-cm (2-mil) Be-Cufoil over the temperature range -140° to +200°C. The thermal cmductivity
Jan 1, 1969
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Papers - Materials Used in Oil-refinery PumpsBy A. E. Harnsberger
I is obvious that details such as the physical and chemical properties and methods of heat-treating of the materials mentioned must be omitted in a paper on the subject of materials used in oil-refine
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Materials Used in Oil-refinery PumpsBy A. E. Harnsberger
I is obvious that details such as the physical and chemical properties and methods of heat-treating of the materials mentioned must be omitted in a paper on the subject of materials used in oil-refine
Jan 1, 1935
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Paper - Gravity Methods - Computation of Eötvös Gravity Effects (With Discussion)By Lancaster Jones
The gravity magnitudes obtained by means of observations with the Eötvös balance in the field are necessarily resultant or total effects due to all abnormalities of mass distribution, including even t
Jan 1, 1929
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Sulphides In Nickel And Nickel AlloysBy A. M. Hall
SULPHUR, even in small amounts, may often be harmful to nickel and high-nickel alloys, causing impairment of mechanical strength and destruction of malleability and ductility, as shown by Merica and W
Jan 1, 1943
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Extractive Mettallurgy Division - Electrolytic Preparation of Thorium MetalBy B. C. Raynes
IN the early part of 1952, under the auspices of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, Horizons Inc. undertook an investigation dealing with the preparation of high purity thorium metal in order to deve
Jan 1, 1958
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French Occupation of the RuhrBy Robert Ignouf
MY REMARKS, which I feel highly honored in being invited to make, shall be limited to a consideration of -the mining and metallurgical problems involved in this question; in fact, these problems alone
Jan 5, 1923
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Cincinnati Paper - Biographical Notice of Sir C. W. Siemens D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S.By George W. Maynard
In the death of Sir William Siemens, the Institute loses its most distinguished honorary member, one who, without exaggeration, may be ranked among the greatest Men of the century. In justification of
Jan 1, 1884