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St. Louis Paper - Oxide of Zinc (with Discussion)By G. C. Stone
The method of making oxide of zinc direct from the ore was invented and developed at the works of The New Jersey Zinc Co. at Newark in the middle of the last century. The process was invented by Burro
Jan 1, 1918
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Papers - Engineering Research - Volumetric Behavior of Oil and Gas from the Rio Bravo Field (T.P. 1251, with discussion)By H. H. Reamer, B. H. Sage
Attempts have been made to predict the volumetric and phase behavior of naturally occurring hydrocarbon mix-turesl-6 but these methods have not been extended to the higher pressures and tem-peratures
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Evolution of Gases from Rimming-steel Ingots (T .P. 942, with discussion)By K. C. McCutcheon, John Chipman
To a very large extent the quality of a mild steel ingot is determined by the manner in which it is poured into the ingot mold and its behavior during the first few minutes after it has been poured. T
Jan 1, 1938
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Industrial Minerals - Comparative Furnace Designs for the Expansion of PerliteBy Herbert A. Stein, John B. Murdock
AN analysis of perlite expansion furnaces must be based upon one consistent theory which explains how and why perlite does expand when heated. There is more than one such theory, so to establish a bas
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Pitot-tube Field Tests of Axial-flow Mine Fans ( T. P. 1425, with discussion)By Raymond Mancha
A test of any fan requires the determination of such data as fan pressure, air volume handled by the fan, and power input to the fen shaft. When testing operating mine fans of the centrifugal type,
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Ventilation at Mines of the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, Inc. (T. P. 1461, with discussion)By A. T. Beckwith
The Lehigh Navigation Coal Company Inc. operates steep-pitch, relatively deep mines in the Panther Creek Valley, at the eastern end of the southern anthracite coal field. Commercially minable coal bed
Jan 1, 1942
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RefractoriesBy James A. Crookston, William D. Fitzpatrick
Committee C-8 of the American Society for Testing and Materials defines "Refractories" as "Material, usually nonmetallic, used to withstand high temperature," and it defines the term "Refractoriness"
Jan 1, 1975
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Experimental Blast-furnace OperationTHE Johnson award for 1926 was given to T. L. Joseph for his experimental work on blast-furnace operation. When the Bureau of Mines undertook its experimental blast-furnace investigation in 1919, a nu
Jan 3, 1927
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Philadelphia Paper - Coal WashingBy S. Stutz
Coal, like most other minerals, only exceptionally occurs in a sufficiently pare state to he directly available for general manufacturing purposes. And even where this is the case, the small coal or s
Jan 1, 1881
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Industrial Minerals - Comparative Furnace Designs for the Expansion of PerliteBy Herbert A. Stein, John B. Murdock
AN analysis of perlite expansion furnaces must be based upon one consistent theory which explains how and why perlite does expand when heated. There is more than one such theory, so to establish a bas
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Engineering Research - Volumetric Behavior of Oil and Gas from the Rio Bravo Field (T.P. 1251, with discussion)By H. H. Reamer, B. H. Sage
Attempts have been made to predict the volumetric and phase behavior of naturally occurring hydrocarbon mix-turesl-6 but these methods have not been extended to the higher pressures and tem-peratures
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - - Use of Metals in the Petroleum Industry - Economical Selection of Sucker Rods (With Discussion)By C. Norman Bowers, Blaine B. Wescott
Marked improvement in the serviceability of sucker rods has been effected in the last two years, partly because of the insistent necessity for greater economy in the operating costs of crude oil produ
Jan 1, 1935
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Amenia Paper - The Manhattan Salt Mine, at Goderich, CanadaBy Oswald J. Heinrich
The deposit of rock salt along the shores of Lake Huron, in Canada, has been brought before the public during the last six months, in consequence of the developments made by the diamond drill at Goder
Jan 1, 1879
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Some Questions On Interrelated Processes Going On In The Blast FurnaceBy B. M. Larsen
IN spite of the great amount of operating experience and of studies directed toward elucidation of the interrelation of the several processes going on in the blast furnace, the present picture of its
Jan 1, 1947
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Porphyry Molybdenum Deposits Of The North American CordilleraINTRODUCTION Within the past few years Clark (1972), King (1970), and King, et al. (1973), have summarized porphyry molybdenum occurrences. Clark (1972) includes as porphyry or stockwork deposits so
Jan 1, 1978
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Papers - Ventilation at Mines of the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, Inc. (T. P. 1461, with discussion)By A. T. Beckwith
The Lehigh Navigation Coal Company Inc. operates steep-pitch, relatively deep mines in the Panther Creek Valley, at the eastern end of the southern anthracite coal field. Commercially minable coal bed
Jan 1, 1942
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Equilibria Of Liquid Iron And Slags Of The System CaO-MgO-FeO-SiO2By John Chipman, Karl L. Fetters
Tax relationship between the composition of the slag and that of the underlying metal during the refining of a heat of liquid steel may best be studied in the light of the two broad physicochemical co
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Pitot-tube Field Tests of Axial-flow Mine Fans ( T. P. 1425, with discussion)By Raymond Mancha
A test of any fan requires the determination of such data as fan pressure, air volume handled by the fan, and power input to the fen shaft. When testing operating mine fans of the centrifugal type,
Jan 1, 1942
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Effect Of Cold-Work Upon Electrical Conductivity Of Copper AlloysBy D. K. Crampton, H. l. Burghoff, J. T. Stacy
THE effect of cold-working upon electrical conductivity of copper and of copper alloys appears not to be generally known in detail Although several papers on the subject have been presented, showing v
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Evolution of Gases from Rimming-steel Ingots (T .P. 942, with discussion)By John Chipman, K. C. McCutcheon
To a very large extent the quality of a mild steel ingot is determined by the manner in which it is poured into the ingot mold and its behavior during the first few minutes after it has been poured. T
Jan 1, 1938