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Magnesium - Production of Magnesium by the Carbothermic Process at Permanente. (Metals Technology, Feb. 1944)By T. A. Dungan
The thermal processes for the production of metallic magnesium can be divided into two general classifications, the direct reduction of magnesia with carbon and the indirect reduction of compounds of
Jan 1, 1944
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New York Paper - Improvements in Blast Furnace Construction (with Discussion)By J. P. Dovel
Having been requested to prepare a paper referring especially to my patents as applied to blast furnaces, I shall confine my discussion to those improvements and inventions pertaining directly to the
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Some Experiments In The Production Of Aluminum-Nickel-Iron Alloys By 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 metals
Jan 1, 1941
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Production Of Magnesium By The Carbothermic Process At PermanenteBy T. A. Dungan
THE thermal processes for the production of metallic magnesium can be divided into two general classifications, the direct reduction of magnesia with carbon and the indirect reduction of compounds of
Jan 1, 1944
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A Design Philosophy For Ventilating Mines - IntroductionBy Michael J. Martinson
Mine ventilation has been evolving as a separate field of study since the middle of the nineteenth century, and some practitioners might assert that mine ventilation has come of age as a discrete fiel
Jan 1, 1980
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Magnesium Alloys - Gain 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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Institute of Metals Division - Mechanical Properties of High Purity Ti-Al Alloys (Discussion page 1561)By R. I. Jaffee, H. R. Ogden, D. J. Maykuth, W. L. Finlay
Titanium with up to 7.5 pct Al forms single-phase a alloys that are work hardening, not heat treatable, and ductile as welded. The high aluminum Y phase alloys are not usefully ductile, despite their
Jan 1, 1954
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Thermodynamic Properties of CS And Solutions of Sulfur in Carbon-Saturated Liquid IronBy R. A. Bergman, C. J. B. Fincham
THERMODYNAMIC properties of many high-temperature systems containing sulfur, such as slags, metal sulfides, and solutions of sulfur in liquid metals, have been studied by means of equilibration with k
Jan 1, 1958
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Papers - Recent Trends in Blast-furnace Operation and DesignBy B. J. Harlan
The trying times experienced by the steel industry during the past four years have emphasized the necessity of producing pig iron at the lowest possible cost. The trend in both design and operation of
Jan 1, 1934
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Industrial Minerals - Suspension Preheating of Dry Pulverized MaterialsBy G. K. Engelhart
A multi-stage counterflow process developed in Germany preheats dry pulverized portland cement raw materials held in suspension in rotary kiln waste gases. Capacity of the first kiln installed for thi
Jan 1, 1955
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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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Papers - The Nature of Passivity in Stainless Steels and Other Alloys, III -Time-potential Data for Cr-Ni and Cr-Ni-Mo Steels (T.P. 1121, with discussion)By H. H. Uhlig
In our study of the mechanism of and the prevention of corrosion in stainless steels, it was considered of fundamental importance to obtain knowledge of the surface structure of such alloys. If corros
Jan 1, 1940
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum Alloys - Tensile Properties of Aluminum-alloy Sheet at Elevated Temperatures (Metals Tech., Dec. 1945, T. P. 1929, with discussion)By Leslie F. Tedsen, John E. Dorn, Alan E. Flanigan
It is necessary occasionally to use aluminum-alloy sheet where moderately elevated temperatures are encountered. Considerable attention has been directed toward determining the influence of "artificia
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Alpha-beta Transformation in Brass (With Discussion)By Albert J. Phillips
When brasses containing from 61 to 62.5 per cent. copper are very rapidly cooled from temperatures near their melting point to below 0" C., unusual results are obtained. These results are quite unexpl
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Effect of Quenching Strains on Lattice Parameter and Hardness Values of High purity Aluminum -copper Alloys (With Discussion)By Arthur Phillips
The progress made in recent years in the art of dispersion-hardening has naturally led to an intensive study of alloy systems capable of yielding supersaturated solid solutions at ordinary temperature
Jan 1, 1934
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Mica (cae4be77-710c-49a6-96b1-b92b7759ef6b)By S. A. Montague
Mica can claim a considerably greater importance than would be assumed from its comparatively small dollar volume, which came to about $37,000,000 for the United States industry as a whole in 1957. Mi
Jan 1, 1960
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Expansion Properties of Low-expansion Fe-Ni-Co AlloysBy Howard Scott
INVAR is the preeminent low-expansion metal by virtue of the fact that it can be prepared with a zero coefficient of expansion at atmospheric temperature. This fact suggests that there is little room
Jan 1, 1930
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The Manufacture of Seamless Steel Tubing in AustraliaThe scope of this paper has been restricted to the manufacture in Australia of seamless steel tubing, as the subject of buttweld tubing has already been dealt with by A. N. Hamilton in a paper deliver
Jan 1, 1947
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Chicago Paper - Static, Dynamic and Notch Toughness (with Discussion)By S. L. Hoyt
Some of the more important properties of finished materials are strength, ductility, toughness, resistance to alternating and repeated stresses, etc. Of these, the property that appears to have receiv
Jan 1, 1920
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Institute of Metals Division - Further Studies of the Properties of Rhenium MetalBy Chester T. Sims, Robert I. Jaffee
The thermoelectric behavior of the Pt—Pt-Re thermocouple and the resistance of rhenium to attack by certain molten metals is discussed. In addition, data are presented on the stress-rupture behavior o
Jan 1, 1957