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Washington Paper - Industrial Researches upon Heat and CombustionBy P. H. Dudley
I have taken the liberty of calling the researches herein mentioned industrial, to distinguish them from those strictly scientific, where every known appliance is used to insure accuracy in determinin
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Institute of Metals Division - Intermediate Phases in Ternary Alloy Systems of Transition ElementsBy Sheldon Rideout, E. L. Kamen, B. S. Lement, Paul A. Beck, W. D. Manly
The 1200°C isothermal sections of the following ternary phase diagrams were investigated: Cr-Co-Nil Cr-Co-Fe, Cr-Co-Mot and Cr-Ni-Mo. In all these systems the u phase was found to form extended solid
Jan 1, 1952
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An Evaluation Of Quenching Oils By Means Of The End Quench TestBy G. Sandoz, C. A. Siebert
OIL quenching of steel, in good commercial practice, is carried out using a great deal of agitation in the quenching bath. Many of the tests reported in the literature represent the results obtained o
Jan 1, 1948
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Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - Note on Boiler-ExplosionsBy William P. Mason
FoR reasons unnecessary to enter into here, I was called upon to contradict the statement that " closed metallic vessels, partly filled with water and heated, do not become shattered by violent explos
Jan 1, 1893
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Part I – January 1969 - Communications - Massive and Martensitic Decomposition of the AgAl Beta PhaseBy J. Kittl, D. Arias
THE decomposition on cooling of the high-temperature ß bcc phases in copper- or silver-based binary systems usually takes place by a martensitic. massive, bainitic, or pearlitic reaction depending upo
Jan 1, 1970
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Petroleum and Gas - The Non-corrosive Ferrous AlloysBy John A. Mathews
It is no longer necessary to explain to an audience like this that there are stainless or non-corrosive steels. It is still necessary to repeat, and to keep on repeating, that no one of them is stainl
Jan 1, 1927
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Some Alloying Elements on the Transformation of Fe-22.5 Pct Ni AlloysBy R. B. G. Yeo
The effects of alloy additions on the M, and A, temperatures of an Fe-22.5 pct Ni alloy have been determined. Increasing amounts of titanium, colum-bium, vanadium, and silicon raise and then lower M,w
Jan 1, 1963
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Institute of Metals Division - High-Temperature Short-Time Creep of Graphite. H E MartensBy D. D. Button, L. D. Jaffee
INTEREST in the use of graphite as a high-temperature engineering structural material has recently increased markedly. However, actual use of this material has been limited, in part because informat
Jan 1, 1961
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Institute of Metals Division - The Oxidation of 'Reactive' Uranium CarbideBy E. W. Murbach
The oxidation of uranium carbide by oxygen at various pressures, and by air, has been investigated at temperatures up to 600°C. Arc-melted and cast uranium carbide displays oxidation behavior that app
Jan 1, 1963
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Fine Crushing With A Rod Mill At The Tennessee Copper CompanyBy J. F. Myers, F. M. Lewis
THE crushing of ore, as defined by Taggart,1 is "usually a stage process, utilizing . . . machines especially suitable for the reduction of particular sizes... . down to a final stage, employed for th
Jan 1, 1946
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Aluminum Therapy Conquers SilicosisBy Hannon, J. W. G.
Silicosis is today's most important industrial disease and probably dates back to the Stone Age. Since the industrial revolution, increasing attention has been paid to those occupations where min
Jan 1, 1949
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Ferrous Production Metallurgy in 1946By J. S. Marsh, T. B. Winkler
THE past year, the first full one of peacetime production, proved that the process of beating swords into plowshares has increased in complexity in step with civilization. Further, judging by various
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - Steady State Creep in a CuAu3-Alloy (TN)By R. G. Davies
WeERTMANI has shown that the high temperature steady state creep rate, i, in lead and indium-base alloys obeys an equation of the form where AH is the activation energy, o the applied stress, n the
Jan 1, 1962
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Drilling Blastholes At The Holden Mine With Percussion Drills And Tungsten Carbide BitsBy Elton A., Youngberg
The Holden mine operated by the Chelan Division of the Howe Sound Co. is on the east slope of the Cascade Range in north central Washington on the south slope of Railroad Creek valley at an elevation
Jan 1, 1949
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Power Line - Miners' Image - Fact Or FictionBy Thomas V. Falkie, Robert Stefanko
Recently The Wall Street Journal featured a series of articles titled "The Dirty Work-Brutal, Mindless Labor Remains a Daily Reality for Millions in The US.-Mining Coal, Shoveling Slag, Gutting Hogs P
Jan 1, 1971
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Notes On The Metallography Of Refined Copper.By Earl Bardwell
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) THE structural relations existing between cuprous oxide and copper were first systematically studied by Heyn1, who suggested that a study of the microstructure of refin
Jan 7, 1913
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep of Single Crystals and Polycrystals Of Aluminum, Lead. and Tin (Discussion p. 1299)By O. D. Sherby, J. E. Dorn, C. D. Wiseman
MCLEAN' has shown that the total strain obtained during creep of aluminum polycrystals arises exclusively from the mechanisms of 1) microscopically observable slip, 2) subgrain tilting, and 3) gr
Jan 1, 1958
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Air-gas Lifts - Mechanical Equipment of Air-gas Lifts in Oklahoma and Kansas Exclusive of Seminole (with Discussion)By R. W. Bond
The gas-lift is a comparatively recent development in the Oklahoma and Kansas fields. It was used to some extent in the old Dilworth field several years ago, but the first extensive installations were
Jan 1, 1928
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Effect of Gas Withdrawal upon Reservoir Fluids (With Discussion)By B. E. Lindsly
The withdrawal of gas and/or oil in appreciable quantity from a natural oil reservoir causes the pressure within the reservoir to diminish, and if the oil is completely saturated with gas, this dissol
Jan 1, 1934
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Superorganizing Professional EngineersBy A. B. Parsons
AN often repeated criticism of the profession of engineering is that it is as a whole it lacks solidarity. organization, co-ordination, and leadership. Significantly, the critic, are all engineers. Ot
Jan 1, 1943