Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Industrial Morale and Employees' MagazinesBy Daniel Bloomfield
ONE of the major problems of management is how to restore in some measure the personal relation-ship between employer and employed which, in the days of small concerns, meant better morale among emplo
Jan 9, 1922
-
Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy, Mining Experiment StationThe State Mining Experiment Station, Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy, Rolla, Mo Charles H. Fulton, Director of the School of Mines Martin H. Thornberry, Director of the Mining Experiment S
Jan 1, 1933
-
Institute of Metals Division - Some Effects of Stress Changes During Creep (TN)By P. W. Davies, B. Wilshire
PREVIOUS investigations on the effect of stress changes on the high-temperature creep and fracture behavior of metals have been confined mainly to the testing of complex alloys.172 Most of these alloy
Jan 1, 1965
-
Iron and Steel Division - Thermodynamic Properties of Mn7C3 (TN)By N. A. Gokcen, S. Fujishiro
THE pressures of Mn(g) in equilibrium with Mn7C3 and graphite have been measured by McCabe and Hudson' and Butler, McCabe, and paxton2 by means of graphite, zirconia, and Ta-Mo Knudsen cells. The
Jan 1, 1963
-
Cortez Gold Mines - Gold Acres Mine Site - Lander County, NevadaCortez Gold Mines operated a conventional 2,100 mtpd (2, 300 stpd) cyanidation plant until the 5 million ton ore body was worked out in 1973. (See Gold and Silver Cyanidation Plant Practice by F. W. M
Jan 1, 1981
-
Part IV – April 1968 - Communications - Solubility and Interstitial Migration of Oxygen in Bcc IronBy H. J. Engell, W. Frank, A. Seeger
SWISHER and ~urkdogan' have determined the solubility of oxygen in a iron. They found it to lie between 7 and 10.5 at.-ppm at 881°C. Using earlier work on the permeability of oxygen in bcc iron,&
Jan 1, 1969
-
Salt Lake Paper - Nodulizing Blast-Furnace Flue Dust (with Discussion)By Lawrence Addicks
Some three years ago the smelter connected with the Chrome, N. J., refinery of the United States Metals Refining Co. found itself embarrassed by constantly increasing piles of unsmelted blast-furnace
Jan 1, 1915
-
Bearing Of Price Upon Oil ReservesBy Joseph Pogue
IT is well known that one of the cornerstones of economic theory is the so-called law of supply and demand, which, really, is a group of economic laws, one of which may be succinctly stated A rise in
Jan 3, 1925
-
Air-gas Lifts - New Developments in Air-gas Lift Operations in Mid-Continent Area (with Discussion)By C. V. Millikan
New developments in air-gas lift practices in the Mid-Continent area since our Pall meeting in Fort Worth have done much to increase the efficiency of installations, and thus bring within economic lim
Jan 1, 1928
-
Chicago Paper - Oxygen in Cast Iron and its Application (with Discussion)By Wilford L. Stork
Certain influences of oxygen on iron have been known for many years and it has always been considered one of the worst enemies of the iron and steel founders. Nobody had a good word for it, hence litt
Jan 1, 1920
-
Philadelphia Paper - Manufacture and Electrical Properties of Manganin (with Discussion)By F. E. Bash
Previous to the war, this country depended on Europe for its supply of a number of alloys of great importance in the manufacture of electrical apparatus and equipment. When this source was cut off sho
Jan 1, 1921
-
Mine Ventilation - Economic Design of Mine AirwaysBy A. S. Richardson
The design of mine airways receives, in general, very little engineering treatment. To a large extent this is, of course, due to the fact that information upon which to base calculations is seldom ava
Jan 1, 1927
-
Coal and Coke - Devices for Detecting Dangerous Gases in Mine Air (with Discussion)By J. T. Ryan
SiR Humphry Davy's epoch-making treatise delivered on Nov. 9, 1815, before the Philosophical Society of London, first announced and demonstrated a flame safety lamp for detecting methane in mine
Jan 1, 1927
-
What is Steel? (744f6776-40fb-4d5f-be13-3f15d583055d)By A. L. Holley
THE general usage of engineers, manufacturers, and merchants, is gradually, but surely, fixing the answer to this question. In every country rails, boiler-plates, and machinery bars, whether hard or s
Jan 1, 1876
-
Institute of Metals Division - Precipitation Processes in Mg-Th-Zr AlloysBy L. Sturkey
Quantitative X-ray diffraction studies of the precipitation of thorium in a Mg + 3.3 Th + 0.51 Zr alloy (HK31A) in both the as-cast and cold-worked states show that the precipitation may be described
Jan 1, 1961
-
Cleveland Paper - What is Steel?By A. L. Holley
The general usage of engineers, manufacturers, and merchants, is gradually, bat surely, fixing the answer to this question. In every country rails, boiler-plates, and machinery bars, whether hard or s
-
New York Paper - Coal-Dust Fired Reverberatory Furnaces.By Louis V. Bender, R. E. H. Pomeroy, David H. Browne
E. P. Mathewson, Anaconda, Mont.—After hearing about the success of D. H. Browne with his furnaces, we in Anaconda decided we might venture into the field of pulverized coal for reverberatory smelting
Jan 1, 1915
-
Technical Notes - Concentration Gradients Associated with Growing PearliteBy R. E. Grace
WHEN an Fe-C alloy, partially reacted to pearl-ite, is quenched rapidly enough to suddenly stop the growth process, it may be expected that any carbon concentration gradients will freeze in situ in th
Jan 1, 1954
-
Zinc - Relative Rates of Reactions Involved in Reduction of Zinc Ores (Metals Technology, Apr. 1941.) (With discussion)By E. C. Truesdale, W. K. Waring
The Research,Division of The New Jersey Zinc Company (of Pa.) has conducted, over a period of years, numerous tests of the reducibility of various zinc ores and the reactivity of various kids of coal,
Jan 1, 1944
-
Philadelphia Paper - Physical Properties of Certain Lead-zinc Bronzes (with Discussion)By Homer F. Staley, C. P. Karr
The casting alloy 88 copper, 10 tin, 2 zinc, commonly known in England as Admiralty metal and in this country as Government bronze, gun metal, or Naval Department composition G, has, at its best, many
Jan 1, 1921