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Prospecting For Expansible ShaleBy John L. Burnett
Manufacture of lightweight concrete aggregate from common shale is one of the most rapidly growing industries in the field of nonmetallic or industrial minerals. Although expanded shale" has been in u
Jan 1, 1964
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Influence Of Failed Rock Properties On Tunnel StabilityBy J. J. K. Daemen, C. Fairhurst
Introduction The stress field around a supported tunnel can be considered as being composed of: i) the virgin (pre-mining) stress in the rock ii) the (elastic) change in this stress field caus
Jan 1, 1971
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Observations and Analysis of Rock Deformation Around Some Open StopesBy S. M. Matthews, D. J. Maconochie, L. G. Alexander, V. H. Tillmann
Case studies of the behaviour of large open stopes at the New Broken Hill Consolidated Mine, Broken Hill and the CSA Mine, Cobar, N.S.W. are considered. Deformations were measured by multipoint ro
Jan 1, 1981
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Determining Ventilation Requirements For Continuous MinersBy Howard L. Hartman
There is reason to believe that ventilation systems so far devised for use with continuous mining machines fall far short of success. This is vividly demonstrated to anyone who has observed in a conti
Jan 3, 1962
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Dry ConcentrationBy Kenneth K. Humphreys, Joseph W. Leonard, Robert L. Llewellyn, William F. Lawrence
INTRODUCTION Cleaning fine coal sizes utilizing air currents in machines as the primary separating medium is called dry concentration or pneumatic cleaning. In 1947 approximately 18 million tons (
Jan 1, 1979
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Annual Review – Beneficiation Moves ForwardBy Stanley D. Michaelson, Norman Weiss
This was a year of realization. Some years are for planning and development, some for designing and building, others for fulfillment. With greater hopes and plans for the future than ever before, the
Jan 3, 1955
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Institute of Metals Division - Plastic Deformation of Silver and Silver-Gold Alloy Single CrystalsBy B. Ramaswami, U. F. Kocks, B. Chalmers
This paper describes the tempetrature, solute (gold), and orientalion dependence of the plastic rleforlirnlion of silver single crystals. The virgin flow stress, To, and its temperatutre dependence in
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - The Polyform Hysteresis Loops of Thin-Gage High Cobalt-Iron Alloys (TN)By H. L. B. Gould, Jr. Wenny D. H.
TO date there has been but limited interest in alloys of 80 to 95 pct Co and Fe with or without other additions. In 1932, S. R. Williams' reported practically zero magnetostriction for the 90 pct
Jan 1, 1965
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Reservoir Engineering–General - A Simple Method for Correcting Spot Pressure ReadingsBy F. Brons, W. C. Miller
Pressure information for use in material-balance calculations is obtained, where possible, from pressure build-up surveys in shut-in wells. Using proper extrapolation methods, static pressures are obt
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Institute of Metals Division - The Intermittent Oxidation of Some Nickel-Chromium Base AlloysBy B. Lustman
IT has been known for a number of years that the addition of certain alkaline-earth and rare-earth metals to nickel-chromium base electric resistance alloys causes marked increase in their oxidation r
Jan 1, 1951
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Institute of Metals Division - The Application of Ultrasonic Energy to Ingot Solidification. II.By W. A. Tiller, D. H. Lane
A simple zone melting technique for investigating the effect of ultrasonic irradiation upon ingot solidification is described. The effect of i) ultrasonic power level, ii) freezing velocity, iii) cons
Jan 1, 1961
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Compressibility of Undersaturated Hydrocarbon Reservoir FluidsBy Albert S. Trube
Increasing emphasis is being placed on the necessity for obtaining reasonably accurate estimates of the physical properties of reservoir fluids well in advance of more accurate laboratory data. One su
Jan 1, 1958
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Combustion-Drive TestsBy W. E. Showalter
This paper discusses some of the results of combstion-drive tests which were made in a test cell using a sand bed 10 in. in diameter x 10-ft long. The test method is illustrated and described. The
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Natural Gas Technology - Equilibrium Constants for a Gas-Condensate SystemBy J. S. Crump, C. R. Hocott, A. E. Hoffman
Planning of the efficient operation of a gas-condensate reservoir requires a knowledge not only of the gross phase behavior of the system but also of the equilibrium distribution of the various compon
Jan 1, 1953
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Sulfur And PyritesBy R. D. Mollison, C. F. Fogarty
Sulfur is widely distributed in nature. It is present in the earth's crust, the ocean, the meteorites that come to us from cosmic space and in practically all animal and plant life. According to
Jan 1, 1960
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Iron and Steel Division - The Reduction of the Iron Values of nmenite to Metallic Iron at Less than Slagging TemperaturesBy H. W. Hockin, D. r. Brandt, R. H. Walsh, P. L. Dietz, P. R. Girardot
New Jersey, Florida, and Canadian ilmenites were reduced with hydrogen or coke under various experimental conditions and the phase changes occurring in the ilmenite upon reduction have been studied by
Jan 1, 1961
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Institute of Metals Division - Short-Time Creep-Rupture Behavior of Molybdenum at High TemperaturesBy M. C. Smith, W. V. Green, D. M. Olsen
The creep-rupture behavior of commercial powder-metallurgy molybdenum rod is reported in the temperature range 1600" to 250O°C, at stresses up to 9000 psi and times up to 1 month. The effects of tempe
Jan 1, 1960
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Reverberatory Furnace Practice at NorandaBy J. N. Anderson
Developments in reverberatory furnace practice at Noranda over the period 1928 to 1953 are described. Features of interest are increasing furnace tonnage from 700 to 2000 tons per furnace day, the use
Jan 1, 1955
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Secondary Recovery - Carbon Dioxide Solvent Flooding for Increased Oil RecoveryBy J. L. Fitch, B. G. Hurd
The presence of gypsum in samples subjected to standard core analysis introduces serious errors in the measurement of water saturation and porosity. The magnitude of these errors, depending upon the t
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Papers - Finite Plastic Deformation Due to Crystallographic SlipBy R. N. Thurston, E. A. Nesbitt, G. Y. Chin
A general relalionship between the amount of glide shear (due to slip) and the macroscopic shape change has been developed. Since the deformation can be large, finite strain analysis is employed. In t
Jan 1, 1967