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Official Institute Reports For The Year 1924TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING AND METALLURGICAL ENGINEERS Gentlemen:-To a Board of Directors keeping in as close touch with all of the affairs under their care as d
Jan 1, 1925
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Present Radium SituationBy AIME AIME
A. A. Holland, Consulting Engineer, Toronto, Ont.-I noticed in this discussion of locations in which radium is found, no mention is made of the recent deposits discovered in Ontario. While radium is
Jan 1, 1930
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Institute of Metals Division - Field-Emission Microscopy of Metal Crystal NucleationBy K. L. Moazed, G. M. Pound
An investigation was made of the deposition of silver from a thermal beam onto tungsten field-emitter tips at 300°K. "Island"-type nuclei were observed to form and grow. The nucleation of silver cryst
Jan 1, 1964
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Institute of Metals Division - Correlation of Transformation Behavior with Mechanical Properties of Several Titanium-Base AlloysBy A. J. Griest, P. D. Frost, J. R. Doig
During the past 5 years, research directed toward the development of titanium alloys having improved strength-ductility relationships and heat treatability has been carried out at Battelle for the U.
Jan 1, 1960
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Industrial Minerals - Industrial Minerals of North CarolinaBy J. L. Stuck
Geological investigation and research have contributed greatly in making industrial minerals the basis of an important industry in the state. North Carolina contains a wide variety of industrial miner
Jan 1, 1952
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Part II - Papers - Sigma Formation in Nickel-Rich Nickel-Cobalt-Chromium-Aluminum-Titanium-Carbon Alloys at 1650°FBy J. R. Mihalisin
Phase changes in as-cast alloys in the Ni2 CoCr-Ni, Ti-NSAl system containing 0.1 wt pct C were studied after heat treatment at 1650°F. It was found that a vegion of CrCo-type s was developed in this
Jan 1, 1968
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Personal (2b683a91-4cc7-4efa-ace1-74b120d723f1)(Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their fellow-members.) Members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period May 10, 1
Jan 7, 1916
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Institute of Metals - Estimation of Oxygen and Sulfur in Refined Copper (with Discussion)By H. A. Bedworth, W. H. Bassett
The amount of oxygen present in refined copper bears an important relation to the effects of various impurities on physical properties of copper, as well as the effects of reducing gases at higher tem
Jan 1, 1926
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Institute of Metals Division - Uranium-Silicon AlloysBy A. Kaufmann, B. Cullity, G. Bitsianes
T0 determine the bulk of the phase diagram, techniques for melting, thermal analysis, heat treatment, metallography, and X-ray diffraction that have already been described were used.' It proved d
Jan 1, 1958
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PART IV - Communications - Contribution to Calorimetric Thermodynamic AnalysisBy B. D. Lichter
In a previous paper, Oelsen, Schuermann, and Hey-nertl pointed out the possibility of obtaining complete thermodynamic functions for alloy systems from calorimetric measurements alone. Specifically, i
Jan 1, 1967
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Metallurgical Research Now Centered at MidvaleBy L. A. Creglow
IN common with many other companies engaged in the mining and processing of ores, research has always been an important activity of the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company. Much of this
Jan 1, 1948
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Liberia - The Bomi Hills DevelopmentLIBERIAN ore has been called the richest iron ore mined in the world, and thus far, the output from the Liberian Mining Co.'s Bomi Hills mine has lived up to its reputation. Iron content has been
Jan 1, 1952
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Gravimeters: Their Relation to Seismometers, Astatization and CalibrationBy C. A. Heiland
MEASUREMENTS of gravity with gravimeters have come into increased use in this country and abroad in the past five years. Probably 100 to 125 gravimeter parties are working in the United States alone.
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Hardness Changes Accompanying the Ordering of Beta Brass.By Cyril Stanley Smith
BeTa brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, hut at low temperature< an ordered structure is stable,
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Hardness Changes Accompanying the Ordering of Beta Brass.By Cyril Stanley Smith
BeTa brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, hut at low temperature< an ordered structure is stable,
Jan 1, 1943
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Mechanization in Coal Mining as Affecting SafetyBy George S. Rice
MECHANIZATION in coal mining is a phrase which has attracted world-wide attention, and those persons not engaged on the practical side of coal-mine operations seem to regard mechanization as a panacea
Jan 1, 1929
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Horizontal Holes For Underground Power LinesBy W. E. Bruce, R. J. Morrell, James Paone
This chapter is a partial summary of an investigation by the U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) made in response to a recent request by the Assistant Secretary, Water and Power Development of the U.S. Depart
Jan 1, 1970
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Discussion - Of Mr. Bolles' Paper on The Concentration of Gold and Silver in Iron-Bottoms (see p. 666)Edward Keller, Baltimore, Md. (communicatioin to the Secretary*):—It is pleasing to note the increasing amount of work on metallurgical problems that is being carried on by exact scientific methods, a
Jan 1, 1905
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Hardness Changes Accompanying The Ordering Of Beta BrassBy Cyril Stanley Smith
BETA brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, but at low temperatures [ ] an ordered structure is stabl
Jan 1, 1942
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Hardness Changes Accompanying The Ordering Of Beta Brass (79f40f83-24bd-4902-8000-e167d007b4b3)By Cyril Stanley Smith
BETA brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, but at low temperatures [ ] an ordered structure is stabl
Jan 1, 1942