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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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Papers - Metal Testing and Technology - Effect of Small Percentages of Certain Metals upon the Compressibility of Lead at an Elevated TemperatureBy Lyall Zickrick
Numerous brands of virgin pig lead are used in the manufacture of lead and lead-alloy cable sheath for commercial cables. In changing from one brand of pig lead to another a readjustment of press oper
Jan 1, 1932
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Part II - Papers - The Association Between Crack-Opening Displacement and Fracture ToughnessBy J. L. Swedlow, M. L. Williams
Two standard techniques for assessing fracture initiatlon in sheet specimens involve measurements of 1) the applied load of fracture which, via linear fuacture mechanics, is used to find the fractu
Jan 1, 1968
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Electric Blasting Practices Of The Tennessee Copper CompanyBy R. G. Clay, C. F. Seaman
THE mines of The Tennessee Copper Co. are in the Ducktown Basin, in southeastern Tennessee. The ore is a heavy sulphide consisting principally of chalcopyrite, pyrite and pyrrhotite and in places runn
Jan 1, 1942
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Iron and Steel Division - Solubility of Oxygen in Liquid Iron Containing Silicon and ManganeseBy D. C. Hilty, W. Crafts
Determination of the solubility of oxygen in iron containing silicon, or manganese, or both, has confirmed the earlier work on silicon, shown that manganese is more effective than expected, and has de
Jan 1, 1951
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Coal - A Thermal Dryer for Fine CoalBy W. E. Bearce
The recent concern for the recovery of even the finest fractions of coal preparation plant feeds has created needs for new equipment. Thermal dryers currently available have difficulty reducing the fi
Jan 1, 1968
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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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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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Diffusion Experiments On A Gold-Silver Alloy By Chemical And Radioactive Tracer MethodsBy William A. Johnson
IT was pointed out in an earlier paper1 that our understanding of the atomic mechanism by which diffusion occurs in metallic alloys is scarcely in an advanced state. This unsatisfactory condition is t
Jan 1, 1942
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Discussion of Papers Published Prior to September 1963 - Grinding Iron Ore in a Wet Autogenous MillBy R. C. Ferguson, B. Bernstrom
R.C. Ferguson (District Manager, Hardinge Company Inc., Hibbing, Minn.) — In the opening paragraph of Mr. Bernstrom's paper he stated that the Cascade mill performance information is preliminary.
Jan 1, 1963
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Developments in the Carbonate Processing of Uranium OresBy F. A. Forward, J. Halpern
A new process for extracting uranium from ores with carbonate solutions is described. Leaching is carried out under oxygen pressure to ensure that all the uranium is converted to the soluble hexavalen
Jan 1, 1955
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Canadian Paper - Porcupine Ore Deposits (with Discussion)By Louis D. Huntoon
The Porcupine gold area, located on the Hudson Bay slope of northern Ontario, has produced over $100,000,000 in gold and has paid more than $28,000,000 in dividends, since the first real production in
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Porcupine Ore Deposits (with Discussion)By Louis D. Huntoon
The Porcupine gold area, located on the Hudson Bay slope of northern Ontario, has produced over $100,000,000 in gold and has paid more than $28,000,000 in dividends, since the first real production in
Jan 1, 1923
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Estimation Of Support Load Requirements For Underground Mine Openings By Computer Simulation Of The Mining SequenceBy William G. Pariseau
A design procedure for the quantitative estimation of support load requirements in underground mines is presented. The central problem in the design of mine support is one of es¬timating a maximum loa
Jan 1, 1978
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Oxides in BrassBy O. W. Ellis
IN VIEW of the extensive use of the brasses and bronzes in engineering practice it is indeed surprising that so little scientific work has been done on the oxides in these alloys. Recognition of the i
Jan 1, 1930
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Reservoir Engineering Equipment - Constant-Pressure Gas PorosimeterBy A. H. Heim
A method and apparatus for measuring gas porosities of rocks are described. The apparatus can be assembled from commercially available components. In principle, measurements are made by volume substit
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Scranton Paper - Mining Developments on the North-western Pacific Coast and their Wider BearingBy Amos Bowman
In the last two years I have had an opportunity to study the conditions of gold-mining in the far northwest of the Pacific coast —in Cariboo district, British Columbia. That country joins Alaska
Jan 1, 1887
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Underground Mining Trends In The Great Swedish Export Iron Ore MinesBy Borje Hjortzberg-Nordlund
THE great Swedish export iron ore mines are Kiruna and Malmberget in the north above the Arctic circle and Grängesberg in Central Sweden, see Figs. 1 to 3. These mines exported in 1951 about 13 millio
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - Internal Stresses in Quenched Aluminum and Some Aluminum Alloys (With Discussion)By H. L. Hopkins, OHIO, L. W. Kemph, CLEVEL AND, E. V. Ivanso
A balanced system of internal stress is set up in any metallic structure by plastic deformation below the annealing temperature. The internaI stress induced by cold rolling or other fabricating proces
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - Mining - Breaking Coal with Cardox in the Pittsburgh Seam (With discussion)By E. C. Skinner
Cardox, which consists essentially of a steel tube containing carbon dioxide compressed to the liquid state, is a trade name designating a device used principally in coal mines to break down coal.
Jan 1, 1944