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Halifax Paper - Topographical Models: Their Construction and UsesBy A. E. Lehman
A RECENT demand for some form of panoramic display of an important railway line, showing its branches, connections, and terri tory controlled by it, revealed to the writer the advantages of' a to
Jan 1, 1886
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Subsidence Above Abandoned Coal MinesBy Richard E. Gray, Robert W. Bruhn
INTRODUCTION Underground coal mining has been practiced in the United States for over 200 years. Much early mining was not as efficient as today and unrecovered coal pillars, often of variable siz
Jan 1, 1982
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Copper, Nickel, Iron, and Chromium on the Tensile Properties of Preferentially Oriented Beryllium SheetBy F. M. Yans, A. D. Donaldson, A. R. Kaufmann
Beryllium was mixed by powder. metallurgical techniques with copper, nickel, iron, and chromium, respectively, to form beryllium -rich binary alloys which Mere then extyuded and rolled transtverse to
Jan 1, 1962
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Part VII - Thermodynamics of the Thermal Decomposition of Nickel(l1) Sulfate: The Ni-S-0 System from 1000° to 1150°KBy T. R. Ingraham
The thermal decomposition of Nickel (II) sulfate was examined by determining the total pressure of SO3, SO2, and O2 developed over a sample when it was heated in an evacuated system fitted with a Pyre
Jan 1, 1967
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Mineral PigmentsBy Kenneth R. Hancock
Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after it has been pulverized to pigmentary size. The current world p
Jan 1, 1975
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The Leaching of Synthetic Chalcocite and Covellite in Oxygenated Acidic Sulphate-Chloride SolutionsBy Lawson F
Narrowly sized samples of synthetic chalcocite (Cu2S) and covellite (CuS) were leached in oxygenated acidic sulphate-chloride solutions. Chalcocite leaches via a two-stage process, the first stage
Jan 1, 1989
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Lime (33660b7b-4e2d-4133-8f2c-3c5b7f0afd2f)By Kenneth A. Gutschick, Robert S. Boynton
Lime has become a very general loosely used term that includes virtually all finely divided types of limestone as well as burned forms of lime. However, actually (and according to Webster) lime is onl
Jan 1, 1960
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Pigments, Iron OxideBy David P. Keller, George Podolsky
Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after being pulverized to pigmentary size. The world production of i
Jan 1, 1994
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - Anisothermal Formation of Rainite and Proeutectoid Constituents in Steels (Metals Tech., December 1947, T.P. 2290) (with discussionBy Leonard D. Jaffe
In recent years, the advantages of tempered martensite as a microstructure for steel parts have been well established. For parts that must not fracture brittlely when loaded at high rates, at low temp
Jan 1, 1949
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Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - The Plastic Flow of Aluminum Alloy Sheet Under Combined Loads (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2237)By W. T. Lankford, Low J. R., Gensamer M.
The problem of sheet metal formability is one which has received a vast amount of attention during recent years. In spite of the great amount of study and experimental work which has been devoted to t
Jan 1, 1947
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Conference on Production and Design Limitation and Possibilities for Powder Metallurgy (Metal Technology, January 1945) - Sintered MagnetsBy C. R. Fulton
The idea of making permanent magnets by sintering is not a new one, but until the introduction of the iron-nickel-aluminum permanent-magnet alloys there was little need for such a process. Permanent-m
Jan 1, 1945
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Propeller Type Mine Fan at Moose Shaft, Butte, MontanaBy A. S. Richardson
THE recent installation of a high-pressure propeller type fan at the Moose shaft of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. at Butte, Mont., is of interest on account of novelty of design and also because an a
Jan 1, 1932
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Transformation of Austenite - Anisothermal Formation of Rainite and Proeutectoid Constituents in Steels (Metals Tech., December 1947, T.P. 2290) (with discussionBy Leonard D. Jaffe
In recent years, the advantages of tempered martensite as a microstructure for steel parts have been well established. For parts that must not fracture brittlely when loaded at high rates, at low temp
Jan 1, 1949
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Part 2: Wet Fine Particle Concentration Section 1: Dense MediaBy Byron C. Hardinge, Michael Sokaski, Paul F. Sands, W. Loring III Mc Morris, David J. Akers
INTRODUCTION In the early days of coarse-coal cleaning by the dense-medium process in Europe, loess was one of the materials used for medium solids. Newly developed cyclones were used to reclaim and
Jan 1, 1991
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Rate Of Nucleation And Rate Of Growth Of PearliteBy Frederick C. Hull, Robert F. Mehl, Robert A. Colton
IT is known that pearlite forms from austenite by a process of nucleation and growth, and that the rate of formation of pearlite may be described by a rate of nucleation and a rate of growth 12 The ma
Jan 1, 1942
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Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - The Plastic Flow of Aluminum Alloy Sheet Under Combined Loads (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2237)By Low J. R., Gensamer M., W. T. Lankford
The problem of sheet metal formability is one which has received a vast amount of attention during recent years. In spite of the great amount of study and experimental work which has been devoted to t
Jan 1, 1947
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Rate Of Nucleation And Rate Of Growth Of Pearlite (456dcc9b-e26c-43fe-a074-958aa64d7f71)By Frederick C. Hull, Robert F. Mehl, Robert A. Colton
IT is known that pearlite forms from austenite by a process of nucleation and growth, and that the rate of formation of pearlite may be described by a rate of nucleation and a rate of growth.1,2 The m
Jan 1, 1942
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SaltBy Charles H. Jacoby, Stanley J. LeFond
Salt, or halite, has had a long and most varied history. While we know the Chinese were producing salt as early as 3000 B.C., the first written reference to salt appears in the book of Job recorded ab
Jan 1, 1975
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Drilling-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Heat Losses During Flow of Steam Down a WellboreBy A. Satter
Studies of wellbore heat transtnission during the injection of a hot fluid, as either gas or liquid, have appeared in he literature. The present investigation takes into account the effect of condensa
Jan 1, 1966
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Assessing Risks from Mining-Induced Ground Movements near Gas WellsBy Gregory M. Rumbaugh, Christopher Mark
"The proliferation of unconventional gas well development in the Northern Appalachian coalfields has raised a number of mine safety concerns. Unconventional wells, which extract gas from deep shale fo
Jan 1, 2019