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Troy Paper - Some Notes and Tests of an Open-hearth Steel Charge made for Boiler-plate.By Alfred E. Hunt
The charge to be described was made in a seven-ton furnace, with a hearth twelve feet long and eight feet wide, with three gas and three air ports on each side. The stock of the entire heat was cha
Jan 1, 1884
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Deformation Of Beta BrassBy Alden B. Greninger
IN a recent study1 of the deformation of metastable beta copper-zinc and beta copper-tin crystals, it was established that the parallel markings that appear on the surface of these crystals after slig
Jan 1, 1938
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Institute of Metals Division - Intermediate Phases with the Cu5Ca Structure (TN)By S. E. Hasko
It is the purpose of this note to report the crystal-lographic data for nine new B5A compounds* having the Cu5Ca structure, with A a rare earth and B a transition element, Co, Ni or Cu. In previous
Jan 1, 1961
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New York Paper - Countercurrent Decantation (with Discussion)By Luther B. Eames
The recovery of dissolved gold from slime pulp in the cyanide process was first accomplished by intermittent decantation. This simple process consists in mixing with the pulp containing the values in
Jan 1, 1918
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Mineral Beneficiation - Manganese Extraction by Carbamate Solutions and the Chemistry of New Manganese-Ammonia ComplexesBy Reginald S. Dean
Manganous oxide is readily soluble in concentrated ammonia solutions containing ammonium salts. Lixiviants of ammonia and ammonium carbamate permit ready extraction of manganese from reduced ores and
Jan 1, 1953
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Mineral Beneficiation - Manganese Extraction by Carbamate Solutions and the Chemistry of New Manganese-Ammonia ComplexesBy Reginald S. Dean
Manganous oxide is readily soluble in concentrated ammonia solutions containing ammonium salts. Lixiviants of ammonia and ammonium carbamate permit ready extraction of manganese from reduced ores and
Jan 1, 1953
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New York Paper - Effect of Time in Reheating Hardened Below the Critical Range (with Discussion)By S. S. Raymond, C. R. Hayward
In reheating quenched steel to remove part of the hardness, the softening effect has generally been considered to be a function of temperature and time. The temperature effect is well known, and long
Jan 1, 1917
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Atlantic City Paper - A Decade in American Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 973)By F. Louis Grammer
The iron industry has been so markedly the cynosure of all eyes, that a sense of weariness has overtaken many on-lookers, and a new wonder is desired. While the commercial phase of the iron industr
Jan 1, 1905
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Institute of Metals Division - Metastable Close-Packed Structures in Silver-Rich Binary Alloys with Tin, Antimony and Silicon (TN)By William Klement
THIS note reports the results of some attempts to metastably extend the primary solid solubilities of tin, antimony, and silicon in silver by rapidly quenching these binary alloys from the melt. The p
Jan 1, 1965
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Part XI - Papers - The Kinetics of Simultaneous Internal Oxidation and External Scale Formation for Binary AlloysBy H. D. Colson, Robert A. Rapp
When a binary alloy is oxidized to form simultaneously an internal oxidation zone and an external scale which grows at a constant rate, the oxidation should reach a condition of steady shale, in which
Jan 1, 1967
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Board of DirectorsMeeting of Sept. 25, 1914.-The Committees to have charge of the arrangements for the Annual Meeting in New York, Feb. 15 to 18, 1914, were appointed. It was voted that the Secretary of the Institute
Jan 11, 1914
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Temperature Conversion Tables.By Leonard Waldo
(New York Meeting, February, 1911.) THE recent and rapid development of the physics of engineering materials at temperatures as low as that of liquid air and as high is that of the electric are, has
Jan 4, 1913
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Papers - Coefficient of Equivalence of Iron with Respect to Aluminum in Aluminum Bronze (With Discussion)By R. H. Heyer, J. L. Bray, M. E. Carruthers
It is well known that iron markedly improves the physical properties and casting characteristics of aluminum bronzes. The use of 1 to 4 per cent iron as the principal modifying addition has become com
Jan 1, 1936
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Pittsburgh Paper - The Process Used at the Comstock for Refining Coppery Bullion Produced by Amalgamating TailingsBy A. D. Hodges
The process to be described, whatever other merits (or demerits) it may have possessed, certainly proved a financial success under the conditions of the locality where it was introduced and where a re
Jan 1, 1886
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Concerning The Nature Of Saltpeter And The Method Followed In Making ItAS I told you in the chapter on salts, saltpeter is a mixture composed of many substances extracted with fire- and water from arid and manurial soils, from that growth which exudes from new walls or f
Jan 1, 1942
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A Laboratory Study Of Seismic Velocities And Attentuation Of Host Rocks For A Nuclear Waste RepositoryBy Bjorn N. P. Paulsson
A number of granitic rock specimens have been studied from the Stripa mine site in connection with a large-scale geomechanics research program. The purpose of the program was to evaluate and develop f
Jan 1, 1984
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Coal Strengthens Its PositionBy Robert L. Frantz
Progress and improvement continue to be the bywords of a dynamic coal industry. The industry continues to gain strength and expand its horizons in the face of competition from atomic energy and the pr
Jan 2, 1969
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New York Paper - Scientific Installations for the Economical Burning of Liquid Fuel of Any Specific Gravity (with Discussion)By William Newton Best
Oil burners, oil furnaces, and methods of installation, have been the subject of many articles, but information concerning oil-burning systems, based upon scientific principles, is still in great dema
Jan 1, 1915
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Industrial Minerals - Raw Materials Preparation at the Brandon Plant, MississippiBy J. C. Holm
ALTHOUGH the main constituents of Portland cement are the oxides of calcium, silicon, aluminum, and iron, characteristics of the cement are seriously affected by such contaminants in the raw materials
Jan 1, 1957
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Petroleum Economics - Economic Dynamics of the Domestic Demand for Motor Fuel (T. P. 1174, With discussion)By Norman D. Fitzgerald
The growth of domestic requirements for motor fuel has been phenomenal, rising year after year in a fashion almost unique among commodities, resisting depressions and forging rapidly ahead in times of
Jan 1, 1940