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Coal Storage and LoadingBy O. B. Bucklen, P. G. Meikle
INTRODUCTION The trend in the coal industry for many years has been to make every- thing "bigger and faster." This also held true for loading and storage facilities. Where once a million ton per y
Jan 1, 1968
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Washington D.C. Paper - Iron and Steel considered as Structural Materials – A Discussion, Papers and Remarks by (927d1b32-1b05-4117-b947-fb8fbae622af)By Ashbel Welch
Gentlemen of the American Institude of Mining Engineers.—As you well know an application is about to be made to Congress, by the American Society of Civil Engineers, for the appointment of a cornmissi
Jan 1, 1882
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Papers - Studies upon the Widmanstatten Structure, V-The Gamma-alpha Transformation in Pure Iron (With Discussion)By Robert F. Mehl, Dana W. Smith
It has been shown that quenched iron of high purity exhibits a Wid-manstiitten figure much resembling martensite in appearance.1 This figure exhibits a maximum of four directions of the surface traces
Jan 1, 1934
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Institute of Metals Division - Anomalous Kinetics of the Bainitic Transformation Just Above the Martensitic Range (TN)By M. F. Smith
BELOW the nose of the bainitic C curves in isothermal transformation diagrams, the rate of the austenite-to-bainite transformation usually decreases with decreasing temperature. However, in some stee
Jan 1, 1960
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - A New Technique for the Recovery of Palladium and Platinum from Gold ElectrolyteBy P. W. Bennett, E. M. Elkin
A new technique for the recovery of palladium and platinum and sludge from go12 electrolyte eliminates many of the drawbacks of the zinc-dust cementation process. In the electrolytic refining of go
Jan 1, 1965
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Washington Paper - Specifications for Cast-iron Coated Water-PipeBy Thomas W. Yardley
In many years' experience as a maker and purchaser of cast-iron coated pipe, I have never met with any standard form of specifications for such. Each water-works company, employing a hydraulic en
Jan 1, 1890
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Glen Summit Paper - The Preparation and Utilization of Small Sizes of Anthracite. [Discussion at Glen Summit Meeting].Eckley B. Coxe, Drifton, Pa.: Anthracite coal differs from other fuels in its greater solidity. It does not burn like coke or wood, or like bituminous and coking coals, which become more or less spong
Jan 1, 1892
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Institute of Metals Division - The Semiconductor-Oxide Interface as a HeterojunctionBy K. M. Busen, J. Lindmayer
A heterojunction model is suggested for descrihzng the electronic conditions at oxide -semiconductor interfaces. Detailed study of the silicon oxide-silicon interface shows that the heterojunction mod
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - Getter Sputtering for the Preparation of Thin Film InterfacesBy J. J. Hauser, H. C. Theuerer
A cathode sputtering technique is described which elin7inates the need for ultrahigh vacuum in preparing thin films of materials sensitive to gaseous impurities. This technique uses a fraction of the
Jan 1, 1965
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Miscellaneous Underground Methods - Cut-and-fill Mining Methods:The cut-and-fill mining methods in use in the mines of The International Nickel Company of Canada Limited, at Falconbridge Nickel Mines Limited, in the Sudbury District, and at McIntyre Por
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Properties of Hydrocarbon Mixtures as Related to Production Problems (With Discussion)By W. K. Lewis
During the last decade the petroleum refinery engineer has made great progress in achieving a better understanding of the physical behavior of hydrocarbon mixtures, with particular reference to their
Jan 1, 1934
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Simplified Spelling Foisted Upon UsA small group of members of the Institute headed by W. H. Shockley, has insistently demanded that the Institute submit to the members for letter ballot the question of our using in our publications an
Jan 12, 1919
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Montreal (Annual) Paper - Note on Unfreezable DynamiteBy E. E. Russell Tratman
The use of dynamite in cold weather is attended with some difficulty, owing to the freezing of the material and its consequeut liability to fail to explode when the fuse is fired. With proper methods
Jan 1, 1893
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Operations Report No. 3 – Combatting Excessive Heat Underground at BralorneBy W. E. Field
In the Coast Mountains approximately 110 miles north of Vancouver, the gold mine of Bralorne- Pioneer Mines Ltd. lies at an elevation of 3500 ft. The deepest or 41 level in the mine is at an elevation
Jan 12, 1963
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Papers - Smelting - Reverberatory Smelting Practice - History of Reverberatory Smelting in Montana, 1879-1933By Frederick Laist
This paper is a review of Montana reverberatory smelting practice covering a period of approximately fifty years, during which time the small furnaces that had been in use elsewhere for a century or m
Jan 1, 1934
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Institute of Metals Division - The Study of Grain Boundaries with the Electron MicroscopeBy J. F. Radavich
Many heats of steel of low carbon value have been known to produce brittle pieces of steel. The brittleness is believed to be due to the impurities located within the grain boundaries. Such brittle st
Jan 1, 1950
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Heat Treatment of Duralumin - DiscussionZAY JEFFRIES, Cleveland, Ohio (written discussion?).-The authors conclude that there is a certain average size of precipitated CuAl2 par-ticle which produces maximum strength and hardness in duralumin
Jan 12, 1919
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Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1954Safety Factor Characteristic Curves. Their Application to Mine Hoisting Ropes. (Paper by W. A. Boyer, Transactions AIME, 199, 989; Mining Engineering, October 1954. Discussion by B. E. Grant.) ....
Jan 1, 1955
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Institute of Metals Division - The Stress-Induced Ordering Internal Friction of Iron-Rich Alloys of Iron and AluminumBy M. J. Sinnot, J. C. Shyne
Low-frequency mechanical damping measurements were made to investigate internal friction in Fe-A1 alloys. The atomic ordering of the Fe-A1 system strongly influenced the stress-induced ordering inte
Jan 1, 1961
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GraphiteBy George D. Graffin
The first use of graphite is lost in the mists of time. It was used by primitive man to make drawings on the walls of caves and by the Egyptians to decorate pottery. As early as 1400 A.D. graphite cru
Jan 1, 1975