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New York Paper - Overstrain in MetalsBy Joseph Kaye Wood
A metal is said to be overstrained when it is deformed beyond the elastic limit at a temperature well below the critical range, as in cold working. Quantitatively, overstrain might be considered as th
Jan 1, 1924
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Concentration of Banded Ingredients of Illinois Coals by Screen Sizing and WashingBy L. C. McCabe
THIS paper is a progress report on a study, of the distribution of the banded ingredients (Figs. 1 and 2) in- Illinois screenings and the method of determining their distribution. Proximate analyses a
Jan 1, 1936
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Part VIII – August 1968 - Papers - Experimental Study of Solidification of Aluminum-Copper AlloysBy V. Koump, T. F. Perzak, R. H. Tien
A series of experiments were carried out in which the rates of propagation of the liquidus and the eutectic fronts Mere measured during essentially one-dimensional freezing of Al-Cu alloys. The dime
Jan 1, 1969
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Stochastic Characteristics of Slurry Flow in Underground Coal Slurry Haulage SystemsBy T. M. Yegulalp
This article summarizes some of the results of the continuing research activity at the Henry Krumb Schools of Mines, Columbia University, directed towards a better understanding of the stochastic beha
Jan 1, 1983
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Minerals Beneficiation - Theory of the Distribution of Fragment Size in ComminutionBy J. J. Gilvarry
Recently, Gilvarry1,2 has given a rigorous derivation of the proper distribution function for fragment size in single fracture, based on a closely defined physical model and deduced strictly by the la
Jan 1, 1964
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Long-Hole Mining Methods - Changing Mining Methods at the Holden MineBy John J. Curzon
The existence of mineralized ground in the area near Lake Chelan has been known since 1887, when Major A. B. Rogers, a locating engineer for the Great Northern Railway, came up Lake Chelan to Railroad
Jan 1, 1946
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An Explosion at Dunbar FurnaceBy E. C. Pechin
AT the suggestion of some members of the Institute, attention is called to the record of the working of Dunbar Furnace during the twelve months ending in January, 1874. During this period, with a prod
Jan 1, 1874
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Technical Notes - Role of Strain Energy in Solid Solution ThermodynamicsBy E. S. Machlin
THE function of this paper is to present certain results based on the fact that the strain energy arising from the solution of out-of-size solute atoms into the solid matrix is free energy and not int
Jan 1, 1955
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - The Temperature Dependence of Preferred Orientation in Rolled TungstenBy J. W. Pugh
PREFERRED orientations in cold-rolled body-centered-cubic metals appear to have remarkable similarity. The as-cold-rolled textures in iron,1,2 silicon-iron,3 mild steel,4 molybdenum, vanadium,' c
Jan 1, 1959
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Determination of Oxygen in Alloy Steels and Its Effect upon Tube PiercingBy Newell Hamilton
SOME years ago, in the manufacture of seamless tubing from an alloy steel containing 0.07 per cent maximum carbon, 18 per cent chromium and 8 per cent nickel, at the plant of The Babcock & Wilcox Tube
Jan 1, 1934
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Relation of Sulpher to the Overpoling of Copper ? DiscussionPHILIP L. GILL, New York, N. Y. (written discussion*).There is one feature of the fire-refining of electrolytic copper which I believe should be mentioned when the relation of oxygen content to the "p
Jan 8, 1918
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Safety Methods In Utah Coal MinesBy D. Harrington
FROM 1870 to date, the coal production of Utah has been somewhat less than 85,000,000 tons. There have been at least three major disasters with total fatalities about 380; or approximately. 4.4 person
Jan 8, 1925
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion, Institute of Metals Division, San Francisco Meeting, February 1949E. R. JETTE*—The way this ternary was developed there are two directly determined points on each of the iso-thermals except the 700° isothermal, where I believe there is only one. How were the end poi
Jan 1, 1950
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X-ray Study of the Solid Solubility of Lead, Bismuth and Gold in MagnesiumBy Frank Foote
PRECISION lattice-constant measurements have been widely used in the study of cubic solid solutions but as yet have been rarely applied to noncubic solid solutions. (See, however, references I and 2.)
Jan 1, 1940
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Technical Notes - Allotropic Transformations at High TemperatureBy J. O. McCaldin, P. Duwez
ALLOTROPIC transformations between 1000° and 1900°C have recently been reported for several metallic elements. Since the proposed transformations are based on limited evidence, it was decided to exami
Jan 1, 1955
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Application of the Phi Scale to the Description of Industrial Granular MaterialsBy C. H. Bowen
Industry needs a generally applicable means of defining average grain sire and grain size distribution. Students of sediments have explored this field, employing methods that might also prove useful i
Apr 1, 1956
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The PGT Uranium Assay ToolBy Leonard H. Goldman, Harold E. Marr
The PGT uranium assay probe is a borehole tool developed by Princeton Gamma-Tech over the last several years. It has the ability to do an in-situ assay of uranium in the presence of any amount of dise
Jan 1, 1980
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Birmingham Paper - Calculations of the Available Heat and the Required Dimensions of Chimneys, Combustion-Chambers, and Gas-Burners in the Use of Blast-Furnace Gases for Firing BoilersBy Frank C. Roberts
Neglecting the hydrogen and hydrocarbons, 1 will assume the following analysis as a fair average composition, by weight, of the waste gases escaping from a coke-burning blast-furnace: CO2............
Jan 1, 1889
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Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In The NonmetallicsBy Oliver Bowles
Two striking events marked the year 1871-the establishment of the A.I.M.E. and the beginning of the portland cement industry, the most spectacular of all the nonmetallics in its development. Just as D
Jan 1, 1947
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The Chemistry Of Ore-DepositionBy Walter P. Jenkey
[ ] I. THE REDUCING ACTION OF CARBON AND OF HYDROCARBONS. Carbon has long been recognized as one of the most powerful reducing agents in the deposition of ores. Investigations, made by myself, of
Jan 1, 1913