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Technical Notes - What Mathematics Courses Should a Mining Engineer Take?
By G. H. Miller
With the recent advances which have been made in science and technology and the increased use of mathematics in this area, the question of the best mathematics courses for a mining engineer to take is
Jan 1, 1971
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Technical Notes - X-Ray Crystallographic Data on As2Te3
By C. W. Spencer, J. Singer
A PARTIAL phase diagram for the As-Te system is given in Hansen.' The only compound reported is As2Te3, melting at 362°C. Stoichiometric quantities of reagent-grade elements were reacted in evacu
Jan 1, 1956
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Technical Notes - X-Ray Diffraction Study of the Nitrides of Uranium
By D. A. Vaughan
COMPOUNDS in the U-N system have received little attention since the work of Rundle, Baen-ziger, Wilson, and McDonald in 1948.' They described the three nitrides UN2, U2,N2, and UN as the only p
Jan 1, 1957
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Technical Notes - X-Ray Diffraction Study of the Sigma Phase in the Systems Re-Cr. Ru-Cr. and Os-Cr
By J. S. Kasper, R. M. Waterstrat
IN view of the recent findings of a pronounced ordering of atoms in s phase alloys containing elements of the first long row of the periodic table (and including molybdenum),l it is of interest to res
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes - X-ray Microscopy of As-Grown and Deformed Single Crystals of Aluminum
By N. A. McKinnon, J. H. Auld, A. M. Marshall, R. A. Coyle
IN making a study of the slip deformation and strain hardening of single crystals of aluminum, it has been found that considerable information additional to that provided by the usual metal-lographic
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes - X-Ray Satellite Line Structure of Ferrite for CrK Radiation
By E. P. Klier, V. Weiss
IN studies of the X-ray diffraction line geometry of iron with chromium radiation using techniques aimed at minimizing the background intensity, Kp and Ka emission satellites* were resolved with three
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes - Zone Refining of Bismuth
By J. H. Wernick, D. Dorsi, K. E. Benson
A LTHOUGH a considerable number of experi--ti mental investigations dealing with the roasting of sulfide minerals have been reported in the past,'"" the behavior of the single roasting particle d
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes -Extraction of Silica from Wisconsin Gogebic Taconite by the Soda Ash Sinter Process
By T. D. Tiemann
Extraction of silica from the taconites of the Wisconsin Gogebic range by high temperature digestion in caustic solutions has been described.1,2 The ores consist essentially of hematite, goethite, a
Jan 1, 1964
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - An Efficient Method of Desulfurizing Liquid Pig Iron
By L. Wahl, M. Allard, B. Trentini
REMOVAL of sulfur in steelmaking is presently a problem of utmost importance as requirements on final sulfur contents in finished steels become increasingly strict. This is in spite of often increased
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - An Oxygen Steelmaking Process
By F. W. Luersson
High carbon, low phosphorus steel can now be made from pig iron containing 0.7 pct P or more, in a commercial sized open hearth furnace. No external heat is required for refining, and steel produced i
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Comparison of Blast Furnace Penetration With Model Studies
By W. H. Holman, J. B. Wagstaff
IN spite of considerable interest among blast furnace operators on the question of the penetration of air into the furnace, there is still uncertainty as to how far the blast does, in fact, penetra
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Continuous Casting Of Three Types of Low Carbon Steel
By F. G. Jaicks
RECOGNITION of the benefits to be gained from the continuous casting of molten steel into finished or semifinished products has been given by scientific minds since the very beginnings of steel plant
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Effect of Oxygen Input Rates In the Decarburization of Chromium Steel
By G. W. Healy, D. C. Hilty
MAJOR considerations in the production of stainless steel are the utilization of stainless steel scrap and the recovery of chromium and other metallic values from the initial furnace charge. The decar
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Hydrogen In Steelmaking Practice
By Nicholas J. Grant, Henry Epstein, John Chipman
FOR many years steel producers have been concerned with the presence of hydrogen in steel. Hydrogen dissolved in excess of its solid solubility at the melting point may cause bleeding and gross unsoun
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Origin and Elimination of Hydrogen in Basic Open Hearth Steels
By W. L. Kerlie, J. H. Richards
The variation in hydrogen content of basic open-hearth steels during refining and the effect of changing from steam to air atomization were studied. The water content of the furnace atmosphere, the sl
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Some Observations on Ferrite-Carbide Aggregates in Alloy Steels
By E. S. Davenport
IT is indeed an honor and a responsibility to have been selected to present the thirty-fourth in this series of Henry Marion Howe lectures, established to perpetuate the memory of a great teacher and
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Synthesis of Some Ferrites
By Arthur Tauber, Horst Kedesdy
FERRITES are sintered metallic oxides of the spinel structure type1 and belong to the class of soft ferromagnetic materials. Similar to a ceramic, they can be formed and fired to a dense body, exhibit
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Thermodynamic Properties of CS And Solutions of Sulfur in Carbon-Saturated Liquid Iron
By 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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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Use of Oxygen at Abbey Melting Shop, Steel Co. of Wales Ltd.
By A. J. Kesterton
MORE than 90 pct of the total tonnage of ingots made at Abbey Melting Shop is for steel sheet to specifications ranging between 0.055 and 0.07 pct maximum carbon. Since the rate of carbon elimination
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes Minerals Beneficiation - Double-Bond Reactivity of Oleic Acid During Flotation
By R. E. Cole, A. M. Gaudin
OLEIC acid, a standard flotation reagent, has generally been preferred to other fatty acids. Because oleic acid differs from saturated fatty acids by the presence of one carbon-to-carbon double bond a
Jan 1, 1954