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  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Recovery of Mercury from Amalgamation Tailing, Buffalo Mines, Cobalt (with Discussion)

    By E. B. Thornhill

    In this paper on the recovery of mercury as sulphide, from the residues from the amalgamation and cyanide treatment of high-grade ores and concentrates, I will not discuss the many reactions, chemical

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    PART II - Papers - Impurity Levels in Aluminum as Influenced by Raw Materials and Processing Methods

    By K. Mukai, M. Ishihara

    This report is a brief discussion of the impurity levels both in primary aluminum and super-purily alnminim in connection with raw materials and proc-essing methods. Particularly, truce amounls of im-

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Standards for Brass and Bronze Foundries and Metal-finishing Processes (with Discussion)

    By Lillian Erskine

    While brass and other copper alloys have long been listed as offering health hazards to their workers, it is questionable if the metals involved are alone responsible for the trades' records of m

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - The Tin-Fusion Method for the Determination of Hydrogen in Steel

    By D. J. Carney, J. Chipman, N. J. Grant

    SINCE the beginning of this century it has been known that hydrogen contributes to the porosity of steel and that it is harmful to its mechanical properties. The evidence for this has been largely qua

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Expansion Properties of Low-expansion Fe-Ni-Co Alloys

    By Howard Scott

    INVAR is the preeminent low-expansion metal by virtue of the fact that it can be prepared with a zero coefficient of expansion at atmospheric temperature. This fact suggests that there is little room

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Papers - Properties of Metals - Expansion Properties of Low-expansion Fe-Ni-Co Alloys (With Discussion)

    By Howard Scott

    Invar is the preeminent low-expansion metal by virtue of the fact that it can be prepared with a zero coefficient of expansion at atmospheric temperature. This fact suggests that there is little room

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - A Preliminary Investigation of the Zirconium-Beryllium System by Powder Metallurgy Methods

    By H. H. Hausner, H. S. Kalish

    IN recent years zirconium and beryllium have become of great interest because of their special properties. Zirconium is known for its remarkable ability to absorb the gases oxygen, nitrogen and hydrog

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Flocculation-Key to More Economical Solid-Liquid Separation

    By R. H. Oliver

    The purposes, types, preparation, and testing of flocculants are discussed. A flocculation compendium is included, indicating choice of flocculant for a given set of conditions. An economic evaluation

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Processing California Bastnasite Ore

    By Edwin H. Olson, Morton Smutz, Charles J. Baroch

    IN 1949 an orebody containing some 10 billion lb of recoverable rare earth metals was discovered in the Mountain Pass district of San Bernardino County, California.1 The following year Molybdenum Corp

    Jan 3, 1959

  • AIME
    Stabilization Of Bituminous Coal Industry

    By Herbert Hoover

    THE desire of the engineers over the last few years, growing out of their contact with public affairs, that this Institute should take a wider vision than the narrower field of technology and should a

    Jan 3, 1920

  • AIME
    Real Del Monte Finds: Low Base Metal-High Silver Ores Give Better Smelter Returns With Pre-Cyanidation Treatment

    By R. R. Bryan

    SINCE the first applications of cyanidation to silver ores about 1906, treatment of ores in the Pachuca district has been entirely by straight cyanidation. Until about the year 1921, Real del Monte re

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Cooperative Effort in Mining

    By Joseph Hodgson

    Introduction SINCE about 70 per cent. of the total cost of mining is due to underground work which is out of sight, it is essential that expenditures should be made here to the best advantage. A grea

    Jan 5, 1916

  • AIME
    Electricity in Oil Fields - Relative Advantages and Costs of Electric Power in Lease Operations (with Discussion)

    By L. J. Murphy

    The production of crude oil in the United States is exceeding consumption by one-quarter million barrels per day and, with the possibilities of West Texas, this condition of overproduction, unless con

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Are Our Aluminum Ore Reserves Adequate?

    By George C. Bravner

    WITH the great expansion currently being made in the aluminum output of the United States, not only by the company that has heretofore been the sole producer but by a now organization in the field it

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Colorado Paper - Note on a Shaft-Fire and its Lesson

    By Robert Gilman Brown

    There are few disasters so difficult to deal with as an underground fire. It is inaccessible at best, and generally unapproachable ; and it finds most material in the very places where it can do most

    Jan 1, 1897

  • AIME
    Producing–Equipment, Methods and Materials - Evaluation of Valve Port Size, Surface Chokes and Fluid Fall-Back in Intermittent Gas-Lift Installations

    By K. E. Brown, F. W. Jessen

    By utilizing an 8,000-ft experimental field well equipped with 10 gas-lift valves and 10 Maihak pressure recorders, gas-lift tests were conducted with port sizes ranging from 5/16 through I in. The we

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - The Nonmetallic Constituents of Steel

    By Clarence E. Sims

    An effort has been made to give both a comprehensive and simplified picture of the origin, modes of formation, and characteristics of nonmetallic inclusions in steel. Exogenous inclusions, those for

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Use of Electrical Resistance Measurements to Determine the Solidus of the Lead-tin System

    By S. A. Lever, R. Hultgren

    The solidus is usually the least satisfactorily determined portion of a phase diagram. Cooling curves, which succeed well with the liquidus, show the solidus inaccurately or not at all because of segr

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Alpha Phase Boundary of the Copper-nickel-tin System (with Discussion)

    By A. J. Phillips, C. G. Grant, Wm. B. Price

    Admiralty nickel is a new corrosion-resisting and heat-resisting white metal alloy composed of 70 per cent. copper, 29 per cent. nickel and 1 per cent. tin. It has been given the trade name "Adnic." I