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Production Engineering and Research - Gravity Drainage in Oil Fields (T.P. 161 I, Petr. Tech., Sept. 1943)By James O. Lewis
Gravity drainage is the self-propulsion of oil downward in the reservoir rock. Under favorable natural and operational conditions, it has been found to effect recoveries comparable to water displaceme
Jan 1, 1944
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Symposium on Practical Aspects of Diffusion - The Degassing of Metals (Metals Technology, Jan. 1944) (With discussion)By A. L. Marshall, F. J Norton
The object of this investigation was to make a comprehensive study of the degassing of molybdenum in order to determine how rigorous a treatment was necessary to completely remove sorbed gases from mo
Jan 1, 1944
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Symposium on Practical Aspects of Diffusion - Preface (Metals Technology, Jan. 1944)By Robert F. Mehl
Jan 1, 1944
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Miscellaneous Alloys - The Present Status of Electrolytic Manganese and Its Alloys (Metals Technology, June 1944) (With discussion)By R. S. Dean
The commercial production of electrolytic manganese on a small scale commenced in 1939. The writer made a short report on the progress of production and utilization in Mining and Metallurgy for Januar
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Steelmaking - The Relative Deoxidizing Power of Boron in Liquid Steel and the Elimination of Boron in the Open-hearth Process (Metals Technology, December 1943) (With discussion)By R. W. Gurry
Thermodynamic calculations indicate that boron is a better deoxidizer than silicon but probably is not quite as effective as aluminum. Boron should, therefore, be readily oxidized out of the open-hear
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Mechanical Properties - Aging and the Yield Point in Steel (Metals Technology, December 1943) (With discussion)By J. R. Low, M. Gensamer
During the course of an investigation into the drawability of automobile-body sheet steel, it became apparent that certain advantages would be possessed by a deep-drawing steel with a very low yield s
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Mechanical Properties - Fracture and Comminution of Brittle Solids (Abstract)By Eugene F. Poncelet
This paper attempts to analyze the phenomena involved in the fracture of brittle solids by simple compression. Glass squares standing on edge, and compressed between two parallel steel jaws, develo
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Mining - Breaking Coal with Cardox in the Pittsburgh Seam (With discussion)By E. C. Skinner
Cardox, which consists essentially of a steel tube containing carbon dioxide compressed to the liquid state, is a trade name designating a device used principally in coal mines to break down coal.
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Iron Ores and Blast Furnace Practice - Selection of Blast-furnace Refractories ( Metals Technology, April 1944)By E. B. Snyder, H. M. Kraner
This paper shows that volume stability, low porosity and decreased pyroplasticity are desirable for blast-furnace linings, partitularly for the hearth. It shows further that a hot load test is a valua
Jan 1, 1944
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Physical Metallurgy - Orientations in Diffusion Layers (Metals Technology, June 1944) (With discussion)By Shueling Woo, Charles S. Barrett, Robert F. Mehl
When one solid phase is generated from another, fixed and rational orientation relationships are observed to subsist between the parent and the new crystal. The principle has been proposed1 that the r
Jan 1, 1944
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Aluminum - The Ammonium Sulphate Process for Production of Alumina from Western Clays.By A. T. Sweet, C. E. Plummer, H. W. St. Clair, S. F. Ravitz
The ammonium sulphate process for recovering alumina from clays was proposed by Rinman, Buchner, and others many years ago, and more recently various modifications have been investigated both here ari
Jan 1, 1944
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Froth Flotation Of A North Carolina Ilmenite OreBy L. L. McMurray
ILMENITE is the most important raw material for manufacture of titanium dioxide.1 Industrially, several other products are made from ilmenite, the most important of which are: ferrotitanium, ferro car
Jan 1, 1944
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Electric Furnace Smelting of Tin Concentrate from Sullivan OreBy E. L. Jones
THE concentration of tin in the tailing from Sullivan ore has been de-scribed by H. R. Banks, superintendent of the Sullivan concentrator, in a paper presented at the annual meeting of the B.C. Divisi
Jan 1, 1944
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Mining And Treatment Of Clay Near Mt. Holly Springs, PennsylvaniaBy Richard M. Foose
FIVE miles southwest of Mt. Holly Springs, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Clay Co. has been mining and milling a white clay since 1896; for use in white cement, as a filler in rubbe
Jan 1, 1944
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Ferroalloying Metals - First Two Years Operation of the Bureau of Mines Electrolytic Manganese Pilot Plant at Boulder City, Nevada (Metals Technology, Aug. 1944) (With discussion)The present paper records a chapter in the history of the development of an electrolytic manganese industry in the United States.l A relatively large pilot plant at Boulder City, Nev., for the prod
Jan 1, 1944
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Minor Metals - CadmiumBy Walter Renton Ingalls
Metallurgical literature has no record of any ore beneficiated for cadmium alone, and the cadmium of commerce is derived from zinc ore, with which cadmium is generally associated. Zinc ores free from
Jan 1, 1944
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New Methods for the Production of MagnesiumBy L. M. Pidgeon
MAGNESIUM metal, with a specific gravity of 1.73, is two-thirds the weight of aluminium and one-quarter that of steel. It is the lightest metal which is stable in the atmosphere. Before the war it had
Jan 1, 1944
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The Degassing Of MetalsBy A. L. Marshall, F. J. Norton
THE object of this investigation was to make a comprehensive study of the degassing of molybdenum in order to determine how rigorous a treatment was necessary to completely remove sorbed gases from mo
Jan 1, 1944
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Aluminium Therapy in the United StatesBy J. W. G. Hannon
FOLLOWING the experimental work of Denny, Robson, and Irwin, and the clinical investigation by Crombie and Blaisdell, an investigation of aluminium therapy was begun at Washington, Pa., which is situa
Jan 1, 1944
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Mineral Possibilities of Areas Adjacent to the Alaska Highway (6445c822-fbfa-45c0-aaa2-cb1a728d1b71)By L. O. Thomas
THE Alaska Highway, in its course through British Columbia, traverses parts of two great physiographic divisions of Canada which are also distinctive geologically-the Cordillera in the western section
Jan 1, 1944