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Papers - Institute of Metals Division Lecture, 1929 - Passivity of Metals and Its Relation to problems of Corrosion (Annual Lecture)By Ulick R. Evans
I Should like to commence by saying how much I appreciate the honor which the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers has done me in inviting me to visit your country, and to deliver
Jan 1, 1929
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Microstructure Of Iron Deposited By Electric Arc WeldingBy George Comstock
THESE notes should be considered as a further discussion of Mr. S. W. Miller's paper on "Some Structures in Steel Fusion Welds."1 In that paper and the resulting discussion; several conflicting o
Jan 1, 1919
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A Century of Mining and Metallurgy in the United StatesBy Abram S. Hewitt
GENTLEMEN : If my first words were other than those of thanks for the high honor of being called to preside over the American Institute of Mining Engineers, I should do injustice alike to you and to m
Jan 1, 1877
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Rate Of Nucleation And Rate Of Growth Of PearliteBy Frederick C. Hull, Robert F. Mehl, Robert A. Colton
IT is known that pearlite forms from austenite by a process of nucleation and growth, and that the rate of formation of pearlite may be described by a rate of nucleation and a rate of growth 12 The ma
Jan 1, 1942
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Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A Century of Mining and Metallurgy in the United StatesBy Hon. Abrams S. Hewitt
Gentlemen : If my first words were other than those of thanks for the high honor of being called to preside over the American Institute of Mining Engineers, I should do injustice alike to you and to m
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Rate Of Nucleation And Rate Of Growth Of Pearlite (456dcc9b-e26c-43fe-a074-958aa64d7f71)By Frederick C. Hull, Robert F. Mehl, Robert A. Colton
IT is known that pearlite forms from austenite by a process of nucleation and growth, and that the rate of formation of pearlite may be described by a rate of nucleation and a rate of growth.1,2 The m
Jan 1, 1942
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Institute of Metals Division - Mechanical Properties of Low-Carbon Alloy-Free MartensitesBy W. H. McFarland
The mechanical properties have been determined for a large number of alloy-free martensitic steels with carbon contents ranging from 0.08 to 0.20 pct and with manganese contents of about 0.4 to 0.5 pe
Jan 1, 1965
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Copper Mining On Lake SuperiorBy T. Prof. Ph. D. Egleston
(Read at the Amenia Meeting, October, 1877.) THE copper-bearing rocks of Lake Superior are composed of a series of metamorphic rocks, comprised under the names of amygdaloid and conglomerate, in wh
Jan 1, 1878
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Pyrometallurgy (f07b5538-eb54-432d-bee6-2e987157339b)US 4,134,944-Production of iron oxide ore pellets of uniform size and excellent strength. Small pieces of ore are rolled into nuclei in a first pellet-rolling circuit in the presence of a binder, the
Jan 1, 1980
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Molybdenum by Direct Thermal Dissociation of Molybdenum DisulfideBy D. V. Doane, G. A. Timmons, W. G. Scholz
Molybdenum of high purity can be produced by direct dissociatiott of commercial molyhdenm disulfide in vacuo at 1600° to 1700°C (2910° to 3090°F). The Product is lower in oxygen than commercially av
Jan 1, 1962
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Papers - Miscellaneous Heavy Metals and Alloys - Preliminary Spectrographic and Metallographic Study of Native Gold (Metals Technology, Feb. 1939.)By Welton J. Crook
Unless present, in considerable praportion, metals of the precious-metal group—other than gold and silver—are not readily detected by the methods of fire assaying usually applied to ores and metallurg
Jan 1, 1943
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Removal of Copper from Liquid Lead by Lead Sulfide Containing Controlled Atomic DefectsBy C. Pin, J. Bruce Wagner
In order to demonstrate the role of defect chemistry in the solid state to a process-metallurgy reaction, laboratory experiments were carried aut to remove copper from liquid lead using lead sulfide w
Jan 1, 1963
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Papers - Flotation - Study of Differential Flotation (With Discussion)By C. R. Ince
The term "differential flotation" is used to denote a flotation operation in which separation is effected between two or more minerals of the same class; e. g., lead sulfide from zinc sulfide, pyrite
Jan 1, 1930
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Part III - Papers - The Observation of Defects in GaAs Using Photoluminescence at 20°K; DiscussionBy D. M. Blacknall, N. N. Winogradoff, E. W. Williams
Low-temperature measurements of photolumines-cence were used to evaluate the progvess in materials development. Variation of the impurity type, impurity concentration, and method of growth were used t
Jan 1, 1968
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New York Paper - Microstructure of Iron Deposited by Electric Arc Welding (with Discussion)By G. F. Comstock
These notes should be considered as a further discussion of Mr. S. W. Miller's paper on "Some Structures in Steel Fusion Welds."l In that paper and the resulting discussion, several conflicting o
Jan 1, 1920
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Porphyry Copper Deposits Of The Andean OrogenINTRODUCTION The regional characteristics of porphyry copper deposits in South America southward from Pantanos and Pegadorcito, Columbia, will be summarized. The age of formation of deposits spans
Jan 1, 1978
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Papers - Miscellaneous Heavy Metals and Alloys - Preliminary Spectrographic and Metallographic Study of Native Gold (Metals Technology, Feb. 1939.)By Welton J. Crook
Unless present, in considerable praportion, metals of the precious-metal group—other than gold and silver—are not readily detected by the methods of fire assaying usually applied to ores and metallurg
Jan 1, 1943
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Geophysics - Value of Geophysico-Statistical Methods in Finding Soft Iron Ore in Northern CanadaBy Maurice K. Seguin
It is a difficult task to find enriched soft iron ore deposits in the central part of the Labrador Trough, New Quebec, Canada, when the areas investigated are covered by glacial drift. A qualitative i
Jan 1, 1971
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Papers - Structure of Ore Districts in the Continental Framework (With Discussion)By Paul Billingsley, Augustus Locke
Certain adequately developed mining districts give complete three-dimensional patterns of ore bodies as clusters rising from roots in basement rocks with details controlled by structure of cover rocks
Jan 1, 1941
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Preliminary Spectrographic and Metallographic Study of Native GoldBy Welton Crook
UNLESS present in considerable proportion, metals of the precious-metal group-other than gold and silver-are not readily detected by the methods of fire assaying usually applied to ores and metallurgi
Jan 1, 1939