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Ottawa Paper - Proposed Method for Working TulluridesBy Frank Clemens Smith
The occurrence of the tellurides of gold and silver, even in small quantities, is so rare that their metallurgical treatment has engaged little attention. A residence of several months at one of the f
Jan 1, 1890
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Long Raises Save Money At Homestake - Costs Per Foot Are Higher, But Miles Of Drifting Are Eliminated.By C. N. Kravig
STANDARD raises at Homestake are 150 ft long. Raises of more than 150 ft, driven with the use of a cage and hoist, are considered long raises- some have been driven more than 900 ft. Long raises have
Jan 6, 1957
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Geophysicists, as Usual, Find Material for DiscussionBy Sherwin F. Kelly
THOUGH the Geophysics Commit- tee limited itself to two sessions this year, both of them marked by a high percentage of absentee authors, even this situation failed to dampen the and or of the ebullie
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals Division - Grain Boundary and General Corrosion of High-Purity Aluminum in Hydrochloric AcidBy O. P. Arora, M. Metzger, G. R. Ramagopal
The rates of grain boundary and general corrosion were surveyed by an approximate method. Quantitative differences between their variations with the strength or cupric ion content of the acid yielded
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - The Texture and Mechanical Properties of Iron Wire Recrystallized in a Magnetic FieldBy Vittal S. Bhandary, B. D. Cullity
Swaged iron wire has a cylindrical {001} <110> texture. The texture is also cylindrical after re-crystallization in the absence of a magnetic field, but <111> and <112> components are added to this te
Jan 1, 1962
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Tensile Properties of Rolled Magnesium Alloys-Binary Alloys with Calcium, Cerium, Gallium, and ThoriumBy John McDonald
THIS report is a continuation of an earlier one with a similar title,1 to which the reader is referred for such details of procedure as do not appear here. A brief summary will be given of the objects
Jan 1, 1940
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Vacuum-Fused -Iron With Specia1 Reference To Effect Of SiliconBy T. D. Yensen
I. INTRODUCTION IT is safe to say that of all the different materials that go to make up electrical machinery, iron is the most important. Upon its -magnetic and electrical quality depends not only t
Jan 2, 1916
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New Haven Paper - Ore-Deposition and Vein-Enrichment by Ascending Hot WatersBy Walter Harvey Weed
The enrichment of mineral-veins as a result of the migration of material from an upper oxidized or disintegrated part of a vein to a lower level, where it is redeposited, is now, I believe, quite gene
Jan 1, 1903
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Part IX – September 1968 - Papers - The Growth of Cementite Particles in FerriteBy G. P. Airey, R. F. Mehl, T. A. Hughes
The coarsening of cementite particles in a ferrite matrix has been studied in a series of steels with 0.15 pct C only and 0.15 pct C plus 1 pct Ni, Mn, and Cr, respectively. Two initial states were
Jan 1, 1969
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - Pore Volume Compressibilities of Sandstone Reservoir RocksBy I. Fatt
The chromalographic effect refers to the separation of constituents in a moving fluid phase which occurs when the phase is passed over a stationary phase, either solid or liquid, or large areal extent
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Papers - X-ray Study of the Solid Solubility of Lead, Bismuth and Gold in Magnesium (T.P. 1248, with discussion)By Frank Foote, E. R. Jette
Precision lattice-constant measurements have been widely used in the study of cubic solid solutions but as yet have been rarely applied to noncubic solid solutions. (See, however, references I and 2.)
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - X-ray Study of the Solid Solubility of Lead, Bismuth and Gold in Magnesium (T.P. 1248, with discussion)By Frank Foote, E. R. Jette
Precision lattice-constant measurements have been widely used in the study of cubic solid solutions but as yet have been rarely applied to noncubic solid solutions. (See, however, references I and 2.)
Jan 1, 1941
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum and Gas in AustraliaBy Arthur Wade
During the year 1938, there was some drilling in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria, as follows: Queens1and.—At Hutton Creek, lat. (approx.) 25° 45' S.; long (approx.) 149°, drilling was
Jan 1, 1939
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum and Gas in AustraliaBy Arthur Wade
During the year 1938, there was some drilling in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria, as follows: Queens1and.—At Hutton Creek, lat. (approx.) 25° 45' S.; long (approx.) 149°, drilling was
Jan 1, 1939
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Part IV – April 1968 - Communications - Sulfur Diffusion Through Cr2O3 at 1000°CBy A. U. Seybolt
DURING the course of an investigation of hot corrosion of nickel-base superalloys (combination oxidation-sulfidation attack at high temperature), it was considered possible that sulfur might gain entr
Jan 1, 1969
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Boston Paper - Block Tin Resulting from Distillation of n Tin AmalgamBy Robert H. Richards
In the latter part of December a batch of amalgam was retorted and the tin in the retort uncovered while at a low red heat, and allowed to cool slowly to a temperature more suitable for ladling into m
Jan 1, 1883
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Institute of Metals Division - Quantitative Addition and Recovery of Oxygen Isotopes in Niobium (Columbium)By D. H. Shaffer, W. F. Harris, W. M. Hickam, M. H. Loeffler
Experiments have been performed on the quantitative addition to niobium of enriched isotopes 018 and 017 at the 0.1 - 40 micro-gram level and their subsequent recovery. A measured quantity of molecula
Jan 1, 1961
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Properties Of Steel As Influenced By Constitution (5c424cf2-53d1-4d14-9611-17d6a68366c5)THE primary interest in the subject of this chapter lies in the fact that various heats of steel made to the same chemical specification do not always have the same properties. The properties consider
Jan 1, 1964
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Part X – October 1968 - Papers - Pearlite Morphology in Three Low-Carbon SteelsBy G. Birkbeck, T. C. Wells
Pearlite morphology in three commercially produced, low-carbon steels has been studied using optical and electron microscopy. A reduction in the cooling rate from 600° to 6°C per hr increased the inte
Jan 1, 1969
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Kinetics of Magnetite in Hydrogen at High PressuresBy W. M. McKewan
Magnetite pellets were reduced in flowing hydrogen at pressures up to 40 atm over a temperature range of 350° to 500°C. The rate of weight loss of oxygen per unit area of the reaction surface was foun
Jan 1, 1962