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Rochester Paper - Gas Absorption and Oxidation of Non-ferrous Metals (with Discussion)By B. Woyski
Many writers, in discussing defects caused by oxidation and gassing of bronzes and red brasses advocate substantially the same cure for both. But from its nature, oxidation cannot take place if there
Jan 1, 1923
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Mining Technology In 1966 - New Technology, Innovations And Operations Set Strong Pace - Underground MiningBy P. J. G. duToit
The continually growing shortage of skilled underground miners, the escalating costs of labor, supplies and equipment, and the indisputable example of "what can be done" by our friends in the space-tr
Jan 2, 1967
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Ottawa Paper - The Wear of Rails as Related to their SectionsBy P. H. Dudley
The present paper was suggested by the paper read by Mr. R. W. Hunt at the New York Meeting, in February last, on rail-sections (Trans., xvii., p. 778)) in the discussion of which I brought forward so
Jan 1, 1890
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Institute of Metals Division - Phase Transformations in Titanium-Rich Alloys of Iron and TitaniumBy J. Gordon Parr, D. H. Polonis
High purity alloys of titanium and iron, made by a technique of levitation melting, have been investigated with particular reference to martensite formation and decomposition in the hypoeutectoid rang
Jan 1, 1955
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Measurement of Pressures Developed during the Carbonization of CoalBy Charles Russell
PRESSURES developed by the coal during the coking process have been responsible for serious trouble to many companies that operate or build by-product coke ovens. The insidious nature of this trouble
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Properties of Coal Which Affect Its Use in the Ceramic Industry (With Discussion)By W. E. Rice
The ceramic industry has to do with forming or molding articles of clay, and imparting to them their characteristic properties of permanence, strength and color by subjecting them to heat treatment in
Jan 1, 1932
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Effect of impregnating Waters on Electrical Conductivity of Soils and RocksBy Karl Sundberg
ELECTRICAL investigations carried out in regions containing sedimen-tary rocks showed that sediments generally are good electrical conductors, a fact which at the present time is used for structural i
Jan 1, 1932
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New York Paper - Crystal Structure of Solid Solutions (with Discussion)By Edgar C. Bain
Of the important phenomenon of the hardening of steel, Professor Sauveurl says: It would seem as if the methods used to date for the elucidation of this complex problem have yielded all they are ca
Jan 1, 1923
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Operating Characteristics Of Centrifugal Fans And Use Of Fan Performance CurveBy Louis Huber
DESPITE the fact that centrifugal fans were first developed for ventilating mines and that artificial ventilation was first practiced in mines, the lack of knowledge of mining men on mine ventilation
Jan 2, 1926
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Institute of Metals Division - A Reinvestigation of the Systems Ti-Cr and Ti-V, Felix ErmanixBy Paul A. Farrar, Felix Ermains, Harold Margolin
The systems Ti-Crand Ti-Vhave been reinvesti-gated in the region up to 40 wt pct alloying addition using both conventional and rapid quenching techniques. The Ti-Cr eutectoid temperature was determin
Jan 1, 1962
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New York Paper - Reaction between Manganese and Iron Sulfide (with Discussion)By O. S. True, C. H. Herty
It is well known that manganese will desulfurize molten iron through the formation of manganese sulfide, which, being only slightly soluble in the metal, rises to and enters the slag where it remains
Jan 1, 1925
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Gas-oil Ratios - Effect of Gas-lift on Gas Factor and on Ultimate Production (with Discussion)By E. O. Bennett
When oil is takcn from a subsurface structure it is generally accompanied by gas. The gas thus produced represents the 1ighter hydrocarbons present in the original petroleurn accurnulation, which arc,
Jan 1, 1928
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New Haven Paper - The Manganese Industry of the Department of Panama, Republic of ColombiaBy E. G. Williams
Manganese-ore has been found upon the Isthmus of Panama throughout' a region of nearly three hundred square miles, over the greater part of which, however, it is known only in small bodies withou
Jan 1, 1903
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Technical Notes - Beaker Flotation as a Quantitative Tool in Flotation TestingBy William Loblowitz
A simplified system of flotation testing has been developed recently at the Bureau of Mineral Research of Rutgers University. The technique involves the known principle of skin flotation and can be us
Jan 1, 1952
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Cast-Iron.Discussion of the paper of J. E. Johnson, Jr., The Effect of High Carbon on the Quality of Charcoal-Iron, presented at the Cleveland meeting, October, 1912, and printed in Bulletin. No. 74, February,
Jan 5, 1913
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New York Paper - Low-temperature Brittleness in Silicon Steels (with Discussion)By Norman B. Pilling
Practical limitations to the usefulness of silicon steels are the hardness and brittleness silicon imparts to iron, making iron-silicon alloys of more than 8 per cent. silicon content unusable except
Jan 1, 1923
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Natural Sodium Carbonate And Sodium SulphateBy Oliver C. Ralston
THE two chemical compounds, natural sodium carbonate and sodium sulphate, in their anhydrous condition are dealt in as "soda ash and "salt cake”-names from an earlier day that are not as precise as th
Jan 1, 1949
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London Meeting - July, 1906Jan 1, 1907
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Conference on Production and Design Limitation and Possibilities for Powder Metallurgy (Metal Technology, January 1945) - Electrical Contacts Manufactured from Metal PowdersBy E. I. Larsen
Powder metallurgy has been described as being "as old as the pyramids and yet as new as the latest bomber." While this may be true literally, it has been only in the last Io or 1 5 years that widespre
Jan 1, 1945
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Least Squares in Practical GeophysicsBy Irwin Roman
PART I. INTRODUCTION THE literature of geophysics as applied to the discovery of mineral deposits has been very extensive during the past few years, but there seem to be few references to the use of
Jan 1, 1931