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  • AIME
    Statistical Analysis Points The Way For $$$$ Savings In Beneficiation

    By A. C. Dorenfeld

    CHANGES in circuits are often made in milling operations. At the same time that these changes are being evaluated the ores are changing. Even from the same mine, the ore is usually variable as to amou

    Jan 10, 1954

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Integration of Metallurgical Engineering Education

    By R. Schuhmann

    As a response to rapidly growing specialization in various branches of metallurgy, it is proposed that undergraduate education in metallurgical engineering should be built up around four principal sci

    Jan 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Manufacture of Steel Rails - Discussion (45adf69b-90ce-486e-9635-07e18226a7d8)

    G. B. WATERHOUSE,* Buffalo, N. -Y. (written discussion?).-One of the most essential features of rail manufacture is the production of rails that will give good service and be free from failures. To th

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Production and Purification of TiCl4

    By L. W. Rowe, W. R. Opie

    A brief history of TiCI, production and purification is given. Chlorinator feed materials for the production of TiCI4 are classified. The thermodynamics and kinetics of Ticl4 production by chlorinatio

    Jan 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Chester A. Fulton, New President, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    NATURE was in a smiling mood on December 18, 1883. On that day, Chester Alan Fulton, the sixty-first President of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, was born, and she endowe

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Gasoline From ?Synthetic? Crude Oil*

    By Walter Snelling

    IN the course of some experiments more than five years ago, made for a totally different purpose than the investigation of the oil used, I placed a small quantity of a transparent yellow lubricating o

    Jan 4, 1915

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Parper - On Some Curious Phenomena Observed in Making a Test of a Piece of Bessemer Steel

    By William Kent

    About a year ago, the writer had occasion to assist Mr. John L. Gill, Jr., of the Pittsburgh Car-wheel Works, in malting a trial of his new testing machine. A piece of Bessemer steel, of about .34 car

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Off-Highway Trucks: How to Calculate Truck Fleet Requirements

    By Alan K. Burton

    The number of trucks required to perform a certain task is a function of the productive capability of one independent truck and the total tonnage required. Hourly productive capability of one truck is

    Jan 12, 1975

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Measurement of the Surface Self-Diffusion Coefficient of Copper by the Thermal Grooving Technique

    By N. A. Gjostein

    The self-diffusion coefficient D, for a surface near the (100) plane in copper was determined by means of the Mullins theory of thermal grooving, and was found to obey the Arrhenius relationship, and

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Temperature Conversion Tables.

    By Leonard Waldo

    (New York Meeting, February, 1911.) THE recent and rapid development of the physics of engineering materials at temperatures as low as that of liquid air and as high is that of the electric are, has

    Jan 4, 1913

  • AIME
    Conference on Production and Design Limitation and Possibilities for Powder Metallurgy (Metal Technology, January 1945) - Pole Pieces for Electric Motors Made from Iron Powder

    By F. V. Lenel

    This discussion is concerned with the method of manufacturing, the design possibilities, and the properties of pole pieces for direct-current electric . motors and generators made from iron powder. In

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Part IX – September 1968 - Papers - The Structure of the Zn-Mg2Zn11 Eutectic

    By R. R. Jones, R. W. Kraft

    Zn-Mg2Znn eutectic alloys nzay freeze willr either rodlike or lanzellar rnorphology. Alloys with slighlly more than /he eutectic arrzount of rnagnesillrn usually contain three-cnned dendrjles of MgzZn

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Part I – January 1968 - Papers - The Representation of the Textures of Rolled Copper, Brass, and Aluminum by BiaxiaI Pole Figures

    By R. O. Williams

    The concept of biaxial pole figures which completely represent sheel textures is defined and an iterative least-squares solution given. The method has been applied to rolled copper, aluminum, and bra

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Halifax Paper - The Specific Gravity of Low-Carbon Steel

    By George S. Miller

    Now that low-carbon steel is manufactured successfully in large quantities by the Bessemer process, and threatens to displace wroughtiron for nearly all purposes, it becomes interesting to find how it

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Determination of a Rate Generating Equation for Continuous Miners

    By R. V. Ramani, T. V. Falkie, T. E. Wilson

    In order to increase the efficiency of underground coal operations, it is necessary to understand not only the operating system in detail, but the interrelationships between system components and the

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Photochemical Reactions at the ZnS-H2O Interface

    By T. W. Healy, D. R. Dixon

    The mechanism of activation of ZnS by metal ions and the subsequent flotation induced by xanthate has been considered as a surface redox reaction. By ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of ZnS suspensions, t

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Production Engineering - The East Texas Oil Field

    By Frederic H. Lahee

    After abandoning two dry holes, on the Mrs. Daisy Bradford land, C. M. Joiner finally completed his No. 3 on Sept. 8, 1930, at a total depth of 3592 ft. This well is 735 miles somewhat north of west o

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Study of Froth Flotation Using a Steady-State Technique

    By D. Watson, T. J. N. Grainger-Allan

    A technique for studying the mechanism of the froth flotation process in which continuous froth removal does not take place but, instead, an equilibrium is reached between froth and pulp is described.

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    The Blast-furnace Theory

    By Richard Franchot

    FERROUS metallurgy today, defined as the art of extracting money from iron ores, appears to suffer from a complex of inherited theory. In so far as pig iron costs contribute to inadequate profit margi

    Jan 1, 1929