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Technical Papers and Discussions - Steelmaking - Origin of Silicate Inclusions in Basic Electric-arc-furnace Steel of Higher Carbon Contents (Metals Tech., August 1948, T.P. 2418)By Axel Hultgren
In ingots of silicon-killed carbon steel-made without addition of aluminum, transparent spherical or nearly spherical inclusions, up to about 0.15-mm diameter, are generally present. They may be glass
Jan 1, 1949
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Physical Metallurgy - Electron Metallographic Methods and Some Results for Magnesium Alloys (Metals Tech., Apr. 1946, T. P. 1979)By R. D. Heidenreich, R. E. McNulty, C. H. Gerould
Jan 1, 1946
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Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Conduction Heating of Formations With Limited Permeability by Condensing GasesBy H. A. Lesser, H. L. Stone, G. H. Bruce
ESSO PRODUCTION RESEARCH CO., HOUSTON, TEX. A mathematical model that represents the conduction heating of a rock formation of limited permeability is formulated. Heat is introduced by the injectio
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - Tungsten Oxidation Kinetics at High TemperaturesBy R. W. Bartlett
The rates of oxidation of tungsten have been determined at temperatures between 1320" and 3170°C and oxygen pressures to 1 amn using a surface -recession measurement technique. Above approximately 200
Jan 1, 1964
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Certain Wettability Effects in Laboratory WaterfloodsBy N. Mungan
Laboratory imbibition and displacement experiments were performed using crude oil and cores drilled with water and preserved under anaerobic conditions. The purpose of these tests was to determine res
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Rock Characteristics - The Instability of Slow, Immiscible, Viscous Liquid-Liquid Displ...By W. van der Knapp
A theoretical and experimental ana1ysis is given of the change in volume of a porous medium due to changes in external and internal pressures. The result enable one to deduce directly the effect of la
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Drilling – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Laboratory Study of Effect of Overburden, Formation...By R. J. Blackwell, J. R. Rayne, W. M. Terry
This paper presents results of an experimental investigation of factors that control the efficiency with which oil is displaced from porous media by a miscible fluid. The study was made to elucidate t
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PART VI - On the Thermodynamic Properties of the Tellurides of Cadmium, Indium, Tin, and LeadBy P. M. Robinson, M. B. Bever
The heats oj formation at 273°K of the compounds CdTe, I)z2Te, InTe, In2Te3. In2Te5, SrzTe, and PbTe have been rleasrred in a liquid metal solutiotz caloritrete? 1.t1itlz bismuth as solvent. The?, are
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Variations in Nitrogen and Manganese Content on the Structure and High-Temperature Properties of Cast X-40 AlloyBy A. R. Elsea, E. E. Fletcher
Cast X-40 alloy with the lowest nitrogen content studied had a 100-hr rupture stress at 1500°F about equal to the reported value for the commercial alloy. Increases in nitrogen content progressively d
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Study of Fibrous Tungsten and IronBy David A. Thomas, John F. Peck
Fibrous microstructures and their development have been studied by metallography and by hardness and quantitative metallographic measurements. Thin, curved grains were observed in transverse sections
Jan 1, 1962
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Part X - Dislocation Mechanisms for Plastic Flow in an Iron-Manganese Alloy at Low TemperaturesBy P. Wynblatt, J. E. Dorn
The effect of strain rate, temperature, and interstitial impurity concentration on the flow stress was investigated in a poly crystalline Fe-2 pct Mn alloy. The temperature dependence of the flow stre
Jan 1, 1967
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Part VIII - Papers - Tensile and Creep Properties of Single Crystals of the Nickel-Base Superalloy Mar-M200By B. H. Kear, B. J. Piearcey
The orientation and temperature dependence of the tensile and creep propevties oj Mav-M200 crystals halle been determined. Crystals oriented for single slip exhibit ,maximum ductility, minimum work ha
Jan 1, 1968
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Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Chemical Composition on the Rupture Properties at 1200°F of Wrought Cr-Ni-Co-Fe-Mo-W-Cb AlloysBy J. W. Freeman, E. E. Reynolds, A. E. White
Fram a study of 63 systematic alloy modifications it was found that molybdenum, tungsten, and columbium, added individually or simultaneously, and increases in chromium cause major improvements in 120
Jan 1, 1953
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Part VII - Creep Mechanisms in Alpha IronBy Yoichi Ishida, Ching-Yao Cheng, John E. Dorn
Tile creep behavior of a iron was investigated over the range of temperatures from 375° to 1150°K. Apparent activation energies for creep, obtained by the effect of sudden changes in temperature on th
Jan 1, 1967
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Part II – February 1969 - Papers - Omega Transformation In Zirconium AlloysBy K. Tangri, M. Chaturvedi
On water-quenching from within the (a + ß) phase region Zr-2.5 Nb and Zr-2.5 Nb-0.5 Cu alloys can undergo w transfirmation. This transformation has been attributed to the enrichment of ß Zr phase, at
Jan 1, 1970
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Papers - Kinetics of Transformation of Metastable Silver-Copper Solid Solutions Quenched from the Liquid StateBy Ronald K. Linde
Metastable Ag-Cu solid solutions at two compositions beyond the maximum limits of solubility obtainable by quenching from the solid state were obtained by rapid quenching from the liquid state. The pr
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - High-Temperature Creep of TantalumBy W. V. Green
Creep of tantalum was measured at temperatures from 0.6 to 0.89 of the absolute melting temperature. The creep curves include first, second, and third stages. Steady-state creep rate depends on the fo
Jan 1, 1965
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Joint Discussion on Aluminum and MagnesiumG. R. GOHN. l-1n Table I11 of The Sager, Brown, and Mears paper, which was presented on the screen, data were given showing the results of accelerated corrosion tests of certain magnesium alloys. Ment
Jan 1, 1945
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Institute of Metals Division - The Observation of Dislocations and Other Imperfections by X-Ray Extinction ContrastBy J. B. Newkirk
ABOUT twenty-seven years ago W. bergl discovered that interesting detail could be seen in an X-ray diffraction spot made with a rock-salt crystal if the recording photographic film were held very clos
Jan 1, 1960