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Salt Lake City Paper - Flotation and Lead Smelting: The Blast FurnaceBy R. A. Wagstaff
Many changes in equipment have had to be made to handle the flotation products at the blast furnace, and these changes have meant an expenditure of considerable money, which has not been compensated b
Jan 1, 1928
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New York Paper - The Production of Solid Steel Ingots (with Discussion)By Benjamin Talbot
The problem of segregation and cavities in steel ingots is a subject which has given and is still giving metallurgists, engineers, and operators matter for serious consideration. This question has
Jan 1, 1914
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Washington Paper - The United States Prototype Standards of Weight and MeasureBy T. C. Mendenhall
All persons, actively engaged in your profession, must have a natural interest in the subject of weights and measures. All members of the engineering profession have to do with operations of weighing
Jan 1, 1890
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The Low-Temperature Gaseous Reduction Of Magnetite Ore To Sponge IronBy O. George Specht, Carl A. Zapffe
IN recent print, some remarkably contradictory statements have appeared regarding the importance to be attached to sponge iron,1-6 a metallurgical commodity whose history goes back at least to the tim
Jan 1, 1946
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Institute of Metals Division - Rare-Earth Compounds with the MgCu2 StructureBy J. H. Wernick, S. Geller
A number of new AB, compounds, in which A is a rare earth or yttrium atom and B is Al, Mn, Fe, Co, or Ni, having the cubic MgCu, structure (Laves phase) are reported. In most of the compounds, the i
Jan 1, 1961
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Metal Mining - Review of Progress in the Caving of Asbestos OreBy Gerald Sherman
MINING asbestos ore by caving at Thetford Mines, Quebec, has been described in the Transactions of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy in papers presented by the staffs of The Asbestos Cor
Jan 1, 1951
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Metal Mining - Review of Progress in the Caving of Asbestos OreBy Gerald Sherman
MINING asbestos ore by caving at Thetford Mines, Quebec, has been described in the Transactions of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy in papers presented by the staffs of The Asbestos Cor
Jan 1, 1951
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - A Kinetic Study of the Leaching of MolybdeniteBy Milton E. Wadsworth, W. Martin Fassell, William H. Dresher
A study of the rate of dissolution of molybdenite (MoS2) in alkaline solution was carried out under carefully controlled conditions. Effects of temperature, oxygen over-pressure, and KOH concentration
Jan 1, 1957
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Underground Mining Trends In The Great Swedish Export Iron Ore MinesBy Borje Hjortzberg-Nordlund
THE great Swedish export iron ore mines are Kiruna and Malmberget in the north above the Arctic circle and Grängesberg in Central Sweden, see Figs. 1 to 3. These mines exported in 1951 about 13 millio
Jan 1, 1952
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Canal Zone Paper - The Solid Non-Metallic Impurities in Steel (Sonims)By Henry D. Hibbard
These impurities are perhaps the most important things in steel—especially steel made by the oxidation processes—the effect of which has not been at least approximately determined. By oxidation proces
Jan 1, 1911
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Some New Methods For Estimating The Future Production of Oil WellsBy J. O. Lewis
Oil wells usually reach their maximum daily output shortly after they are completed. From that time they decline in-production, the rapidity of decline depending on the output of the wells and on othe
Jan 2, 1918
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Evaluation Of The Molding, Coining, And Sintering Properties Of Iron PowderBy Jerome F. Kuzmick
INTRODUCTION THE use of iron powder during the post-war conversion period has been increasing with great rapidity. This is particularly true in regard to the manufacture of molded mechanical parts
Jan 1, 1948
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The North Shore of Lake Superior as a Mineral¬bearing DistrictBy W. M. Courtis
THIS district commences near Pigeon River, the northeastern boundary between Minnesota and Province of Ontario, and extends entirely around the north shore of Lake Superior, terminating for the presen
Jan 1, 1877
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Cleveland Paper - The Action of Various Commercial Carbonizing-Material (with Discussion)By Robert R. Abbott
The practice of carbonizing steel for the purpose of case-hardening has assumed great commercial importance within the past 10 years. Formerly, case-hardened steel was held in more or less contempt
Jan 1, 1913
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An Evaluation Of The Performance Of Thirty-Three Residential Stoker CoalsBy JAMES J. PURDY
The great majority of stokers used in residential heating installations are of the clinkering type. Because of inherent characteristics of the under- feed combustion process as it occurs in these smal
Jan 1, 1949
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Institute of Metals Division - The Mechanism of Boundary Migration in RecrystallizationBy R. A. Vandermeer, Paul Gordon
On the basis of a unified concept, theoretical erPressions for grain boundary migration in recrys-tallization are derzved for impurity-controlled and impurity-independent migration. The expression in
Jan 1, 1962
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The Relationship Between Transformation At Constant Temperature And Transformation During CoolingBy G. K. Manning, C. H. Lorig
Two metallurgical tools have acquired wide use within the past several years as a means of studying the transformation characteristics of steel. One is a technique used first by Bain and Davenport for
Jan 1, 1946
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New Haven Paper - The Valuation of Mines of Definite Average IncomeBy H. D. Hoskold
As the theory and the practice of valuing mines have never been discussed in the Transactions, a paper on the subject may be acceptable, even though not exhaustive. The method here indicated is set fo
Jan 1, 1903
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Influence Of Coal Porosity On The Effectiveness Of Freeze Conditioning AgentsBy P. F. Richardson, J. L. Perisho, W. J. Roe
Handling and transport of coal during the winter months can be a severe problem. The inability to unload frozen coal from rail cars produces serious economic and logistic problems due to transportatio
Jan 1, 1986
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New York Paper - The Properties of Iron alloyed with Other MetalsBy G. H. Billings
There exists an unconfirmed opinion among many ironmasters that the combination of a small quantity of manganese, chromium, titanium, tungsten, aluminium, nickel, and some of the metalloids with iron