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Papers - Development With and Against the Pitch at Coal Mines in Southwestern Wyoming (T. P. 1330)By J. E. Wilson, F. P. Lebar
TYPICAL of southwestern Wyoming are coal structures that dip from 4° to 17°. Those at the Reliance and Winton mines of the Union Pacific Coal Co. average 91/2 and 15°, respectively, and dip almost dir
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Development With and Against the Pitch at Coal Mines in Southwestern Wyoming (T. P. 1330)By J. E. Wilson, F. P. Lebar
TYPICAL of southwestern Wyoming are coal structures that dip from 4° to 17°. Those at the Reliance and Winton mines of the Union Pacific Coal Co. average 91/2 and 15°, respectively, and dip almost dir
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Reserves and Mining - Sectionalizing Power Distribution Underground (T.P. 2345, Coal Tech., Feb. 1948)By A. Lee Barrett
Mine power systems are quite different in many respects from those usually found in industrial plants. Wide areas are served, usually by a circuit which is connected continuously throughout the mine.
Jan 1, 1949
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Miscellaneous Metals and Alloys - An Electron Diffraction Study of Oxide Films Formed on Copper-nickel Alloys at Elevated Temperatures (Metals Tech., June, 1948, TP 2391)By E. A. Gulbransen, J. W. Hickman
Recent work by the authors1 on the oxide films formed on alloys of titanium and zirconium with nickel and copper indicated that an investigation of the oxides which form on alloys of copper and nickel
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - Formation of a Dispersion in Copper by Reaction in the Melt (TN)By R. I. Jaffee, J. W. Roberts, D. N. Williams
DISPERSION hardening as an alloying process has aroused increasing interest in the past few years. This alloying procedure, in which an insoluble phase is dispersed randomly through a metal or allo
Jan 1, 1961
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Logging and Log Interpretation - A Graphical Method of Dipmeter Interpretation Using the StereonetBy A. J. de Witte
INTRODUCTION The importance of determining dips of subsurface formations in wells, especially in wildcat wells, is self-evident and need not be enlarged upon. Various dipmeter instruments have b
Jan 1, 1957
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Papers - Mining Engineering Education - Settling Device for Sludge Samples (Mining Technology, Jan. 1943.) (with discussion)By A.A. Gustafson
In diamond or churn drilling for the prospecting of ore bodies, two products can be used for quantitative analyses; i.e., the core and the cuttings, or sludge. Some operators prefer an assay of core;
Jan 1, 1943
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Contents of Volume 150 (Iron and Steel Division)Time as a Factor in the Making and Treating of Steel. By John Johnston. (Howe Lecture) (T.P. 1478) Influence of Chromium and Molybdenum on Structure, Hardness and Decarburization of 0.35 Per Cen
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Mining Engineering Education - Settling Device for Sludge Samples (Mining Technology, Jan. 1943.) (with discussion)By A. A. Gustafson
In diamond or churn drilling for the prospecting of ore bodies, two products can be used for quantitative analyses; i.e., the core and the cuttings, or sludge. Some operators prefer an assay of core;
Jan 1, 1943
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Technical Notes - Structure of Some Iridium-Osmium AlloysBy E. Maxwell, C. J. Bechtoldt, H. C. Vacher
IN the course of an investigation of the properties of metals at low temperature there was occasion to determine the constitution of four iridium-osmium alloys. There is very little information in the
Jan 1, 1955
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Contents of Volume 150 (Iron and Steel Division)Time as a Factor in the Making and Treating of Steel. By John Johnston. (Howe Lecture) (T.P. 1478) Influence of Chromium and Molybdenum on Structure, Hardness and Decarburization of 0.35 Per Cen
Jan 1, 1942
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PART V - Impurity Substructures and Solute Distributions in Dilute Alloys of Silver in TinBy K. G. Davis
Dilute alloys of silzer in tilz haz been solidzjzed a1 controlled rules, in lzorizontal tubes 2 mrz and 0.5 rn in diam. Radioactive; tracer techniques we?-e used to study solute distvihutions along ll
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - Deformation Resulting from Grain Boundary SlidingBy N. J. Grant, H. Brunner
This paber is concerned with the determination of equations relating elongation to the amount of shear taking place both along grain boundaries and in slip planes of poly crystalline aggregates during
Jan 1, 1960
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Minerals Beneficiation - Fracture and Comminution of Brittle SolidsBy J. J. Gilvarry, B. H. Bergstorm
The first part of this paper describes a new approach to the problem of energy relationships in fracture and comminution. The basic theoretical method used (as contrasted to previous empirical or sem
Jan 1, 1961
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PART V - Papers - The Significance of Average Mean Curvature and Its Determination By Quantitative MetallographyBy John W. Cahn
Tile avevage value of the mean curvature of surfaces in a specimen can be precisely delermined by sitrlple measurements performed on random sections or on 1 vojectiotzs of these surfaces. For surjaces
Jan 1, 1968
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Part VII - An Experimental Determination of the Yield Locus for Titanium and Titanium-Alloy SheetBy W. A. Backofen, D. Lee
Titanium of commercial purity (RC-70) and two all-a (hcp) alloys (4Al-1/4O2 and 5Al-2.5Sn) were tested in sheet form under conditions of combined-stress loading. Plane-strain compression and plane -st
Jan 1, 1967
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Part XI - Papers - A Study of Grain Growth in FeCo-VBy N. S. Stoloff, R. G. Davies
The annealing behavior of a heavily cold-worked FeCo-V alloy has been studied at temperatures both above and below Tc, the critical temperature for ordering. It was found that re crystallization and g
Jan 1, 1967
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Natural Gas Technology - The Design of Hydrocarbon Recovery Units Using Solid AdsorbentsBy R. E. Holmes, T. W. Leland
The solution to the unsteady-state mass- and heat-transfer equations describing the adsorption of a dilute component from a gas stream flowing through a packed bed is readily applicable to the design
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Reservoir Rock Characteristics - Additional Thermal Data for Porous Rocks–Thermal Expansion and Heat of ReactionBy M. A. Selim, W. H. Somerton
Thermal expansions and heats of reaction of three typical sandstones were measured in the temperature range of 25°to 1,000°C. The significance of these data in subsurface heat-transfer calculations is
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Metallurgical Structure on the Tensile and Notch-Tensile Properties of Molybdenum and Mo-0.5 TiBy J. W. Spretnak, H. R. Ogden, A. G. Imgram
The effect of working reduction, stress-relief annealing, and recrystallized grain size on the tensile and notch-tensile properties of molybdenum and Mo-0.5 Ti was studied. It was found that increasin
Jan 1, 1964