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New York Paper - Combustion of Blast-furnace Cokes in Fuel Beds (with Discussion)By Ralph A. Sherman, John Blizard
The experimental investigation described in this paper was conducted to determine the relative combustibilities of different samples of blastfurnace coke when burned in a current of air in a small fur
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Combustion of Blast-furnace Cokes in Fuel Beds (with Discussion)By John Blizard, Ralph A. Sherman
The experimental investigation described in this paper was conducted to determine the relative combustibilities of different samples of blastfurnace coke when burned in a current of air in a small fur
Jan 1, 1923
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The Advantages of High-Lime Slags in the Smelting of Lead Ores (61e75f02-121b-4343-a628-ab8e7982e2d0)By S. E. Bretherton
Discussion of the paper of S. E. BRETHERTON, presented at. the San Francisco meeting, September, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 104, August, 1915, pp. 1595 to1599. ANTON EILERS, Brooklyn, N. Y. (c
Jan 12, 1915
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Institute of Metals Division - Abnormal Thermal Etching Behavior in a Copper-Silicon Alloy (TN)By D. H. Polonis, M. B. Kasen
AN unusual thermal etching phenomenon has been observed on the surface of a Cu-Si alloy. The observations were made during studies of vacancy condensation pit formation which were reported in previou
Jan 1, 1964
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Minerals Beneficiation - Solid State Bonding in Iron Ore PelletsBy Robert E. Brand, Strathmore R. B. Cooke
For a study of the bonding that occurs in magnetite pellets during oxidation, cubes of magnetite, hematite, and quartz were prepared, each with one surface polished and nearly optically plane. These f
Jan 1, 1955
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Papers - Application of Chemistry in Combatting Anthracite Mine Fires (T. P. 1424)By G. W. Jones, G. S. Scott
Economic waste caused by mine fires may become considerable,l5 especially if a fire is allowed to spread or temporarily to get beyond control. It is important, therefore, to act promptly whenever a fi
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Application of Chemistry in Combatting Anthracite Mine Fires (T. P. 1424)By G. S. Scott, G. W. Jones
Economic waste caused by mine fires may become considerable,l5 especially if a fire is allowed to spread or temporarily to get beyond control. It is important, therefore, to act promptly whenever a fi
Jan 1, 1942
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Coal Evaluation and Preparation (With Discussion)By Thomas F. Downing
When examining a coal property it is customary for the engineer to take channel samples at several coal faces. In doing so the extraneous matter, or partings, which can be removed by hand, or mechanic
Jan 1, 1932
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Mining - Block Caving Practice at the Jeffrey MineBy H. H. Waller, D. L. Monroe, D. P. R. Smyth
ORIGINALLY slusher drift development was conventional, advancing the drift full 10x13-ft size at 6 ft per round. This proved dangerous and costly because the weak fractured rock of the orebody cannot
Jan 1, 1955
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Part XII – December 1969 – Papers - The Effect of Alloy Grain-Size and Surface Deformation on the Selective Oxidation of Chromium in Ni-Cr Alloys at Temperatures of 900° and 1100°CBy C. S. Giggins, F. S. Pettit
The oxidation properties of Ni-Cr alloys with fine grains, coarse grains, and deformed surface layers have been studied at temperatures of 900" and 1100°C in 0.1 atm of oxygen. The oxidation rates of
Jan 1, 1970
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Metal Mining - Comparison of Branch Raise and Combined Shrinkage and Caving Methods (with Discussion)By Charles A. Mitke
Excluding top-slicing and sublevel caving, large production caving methods may be divided into two general classes, the branch raise, or undercut caving method, and the combined shrinkage and caving m
Jan 1, 1928
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Institute of Metals Division - Titanium-Aluminum SystemBy E. S. Bumps, H. D. Kessler, M. Hansen
The titanium-rich end of the Ti-AI phase diagram has been determined to the compound TiAI3 (62.7 pct Al), thus joining the aluminum-rich portion previously investigated by others and completing the di
Jan 1, 1953
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Comparison Of Branch Raise And Combined Shrinkage And Caving MethodsBy Charles Mitke
EXCLUDING top-slicing, and sublevel caving, large production caving methods may be divided into two general classes, the branch raise, or undercut caving method, and the combined shrinkage and caving
Jan 1, 1928
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Path Of Rupture In Steel Fusion WeldsBy S. W. Miller
MOST of the steel welding done at the present time is in material containing not over 0.3 per cent. carbon, and the tests here described were in similar material. These tests are not as yet completed
Jan 2, 1919
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Industrial Minerals - Surface Strip Phosphate Mining at Leefe, Wyoming, and Montpelier, IdahoBy D. L. King
The San Francisco Chemical Co. has been actively interested in phosphate mining since 1908. It was, in fact, the first company to make claims on properties in the western phosphate belt. From the peri
Jan 1, 1950
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Preferred Orientations in Hot-rolled Low-carbon SteelBy M. Gensamer
ONLY recently has it been realized that preferred orientations are common in hot-rolled steels. In a recent paper, N. P. Goss1 stated that hot-rolled mild steel exhibits a texture different from that
Jan 1, 1936
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Institute of Metals Division - Hydrogen Diffusion in a Beta-Titanium AlloyBy F. Paredes, W. R. Holman, R. W. Crawford
The diffusion coefficient for hydrogen in the ß titanium alloy containing 13 pct V, 11 pct CY, and 3 pct A1 was measured over the temperature range 20° to 500°C. Results fit the expression: D= 1.58
Jan 1, 1965
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Burt FilterBy A. Y. Bethune, W. G. Woolf
THE hydrometallurgy of special high-grade zinc as practiced by the Sullivan Mining Co. at its electrolytic zinc plant, Kellogg, Idaho, involves an important filtration step immediately following the l
Jan 1, 1951
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Burt FilterBy W. G. Woolf, A. Y. Bethune
THE hydrometallurgy of special high-grade zinc as practiced by the Sullivan Mining Co. at its electrolytic zinc plant, Kellogg, Idaho, involves an important filtration step immediately following the l
Jan 1, 1951
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Colorado Paper - Concrete Example of the Use of Well LogsBy Mowry Bates
The following example of the practical application of engineering geology is of interest in that it demonstrates the advantage of keeping accurate records of all wells, whether drilled by onn's s
Jan 1, 1920