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New York Paper - Reduction of Iron Ores by Carbon Monoxide (with Discussion)By Heihachi Kamura
The reduction of iron oxide, such as Fe203, to iron in the blast furnace is performed principally by carbon monoxide, but partly by solid carbon by the two following reactions: Fe2O3 + 3CO = 2Fe 4-
Jan 1, 1925
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MLA 75-85 - Mineral Resources Of The Terry Badlands Study Area, Custer And Prairie Counties, Montana ? SummaryBy J. Douglas Causey
In 1984, at the request of the Bureau of Land Management, the Bureau of Mines studied 29,020 acres of the 43,165-acre Terry Badlands Wilderness Study Area (MT-024-684) in order to evaluate its mineral
Jan 1, 1985
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Papers - Steelmaking - The Role of Basic Slags in the Elimination of Phosphorus from Steel (Metals Technology, April 1944) (With discussion)By William J. McCaughey, Richard L. Barrett
For sixty years—in fact, ever since the inception of the basic steelmaking process —basic slags have been the subject of study by chemists, metallurgists and petrog-raphers! with the purpose of provid
Jan 1, 1944
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Application Of PH Slag-Basicity Measurements To Basic Open-Hearth Phosphorus ControlBy Michael Tenenbaum, C. C. Brown
IN recent years, the importance of slag control in basic open-hearth operations has been universally recognized. To effect such control during the working period of the heat, methods have been develop
Jan 1, 1945
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Papers - - Research - Extending the Application of Electric Analogy in Oil-reservoir Studies (TP 2125, Petr. Tech., Jan. 1947, with discussion)By Henry Schaefer
Solution by electric analogy of performance problems of reservoirs containing oil and gas has heretofore depended upon a process of successive approximations based on material-balance calculations, be
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Mechanical Properties of Steel - Anomalous Changes in Tensile Properties of Quenched Iron-cobalt (35 per cent Co) Alloys (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2221, with discussion)By J. K. Stanley
Iron-cobalt alloys in the range of 35-50 pct cobalt are of interest in the electrical industry because they possess the highest magnetic saturation of any magnetic material known. l1,2The magnetic sat
Jan 1, 1948
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Steelmaking - Effect of Ingot Delivery Time as a Factor in Quality of Bessemer Steel (Metals Technology, August 1945) (With discussion)By Howard C. Dunkle
Various factors can affect the quality of BIII2 and BIII3 steel as produced in a bessemer plant; among them: vessel-charging practice, blowing practice, ingot-pouring practice, ingot delivery-time pra
Jan 1, 1945
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Ion Exchange Resin Evaluation In Uranium RecoveryBy R. F. Janke, J. F. Bossler
Introduction The commercial use of ion exchange resins to recover uranium evolved in the decade following 1950 when significant efforts were made to recover this vital element economically and eff
Jan 1, 1979
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Anomalous Changes In Tensile Properties Of Quenched Iron-Cobalt (35 Pct Co) AlloysBy James K. Stanley
IRON-COBALT alloys in the range of 35-50 pct cobalt are of interest in the electrical industry because they possess the highest magnetic saturation of any magnetic material known.1,2 The magnetic satu
Jan 1, 1947
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Resource Recovery In Waste Treatment Increasingly UsedBy Surendra K. Mishra
The increasing volume of wastes being generated by industry is a legacy of the industrial revolution and subsequent industrial growth. Social and regulatory pressures have been mounting on industry to
Jan 1, 1999
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Part III – March 1968 - Papers - Solution Growth of (Zn,Hg) Te and Ga(P,As) CrystalsBy B. N. Das, H. E. LaBelle, G. A. Wolf
ZnxHg1-xTe and GUPxAS1-x crystals have been grown from solution by a traveling heater method (THM). In a floating zone type fashion a solution zone sandwich of liquidus composition is made to migrat
Jan 1, 1969
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Mechanical Properties of Steel - Anomalous Changes in Tensile Properties of Quenched Iron-cobalt (35 per cent Co) Alloys (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2221, with discussion)By J. K. Stanley
Iron-cobalt alloys in the range of 35-50 pct cobalt are of interest in the electrical industry because they possess the highest magnetic saturation of any magnetic material known. l1,2The magnetic sat
Jan 1, 1948
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The Role Of Basic Slags In The Elimination Of Phosphorus From SteelBy William J. McCaughey, Richard L. Barrett
FOR sixty years-in fact, ever since the inception of the basic steelmaking process -basic slags have been the subject of study by chemists, metallurgists and petrographers, with the purpose of providi
Jan 1, 1944
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Minerals Beneficiation - Determination of Strain Energy in Muscovite by Simultaneous Measurement of Enthalpies and Weight LossBy William Lodding
Muscovite was the crystalline material used in the experiments discussed in this paper. It was both wet and dry ground for various periods of time. The effects (physical and chemical changes) produced
Jan 1, 1968
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Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - Activity of Carbon in AusteniteBy David R. Poirier
Activity data of carbon as a function of both temperature and composition throughout the stable austenite range is correlated by mearts of an equation derived from a quasi-chemical model. The carbon
Jan 1, 1969
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Techno-Economic Feasibility of a Peroxidation Process to Enhance Prereduction of ChromiteBy E. L. J. Kleynhans, J. I. J. Fick, J. P. Beukes, P. G. van Zyl
"Ferrochrome (FeCr) is vital for the production of stainless and high-alloy ferritic steels, since it is the only source of new Cr units. FeCr production is an energy-intensive process. The pelletized
Jan 1, 2017
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Iron and Steel Division - Equilibria Controlling the Decarburization of Solid Ferrochromium by Chromium OxideBy H. A. Hancock, L. M. Pidgeon
Equilibrium carbon monoxide pressures were measured over the reaction between chromium oxide and a number of solid ferrochromium alloys in the composition range 0.4 to 4.8 pct C and 0 to 49 pct Fe. Me
Jan 1, 1963
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Some Experiments In The Production Of Aluminum-Nickel-Iron Alloys Of Powder MetallurgyBy P. R. Kalischer
IN the production of alloys by powder metallurgical processes it is often necessary or desirable to include one or more components that tend to form very stable oxides. Included in this group of metal
Jan 1, 1941
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Grain Refinement Of A Carbothermic Magnesium Alloy By SuperheatingBy Ralph Hultgren, Bernard York, David W. Mitchell
It is a well-known fact that magnesium-alloy castings are apt to be coarse grained if the melt is not superheated several hundred degrees above the melting point before casting. (The casting temperatu
Jan 1, 1945
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Papers - Steelmaking - The Role of Basic Slags in the Elimination of Phosphorus from Steel (Metals Technology, April 1944) (With discussion)By William J. McCaughey, Richard L. Barrett
For sixty years—in fact, ever since the inception of the basic steelmaking process —basic slags have been the subject of study by chemists, metallurgists and petrog-raphers! with the purpose of provid
Jan 1, 1944