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RI 3281 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1934 ? SummaryBy G. R. Hopkins
The average quantity of heat needed to refine a barrel of crude oil in 1934 was 638,000 B.t.u., or about as much heat energy as contained in 5 gallons of fuel oil. Although the total heat utilized in
Jan 1, 1935
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RI 8422 Two-Measurement Methods for Working-Level Determinations of Radon Daughters, A Theoretical StudyBy Robert F. Holub
The Bureau of Mines has evaluated four working-level radiation-measurement methods and optimized them from the inherent and statistical error standpoint. Optimization with respect to various sampling
Jan 1, 1980
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RI 2849 Analyses Of Crude Oils From The West Texas District ? IntroductionBy A. J. Kraemer
[The Bureau of Minas for a number of years has been studying the properties of crude petroleum from producing fields in the United States and Western Hemisphere and has published a series of reports o
Jan 1, 1927
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RI 6839 Influence Of Continuous Carbonization Method, Temperature, And Carrier Gas On The Amounts Of Individual Pyrolysis Products From A Sub-Bituminous CoalBy Jr. Karr
The Bureau of Mines studied the influence of carbonization method, temperature, and carrier gas on the composition of eight different low-temperature tars produced from a Colorado subbituminous coal.
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 3269 Special Multiple Shot Blasting UnitsBy A. V. Hooker, E. J. Coggeshall
"The Bureau of Mines for some time advocated the firing of all blasts in coal mines as single shots, and this method of firing is the general practice in American bituminous-coal mines. All single sho
Mar 1, 1935
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Literature ReviewBy Lloyd A. Morley, Alan M. Christman
Introduction A wealth of information exists which deals with electrical grounding, both from a general viewpoint and from a specifically mine-oriented approach. Many parameters must be investigate
Jan 1, 1976
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Fate Of Trace Mercury In The Combustion Of CoalBy R. C. Diehl
Coal, fly ash, and flue gas samples were analyzed for mercury (Hg) by double gold amalgamation-flameless atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The purpose of the study was to elucidate the fate of the
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 2978 Flow Of Gas In The Blast-Furnace ShaftBy S. P. Kinney
During 1925, at Holt, Ala., the United States Bureau of Mines made a study of the composition of the gases at four elevations in the shaft of a furnace producing foundry iron. A report3 of the work wa
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2114 Use of Airplanes in Mine Rescue WorkBy F. J. Bailey
"In the fall of 1919, the U.S. Bureau of Mines began an inquiry as to the possibility of utilizing airplanes in conjunction with its rescue work, for quickly transporting engineers and oxygen rescue-a
Apr 1, 1920
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RI 7499 Heat Of Formation Of Cuprous Cyanide And Its Heat Capacity From 10° To 400° KBy A. R. Taylor
Using solution calorimetry, the following heats of reaction were determined: (1) NaCN(c) + 1/Cu20(c) + 129H20(l) ? CuCN(c) + NaOH?128.5H2O ?H = -13.44±0.10 kcal/mole, (2) HCN(2) + NaOH?128.5H
Jan 1, 1971
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Technology News - No. 489 - Reducing the Danger of Explosions in Sealed Areas (Gobs) in MinesObjective To identify techniques to reduce the probability of gob gas explosions. Background In the last 6 years, seven explosions of methane and/or coal dust occurred within worked-out, seal
May 1, 2001
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RI 3554 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1939 ? SummaryBy G. R. Hopkins
[A new record in fuel efficiency at petroleum refineries was established in 1939, when a the average B.t.u. requirements per barrel of crude oil processed declined to a new low of 557,000 B.t.u. (see
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 2874 Milling Baboquivari OresBy Edmund S. Leaver, Jesse A. Woolf
"The Baboquivari mining district is about 60 miles southwest of Tucson, Ariz., the present railroad shipping point. The values are silver and gold. The silver is largely associated with the black oxid
May 1, 1928
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RI 2128 Sulphur Dioxide as Factor in Smoke Problem, Salt Lake CityBy G. St John Perrott
"The United States Bureau of Mines is cooperating with the State of Utah and the City of Salt Lake in an investigation of methods of abating the smoke nuisance in Salt Lake City. In the course of this
May 1, 1920
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IC 9164 Water-Jet-Assisted Drag Bit Cutting In Medium-Strength RockBy J. E. Geier
This Bureau of Mines report reviews hypotheses for the mechanism by which water jets reduce the specific energy of cutting for drag bits. Several of these hypotheses are shown to be inconsistent with
Jan 1, 1987
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Electromagnetic Direction Finding Experiments For Location Of Trapped MinersBy A. J. Farstad, R. G. Olsen
The Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, passed by Congress in the wake of the disaster at Farmington, West Virginia, led to an extensive study by the National Academy of Engineering of the proble
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 6583 Heats Of Formation Of Lithium Chloride And Lithium Oxalate, Including Details On The Construction And Operation Of A Solution CalorimeterBy B. B. Letson
The heats of formation of lithium chloride and lithium oxalate were determined with the aid of a Bureau-developed, glass Dewar-type solution calorimeter which uses thermistors as its temperature sensi
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 8269 - Methane Emissions From Gassy Coals In Storage SilosBy Fred N. Kissell, J. E. Matta, J. C. LaScola
The methane gas emitted from coal samples collected from the conveyor belts dumping into silos was measured by the Bureau of Mines. Approximately 50 pct of the total gas desorbed into a sealed can wit
Jan 1, 1978
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Electromagnetic Location Systems For Metal/Non Metal MinesBy A. J. Farstad, R. F. Kehrman
Characteristics of metal/non metal mines were evaluated to determine the suitability of applying the U.S. Bureau of Mines electromagnetic location system to the problem of locating trapped driers in m
Jan 1, 1979
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Instrumentation for the Measurement of Respirable Coal Mine DustBy Kenneth L. Rubow, Virgil A. Marple
"INTRODUCTION Respirable dust is defined as the dust which penetrates to the alveolated regions of the lungs. Due to the size selective nature of the particle removal mechanisms in the nasal passages
Jan 1, 1988