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  • AIME
    Fluidized-Bed Combustion: Development Status (a78f6a8f-e05e-46e4-9ee1-41856a928f6d)

    By A. A. Janke, G. J. Vogel, W. M. Swift

    The combustion of fossil fuels in a fluidized bed of calcined limestone particles is a potentially efficient and economically attractive process for the generation of steam for electric power producti

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Textures, Anistropy And Earing Behavior Of Brass

    By F. H. Wilson, R. M. Brick

    WITH the papers of Palmer and Smith1 and of Burghoff and Bohlen,2 published in 1942, understanding of the problem of the development of ears on deep-drawn brass cups was brought to the point where, fr

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Temperature Measurements in Bessemer and Open-Hearth Practice (with Discussion)

    By George K. Burgess

    The suggestion has often been made that it would be highly desirable, at least for certain grades of steel, to be able to control more certainly, by pyrometric measurement or otherwise, the temperatur

    Jan 1, 1917

  • AIME
    Natural Gas Technology - Calculation of the Stabilized Performance Coefficient of Low Permeabilit...

    By A. J. Garnier, N. H. van Lingen

    Rock downhole is known to be lesc. drillable than when brought to the surface. This must be ascribed mainly to the presence under downhole conditions of a pressure differential across already made chi

  • AIME
    Tennessee Phosphate Practice

    By J. A. Barr

    Tennessee phosphates are commercially divided into three varieties: Brown, Blue, and White.

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    Disorderly Production

    THE distinction btween price reduction as a re-sult of lowering of production cost and price re-duction through unrestricted competition cannot be made too clear, because they are often interwoven in

    Jan 7, 1928

  • AIME
    Washington D.C. Paper - Contributions to the Metallurgy of Nickel and Copper

    By H. M. Howe, W. E. C. Eustis

    The processes which form the subject of this paper have been experimented on in the laboratory of W. E. C. Eustis, but have not passed beyond the experimental stage. The first is the invention of Mr.

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
    Conceptual Model Of A Drum Magnetic Separator To Beneficiate Beach Sands

    By John L. Watson

    A conceptual model (MAGSEP) is described to simulate the beneficiation characteristics of a drum magnetic separator in terms of the probability of an individual grain being recovered in the magnetic c

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Discussion – Energy Transfer by Impact – Mining Engineering, pp. 47, January 1956, Vol 205 – Charles, R. J. and de Bruyn, P. L.

    By J. P. Zannaras

    Referring to the article by R. J. Charles and P. L. de Bruyn, let us assume that W = weight of glass bar; P = weight of hammer; e = total deformation; E = unit of deformation; K = potential stress ene

    Nov 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel - Significance of the Simple Steel Analysis (Howe Memorial Lecture)

    By H. D. Hibbard

    At the beginning of a Henry M. Howe lecture it seems fitting to refer to Howe's great contributions to steel metallurgy, and particularly to the literature thereof. Most of my predecessors in thi

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Kinetics Of Metallurgical Processes (6ff7d6ce-5c2d-44ef-9c28-811c23beacee)

    KNOWING the endpoint, or the equilibrium state, in steelmaking reactions is only part of the story. The rate at which the reactions proceed can be equally important. But the power of thermodynamics, w

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Institute Committees (f9c93920-a2eb-435c-a5c5-47af01296a05)

    EXECUTIVE COMMITTEES OF LOCAL SECTIONS New York L. W. FRANCIS, Chairman. WILLARD S. MORSE, Vice-Chairman. THOMAS T. READ, Secretary, Woolworth Bldg., New York, N. Y. P. A. MOSMAN; Treasurer. LOUI

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    Mining Branch and Divisions (94282625-a178-4048-8bbc-5b24675fa420)

    Coal Division Mineral Industry Education Division Industrial Minerals Division Minerals Beneficiation Division Mineral Economics Division Mining, Geology and Geophysics Division Council R C Ste

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Increasing Dividends Through Personnel Work

    By Thomas Read

    PERSONNEL work is a term recently introduced to cover the great variety of activities in industrial work that deal with the human factor. Much attention has been focussed upon individual phases of per

    Jan 10, 1917

  • AIME
    The Trollhättan Electrothermic Zinc Process

    By W. S. Landis

    IN brief, this is the story of an attempt to Americanize a process originally developed in Europe. The story will be recited in two sections, the first dealing with the process as developed by the Eur

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    The Railroads and Light-weight Equipment

    By W. W. Colpitts

    To me, as to many other students of railroad needs, the necessity for reducing the dead weight in railroad rolling stock, both passenger and freight, has been apparent for, many years. The problem of

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Ratio Of Peak Production To Estimated Total Production In Certain Oilfield

    By G. B. Richardson

    WHILE examining a number of curves showing the production of petroleum, the author was impressed by the rather uniform relationship between the cumulative production from the beginning of development

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Improvements In The. Series System Of Electrolytic Copper Refining Recently Developed By The Nichols Copper Co.

    By M. H. Merriss

    IN THE last few years, there have been developed at the plant of the Nichols Copper Co., Laurel Hill, Borough of Queens, New York City, improvements in electrolytic copper refining by the series syste

    Jan 6, 1925

  • AIME
    Lithium - Minerals Provide Unique Industrial Raw Material

    By P. E. Landolt

    MILITARY necessities and economic scarcities, occasioned by the first and second World Wars, led to the search for substitute materials and new products to meet the demands of advancing technology acc

    Jan 12, 1951

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of Slag-Metal Reactions (caeb052a-f24f-41e1-8783-1ca087fb466f)

    BASIC open-hearth slags have no obviously unique features when compared with slags from other metallurgical operations. Open-hearth slags form and exist at temperatures ranging from 2500 to 3100 F (13

    Jan 1, 1964