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Part I. Process For Reclaiming Chromium, Vanadium, Molybdenum And Tungsten From Secondary Source MaterialsBy Jameel Menashi
A process has been developed for recovering the refractory metal values contained in mixed secondary source materials such as contaminated grinding wastes, oxides and sludges. The wastes are calcined
Jan 1, 1984
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PART II - Communications - Anomalies of the Electrical Resistivity of Nickel-Aluminum AlloysBy H. Kreye, E. Hornbogen
An increase in electrical resistivity during aging or after quenching from high temperatures is known in a large number of alloys. Plastic deformation of alloys in this condition leads to a decrease i
Jan 1, 1967
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PART II - Communications - Determinations of Beta-Tin Crystallographic OrientationsBy R. W. Vieth, S. A. Bradford
THE orientations of tetragonal tin crystals are commonly examined by either the transmission Laue method or the back-reflection Laue method. The predominant planes and zone axes of the pattern are plo
Jan 1, 1967
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PART II - Communications - Determinations of the Rolling Texture of Copper Using Three Different MethodsBy F. Haessner, M. Wilkens, U. Jakubowski
ThOUGH at present there is a wide range of possibilities for the quantitative determination of preferred orientations, pole figures of identical specimen material have not been determined by different
Jan 1, 1967
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PART II - Communications - Martensite Reversion in Stainless SteelBy J. F. Breedis
The stabilization of austenite in Fe-Ni alloys against martensitic transformation after reversion has been attributed' to the lattice imperfections remaining from previous transformation. More re
Jan 1, 1967
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Part II - Papers - Grain Boundary Migration During Recrystallization; I: Zone-Refined Lead, Zinc, Tin and Bismuth, II: Zone-Refined AluminumBy G. F. Bolling
Single crystals of each metal were deformed at 77°K and heated at constant rates, variously in the range 0.125" to 4o°Kper min from 77" to -390oK, while being monitored in an X-ray diffractometer. Cha
Jan 1, 1968
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Part II - Papers - Growth and Preferred Orientations of Large Elongated Grains in Doped Tungsten SheetBy J. L. Walter
Tungsten ingots with and without small amounts of aluminum, silicon, and potassium were prepared by conventional powder-metallurgy techniques and hot-rolled to 0.001-in.-thick sheet. The ingots were r
Jan 1, 1968
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PART II - Papers - Impurity Levels in Aluminum as Influenced by Raw Materials and Processing MethodsBy K. Mukai, M. Ishihara
This report is a brief discussion of the impurity levels both in primary aluminum and super-purily alnminim in connection with raw materials and proc-essing methods. Particularly, truce amounls of im-
Jan 1, 1967
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Part II - Papers - Nucleation of the Equiaxed Zone in Cast MetalsBy R. T. Southin
Cast ingots of 99.99 pct purity A1 and aluminum/copper alloys containing up to 2 pct Cu have been found to contain four zones rather than the three previously accepted, i.e., chill, colummar, and equi
Jan 1, 1968
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PART II - Papers - On the Origin of the Equiaxed Zone in CastingsBy D. R. Uhlmann, T. P. Seward, K. A. Jackson, J. D. Hunt
microscopic ohservations on alloys of organic trzaterials show that dendrite arms can melt off under normal conditiorzs of growth. This occurs because of the interactiorz of' heat and matter flux
Jan 1, 1967
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Part II - Papers - Sigma Formation in Nickel-Rich Nickel-Cobalt-Chromium-Aluminum-Titanium-Carbon Alloys at 1650°FBy J. R. Mihalisin
Phase changes in as-cast alloys in the Ni2 CoCr-Ni, Ti-NSAl system containing 0.1 wt pct C were studied after heat treatment at 1650°F. It was found that a vegion of CrCo-type s was developed in this
Jan 1, 1968
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Part II - Papers - Some Electrical-Resistivity Measurements on Cerium Metals of Various PuritiesBy W. N. Miner, R. O. Elliott
Electrical-resistivity )measurments were made be-trueetz room temperatrive and 1.5 oK on five different stocks of cerium metal, and the results were correlated with the types, amounts, and distributio
Jan 1, 1968
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PART II - Papers - Staff of AIME February 1966Jan 1, 1967
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PART II - Papers - The Thermoelectric Power of Ionic Crystals III – Heats of Transport for Potassium ChlorideBy J. N. Maycock, P. W. M. Jacobs
Previous measurements of the thermoelectric power of ionic crystals are reviewed briefly. It is concluded that, while extensive measurerements are available on systems in which the electrode M has a c
Jan 1, 1967
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Part II – February 1968 - Communication - Evidence for Diffusional Creep with Low Strain Rate SensitivityBy S. W. Zehr, G. S. Murty, W. A. Backofen
AN observation by Squires, Weiner, and phillipsl has stimulated interest in a mechanism of deformation at high temperature (above -0.5 of the absolute melting point) that is not usually thought to be
Jan 1, 1969
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Part II – February 1968 - Communication - Observations on the Plasticity of GermaniumBy A. Tanaka, K. G. Carroll
The existence of local room-temperature plastic flow in germanium, which has been a subject of controversy for nearly two decades, has recently received renewed attention, albeit no more agreement tha
Jan 1, 1969
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Part II – February 1968 - Communication - Recrystallization in Alpha PlutoniumBy R. D. Nelson
The purpose of this technical note is to briefly present some data on a phenomenon—recrystallization with concurrent deformation—that has been found to occur in a plutonium. This phenomenon is unusual
Jan 1, 1969
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Part II – February 1968 - Papers - Dislocation Structures in Niobium (Columbium) Single Crystals Observed by Optical MicroscopyBy R. G. Vardiman, M. R. Achter
Observations of dislocation structure in niobium are presented using two techniques. Triangular pits developed by electroetching are confined to orientations in the stereographic triangle between the
Jan 1, 1969