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Papers - Porosity, Reducibility and Size Preparation of Iron Ores (With Discussion)By T. L. Joseph
Blast furnaces are most efficient thermally when the CO2 in the top gas is highest. Oxygen introduced in the air blast is converted to CO in the combustion zones. The extent to which CO, generated in
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - Porosity, Reducibility and Size Preparation of Iron Ores (With Discussion)By T. L. Joseph
Blast furnaces are most efficient thermally when the CO2 in the top gas is highest. Oxygen introduced in the air blast is converted to CO in the combustion zones. The extent to which CO, generated in
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - Concentration - Nature of the Adsorption of Fatty Acids from Organic Solvents by Inorganic Lead Compounds (Mining Technology, May 1941.) (with discussion)By Dwight L. Baker, Alexander Knoll
The work herein reported shows that galena in certain organic solutions of fatty acids becomes coated with lead soaps, and that this coating is not only highly water-repellent but is also repellent to
Jan 1, 1943
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Nature Of The Adsorption Of Fatty Acids From Organic Solvents By Inorganic Lead Compounds (ccf6e4c3-31a6-44a7-985e-85f02174b1f9)By Alexander Knoll, Dwight L. Baker
THE work herein reported shows that galena in certain organic solutions of fatty acids becomes coated with lead soaps, and that this coating is not only highly water-repellent but is also repellent to
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Concentration - Nature of the Adsorption of Fatty Acids from Organic Solvents by Inorganic Lead Compounds (Mining Technology, May 1941.) (with discussion)By Alexander Knoll, Dwight L. Baker
The work herein reported shows that galena in certain organic solutions of fatty acids becomes coated with lead soaps, and that this coating is not only highly water-repellent but is also repellent to
Jan 1, 1943
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Coal As A Source of Power For Production of AluminumBy Arthur F. Johnson
Plant sites for the light metal industry must be located where ample low cost power is available. In the first half of the century hydroelectric development was the only source of this power-now the b
Jan 4, 1955
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Internal Friction and Young's Modulus of Hexagonal and Cubic CobaltBy E. H. Greener, M. E. Fine
The internal friction (1/Q) of cobalt Fig. 1 (measured by an electrostatic dynamic method1) near 250°C begins to increase rapidly on heating and continues to increase until 560°C, the highest tem- per
Jan 1, 1959
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Papers - Smelting - Waste-Heat Boiler Practice - Waste-heat Boiler Practice of Nevada Consolidated Copper CorporationBy N. W. Sager, H. W. Mossman
The arrangement and general dimensions of the reverberatory furnaces and waste-heat boilers for the Nos. 2 and 3 smelting units at the McGill plant of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Corporation are sh
Jan 1, 1934
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Measurements of Rock Deformation Around Mine Drifts in the Burgin MineBy John Cogan
Field observations were made of rock phenomena in shale, dolomite, and fractured quartzite in the Burgin Mine, Eureka, Utah. Draft closure rates were measured with extensometers and convergence gages.
Jan 1, 1979
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Coal - Coal Strip Mining-Is It Reaching a Peak?By Hubert E. Risser
Although, for about a half-century the percentage of coal production provided through strip mining has steadily increased, recent trends indicate that a peak in percentage (not tonnage) is being appro
Jan 1, 1970
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Technical Notes - Grain Boundary Mobilities in High Purity SilverBy W. E. Bron, E. S. Machlin
GRAIN boundary migration in V-shaped thin specimens of high purity silver was studied. Each specimen contained two crystals having the relative orientation: (111)A/(111)B; (ll0)A/(101)B. The boundary
Jan 1, 1957
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Boston Paper - The New York Mining LawBy R. W. Raymond
The Mining Law of New Pork, contained in Title XI., Chapter IX., Part One of the Revised Statutes, is as follows: Section 1. The following mines are, and shall be, the property of the people of thi
Jan 1, 1888
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Nitrogen Compounds (e33b9731-2e23-4a0d-b05e-78358a11166f)By Herbert W. Huse
Nitrogen, and its compounds, unique among the materials described in this volume, is absolutely essential to the existence of the human race. Almost all minerals are important and the absence of any o
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Some Remarks on Grain Boundary Migration (TN)By G. F. Bolling
STUDIES of grain boundary migration in zone-refined metals have all shown that the rate of migration is greatly reduced by small added solute concentrations. However, it is apparent that a difference
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - The Cadmium-Uranium Phase DiagramBy Allan E. Martin, Harold M. Feder, Irving Johnson
The cadmium-uranium system was studied by thermal, metallographic, X-7-ay and sampling techniques; special emphasis was placed on the establishment of the liquidus lines, The single inter metallic pha
Jan 1, 1962
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Fine Coal Preparation - State Of The Art, Problems And Preductions For The FutureBy F. F. Aplan
INTRODUCTION The production of coal is a major part of the mining industry. In recent years the production of clean coal has exceeded 600 million tons per year and is reported to have reached 660
Jan 1, 1979
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Influence of Earthquakes on Rock Slope StabilttyBy Charles E. Glass
A steadily growing body of evidence indicates that earthquake ground motions can cause failure of rock slopes that are otherwise stable under static loading conditions. As a result, the economic optim
Jan 1, 1983
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Restoration of Permeability to Water-Damaged CoresBy D. K. Atwood
Experiments resulted in a satisfactory laboratory method for restoring permeability to clay-containing cores damaged by fresh water. Clay contents of a number of field cores were measured, and permeab
Jan 1, 1965
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Effects of Low-temperature Heat-treatment on Elastic Properties of Cold-rolled Austenitic Stainless SteelsBy Russell Franks
IN recent years a considerable tonnage of the 18 per cent chromium and 8 per cent nickel steels has been used in lightweight high-strength structures that must be resistant to deterioration under atmo
Jan 1, 1940
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New York Paper - Electric Traction in MinesBy Charles Legrand
In many iron, coal and copper mines where large tonnages are known before starting operation and proper provisions can be made, the problems of electric traction by trolley locomotives are not very di
Jan 1, 1915