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Part VI – June 1968 - Papers - The Determination of Water Vapor in Tough Pitch Copper Wire Bar by an Aluminum Reduction TechniqueBy John C. Gifford, Charles L. Thomas
A unique and reproducible method is presented for the determination of water vapor in tough pitch wire bar copper. The procedure involves reduction of the water vapor with molten aluminum to form hyd
Jan 1, 1969
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Iron and Steel Division - The Activity and Solubility of Oxygen in Liquid Iron, Nickel, and CobaltBy N. A. Gokcen, E. S. Tankins, G. R. Belton
Equilibrium in the reaction H2(g) + O[in liquid iron, cobalt, or nickel] = H2O(g) has been investigated over wide temperature and composition ranges. Oxygen has been found to obey Henry's Law in
Jan 1, 1964
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Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - The Effect of Liquid Viscosity in Two-Phase Vertical FlowBy K. E. Brown, A. R. Hagedorn
Continuous, two phase flow tests have been conducted during which four liquids of widely differing viscosities were produced by means of air-lift through 1%-in. tubing in a 1,500-ft. experimental well
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - Recrystallization Textures in Bcc MetalsBy I. L. Dillamore
A purely geomentrical analysis based on oriented-growth relationships is presented to derive annealing-texture orientations in bcc metals from their- known deformation textures. The analysis takes as
Jan 1, 1965
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Drilling Cost Escalation in the Gulf of MexicoBy George W. Friesen
This paper presents the historical trend and de- fines the causes of drilling cost escalation in the Gulf of Mexico during the 1970's. The three major components of escalation are: 1) inflation,
Jan 1, 1982
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Value of the Mines of the United StatesBy W. R. Ingalls
WHAT proportion of the national wealth is represented by' the producing mines of the country?' Or by the- mining and metallurgical industry-as a whole, for it is impossible to make-an econom
Jan 1, 1921
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion of Thermodynamic Properties of Titanium-Oxygen- Hydrogen AlloysBy Kenneth A. Moon
Kenneth A. Moon (U.S. Army Materials Research Agency)—The authors are to be congratulated for a very interesting and valuable paper. Their discussion of the structural implications of the results sho
Jan 1, 1963
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Technical Notes - Role of Strain Energy in Solid Solution ThermodynamicsBy E. S. Machlin
THE function of this paper is to present certain results based on the fact that the strain energy arising from the solution of out-of-size solute atoms into the solid matrix is free energy and not int
Jan 1, 1955
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Institute of Metals Division - A Rationalization of the Data on Grain Boundary Migration in Zone-Refined Metals as Influenced by Dissolved ImpuritiesBy Paul Gordon
It is shown that equations for grain-boundary migrntion given by Gordon and Vandermeer, based on a theory first advanced quantitatively by Lucke and Detert, satisfactorily explain recent data on both
Jan 1, 1963
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Part VII – July 1968 - Papers - 1968 Institute of Metals Lecture - Resistance To Hot DeformationBy D. McLean
For many pu@oses uniform strength is desired over a long temperature range, coupled to a band of softness at the hot end for easy shaping. Various types of material fulfill such a requirement to diff
Jan 1, 1969
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An Electrolytic Method For Pointing Tungsten WiresBy W. G. Pfann
THE problem of forming points on wires that were from 0.002 in. to 0.010 in. in diam arose in the recent appearance of silicon and germanium point contact rectifiers as elements in microwave radar.1 I
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Tungsten, Molybdenum and Chromium - An Electrolytic Method for Pointing Tungsten Wires (Metals Tech., June 1947, TP 2210) With discussionBy W. G. Pfann
The problem of forming points on wires that were from 0.002 in. to 0.010 in. in diam arose in the recent appearance of silicon and germanium point contact rectifiers as elements in microwave radar.&ap
Jan 1, 1949
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PART II - Communications - Anomalies of the Electrical Resistivity of Nickel-Aluminum AlloysBy H. Kreye, E. Hornbogen
An increase in electrical resistivity during aging or after quenching from high temperatures is known in a large number of alloys. Plastic deformation of alloys in this condition leads to a decrease i
Jan 1, 1967
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Kinetic Study of the Leaching of MolybdeniteBy M. E. Wadsworth, W. H. Dresher, W. M. Fassell
HIGH temperature-high pressure techniques have long been used to great advantage in the organic chemical industry, the petroleum industry, and the paper industry. Only recently, however, have these me
Jan 1, 1957
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The Determination of Combined Carbon in Steel by the Colorimetric MethodBy J. Blodget Britton
IN the Journal of the Franklin Institute for May, 1870, there is published a description of a Colorimeter, together with a modification of the method proposed by Professor Eggertz, for determining com
Jan 1, 1873
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Part X – October 1969 - Papers - Ductile-to-Brittle Transition in Austenitic Chromium-Manganese-Nitrogen Stainless SteelsBy J. D. Defilippi, E. M. Gilbert, K. G. Brickner
FCC chromium-manganese-nitrogen (Cr-Mn-N) steels differ from most other fcc materials in that these steels undergo a ductile-to-brittle transition. Transformation to martensite is considered to be res
Jan 1, 1970
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Notes On The Disadvantages Of Chrome Brick In Copper Reverberatory Furnaces (4864cf92-69f5-4af6-8342-660ee1c73f85)THE CHAIRMAN (G. H. CLEVENGER, Stanford University, Cal.).¬I would like to ask Mr. Pyne if he has had any experience inn the use of chromite as refractory under conditions that are highly reducing? I
Jan 4, 1918
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Institute of Metals Division - Solubility of Nitrogen in Tantalum (TN)By C. Wert, P. Bunn
Determination of the solid solubility of gases in metals is usually done by one of two methods. The first is an additive method, in which measurement is made at temperature of the maximum amount of
Jan 1, 1964
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New York Paper - The Determination of Combined Carbon in Steel by the Colorimetric MethodBy J. Blodget Britton
IN the Journal of the Franklin Institute for May, 1870, there is published a description of a Colorimeter, together with a modification of the method proposed by Professor Eggertz, for determining com