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Coal Dock Operations of the North Western-Hanna Fuel Company at the Head of the LakesBy J. T. Crawford
ALTHOUGH nearly 10 pct of the total tonnage of coal produced annually within the United States is handled by bulk freighters on the Great Lakes, very little of the detail connected with it has been pu
Jan 1, 1948
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The Influence on Quality of Cast Iron Exerted by Oxygen, Nitrogen, and Some Other ElementsBy J. E. Johnson
At the Cleveland meeting of the Institute in October, 1912, I had the honor to present a paper outlining the conditions surrounding the charcoal iron industry…
Jan 1, 1915
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Tariffs And Exhaustible ResourcesBy J. W. Furness
Before attempting any discussion of the importance of tariff enactments as applied to exhaustible resources, certain basic factors should be emphasized. First, it must be remembered that minerals diff
Jan 1, 1932
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Geotechnical Investigations and Appraisal of Ground Control Practice for Roof Support DesignBy Barrie T. Wells, Raghu N. Singh, Paul S. Buddery
Rockbolting and dowelling are important methods of ground control. Their effectiveness depends upon the compatibility of the support members and the geotechnical behaviour of the rock mass. Detailed g
Jan 1, 1983
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Progress Notes on the Iron-silicon Equilibrium DiagramBy Bradley Stoughton
As a part of the systematic study of the alloys of iron under the auspices of the Engineering Foundation, and preliminary to the commencement of comprehensive work on this larger subject, the authors
Jan 1, 1930
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Part XII – December 1969 – Papers - The Strain Aging of Iron Under StressBy E. A. Almond
An attempt is made to explain the effect of stress on strain aging by examining the mechanism of yielding for a group of aged dislocations. The experimental results on which the theory is based indica
Jan 1, 1970
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Cementing Techniques For Solution Mining Wells And Salt Storage Domes: The State-Of-The-ArtBy Charles George, Ronald Faul
The cementing process has been used in approximately 2.5 million oil and gas wells to seal, protect and isolate various downhole formations against communication. It has been adapted to other more spe
Jan 1, 1985
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Solid-Solution Alloying on the Creep-Rupture Strength of Alpha and Beta TitaniumBy L. S. Richardson, N. J. Grant
Iodide-grade titanium, two oxygen alloys, and two aluminum alloys were studied by means of creep-rupture tests from 1000° to 2000°F. From the test information an evaluation was made of, 1) the relat
Jan 1, 1960
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Stress-Corrosion Cracking Of 70-30 Brass By AminesBy H. Rosenthal, A. L. Jamieson
THE action of mercury on stressed brass to produce cracks was known before Moore, Beckinsale and Mallinson1 showed that actual season cracking did not occur spontaneously but could be induced by ammon
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect on Fatigue of Gaseous Environments under Varying Temperature and PressureBy H. H. Smith, G. J. Danek, M. R. Achter
Nickel, Type 316 stainless steel, and copper show decreases in reversed bending fatigue strength with increases in air and oxygen pressure. The leveling off of the log N us log p curve for nickel at
Jan 1, 1963
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The Spectroscopic Determination Of Lead In CopperBy C. W. Hill
IN a previous article preliminary experiments were described, indicating the possibilities of a quantitative spectroscopic method for the determination of small amounts of lead in copper, which would
Jan 10, 1918
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Institute of Metals Division - Hydrogen Embrittlement of Beta-Stabilized Titanium AlloysBy R. I. Jaffee, C. M. Craighead, G. A. Lenning
The a-p type alloys are subject to a loss of tensile ductility with increasing hydrogen content. No hydride phase is visible in embrittled a-B type alloys. The embrittlement encountered appeared to be
Jan 1, 1957
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PART V - Communications - Martensitic Transformations in Iron-Iridium AlloysBy C. M. Wayman, M. Miyagi
COMPARED to many of the binary alloys of iron, Fe-Ir alloys have received very little tud.'' Virtually nothing is known about the Fe-Ir equilibrium diagram' except for a few details con
Jan 1, 1967
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Part III – March 1969 - Papers- Effects of Substrate Misorientation in Epitaxial GaAsBy A. E. Blakeslee
Morphological and electrical properties of GaAs epitaxial layers are influenced not only by changes in the nominal substrate orientation but also by small amounts of misorientation from the exact crys
Jan 1, 1970
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PART II - Papers - A Classical Model of Solid Solutions Based on Nearest-Neighbor Interactions Which Involve Both Central and Linked-Central ForcesBy Eugene S. Machlin
A classical theory of solid solutions involving neavest-nergkbor intevactions with both central and linked-central forces between atoms has been developed. It has been found that the theory, where it
Jan 1, 1967
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Biological Treatment Of Cyanidation Waste WatersBy J. L. Whitlock
An attached growth aerobic biological treatment process has been developed at Homestake Mining Co.'s Lead operation which not only oxidizes free and complexed cyanides, including the stable iron
Jan 1, 1985
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Institute of Metals Division - The Uranium-Silicon Epsilon PhaseBy S. Isserow
RECENTLY, a description of the wartime work in this laboratory on the U-Si phase diagram was published. This diagram was available earlier in the open literature; as were Zachariasen's crystal st
Jan 1, 1958
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Institute of Metals Division - Secondary Recrystallization Kinetics in Singly Oriented Silicon IronBy T. V. Philip, R. E. Lenhart
When commercial silicon iron sheets of varying magnetic quality are isothermally annealed at high temperatures, extremely large grains develop in the material having good magnetic properties. These g
Jan 1, 1962
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Part X - Temperature Dependence of the Elastic Stiffness Coefficients of Niobium(Columbium)By Harry L. Brown, James M. Dickinson, Philip E. Armstrong
The elastic stiffness coefficients of niobium have been rneaslrred from -150°C to over 650 C and ave in accord with the anomalous temperature dependence previously observed for Young's modulus. T
Jan 1, 1967
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Iron and Steel Division - The Reduction of Silica in Blast-Furnace Slag-Metal SystemsBy John F. Elliott, John R. Rawling
The rate of reduction of silica to silicon by carbon at 1550° to 1700°C in iron blast-furnace type slag-metal systems has been investigated. In the tower portion of the temperature range oxygen transp
Jan 1, 1965