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Thermal And Electrical Conductivities Of Copper AlloysBy Cyril Stanley Smith, Earl W. Palmer
FOR several years an investigation has been in progress in the research laboratory of The American Brass Co. to determine the thermal and electrical conductivities of most copper alloys of commercial
Jan 1, 1935
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Application Of Computers To Production Planning In Underground MinesBy William J. Douglas, Jack T. Urie, Randall D. Metz
Production and financial planning for a new underground mine requires the coordination of equipment and coal reserves in a manner which assures that resources are utilized efficiently in achieving the
Jan 1, 1983
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Determination of Average Reservoir Pressure From Build-Up SurveysBy D. N. Dietz
A method for determining average reservoir pressure is presented, which is simpler to apply than that devised by Matthews. Brons and Hazebroek. For bounded reservoirs, identical results are obtained i
Jan 1, 1966
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Stress-Strain Analysis Of A Viscoelastic Mine RoofBy Paul H. Lu, Fred D. Wright
Numerous laboratory tests and field measurements conducted by different persons have indicated that most mine rocks behave viscoelastically rather than elastically. Hence, for an accurate and realisti
Jan 1, 1972
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1971 Industrial Minerals ReviewBy Oscar M. Wicken
Industrial minerals - being the basic materials for much of the industrial activity in the world -suffer or gain in the market place with changes in that activity. The period 1970 and early 1971 has b
Jan 1, 1972
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New York Paper - Welding Mild Steel (with Discussion)By H. M. Hobart
This paper deals principally with investigations undertaken by the Welding Research Sub-committee of the Welding Committee of the Emergency Fleet Corporation. The general object of the investigations
Jan 1, 1920
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Minerals Beneficiation - Analysis of Data from Continuous Flotation TestsBy C. C. Harris, A. Jowett, S. K. Ghosh
An equation derived from first-order kinetics and accounting for return from froth to pulp has correlated continuous flotation data. The concentration of floatable material in the pulp can be altered
Jan 1, 1963
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Discussion - Impacts Of Land Use Planning On Mineral Resources - Technical Papers, Mining Engineering, Vol. 36, No. 4, April, 1984, pp. 362 -369 – Ramani, R. V., Sweigard, R. J.By G. F. Leaming
The paper by R.V. Ramani and R.J. Sweigard is a wonderful description of the labyrinthine web that has been spun about the mining industry by energetic bureaucrats and politicians over the past 50 yea
Jan 1, 1986
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Part VI – June 1968 - Papers - Internal Oxidation of Iron-Manganese AlloysBy J. H. Swisher
When an Fe-Mn alloy is internally oxidized, the inclusions formed are MnO which contains some dissolzled FeO. In the internal oxidation reaction, not all of the manganese is oxidized; some remains in
Jan 1, 1969
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Institute of Metals Division - Low Melting Gallium Alloys (With Discussion)By R. I. Jaffee, R. M. Evans
IN recent years, the interest in liquid metals as heat-transfer media for power plants has been very great. The possibility of the development of nuclear power plants has increased this interest and s
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep Correlations in Alpha Solid Solutions of AluminumBy O. D. Sherby, J. E. Dorn
SEVERAL years ago Zener and Hollomon1 suggested that the flow stress of metals might be related to the temperature and strain rate in accord with the functional equation: s=s(eeh/rt) [1]
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - Mathematics of the Thermal Diffusion of Hydrogen in Zircaloy-2By Anton Sawatzky, Erich Vogt
By means of mathematical solutions to the appropriate diffusion equations, we describe the kinetics of the thermal diffusion of hydrogen in Zircaloy-2 for the various temperatures and concentrations e
Jan 1, 1963
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Part VI – June 1969 - Papers - Surface Self-Diffusion of NickelBy P. Douglas, G. M. Leak, B. Mills
The sinusoidal surface relaxation technique has been used to measure the surface self-diffusion coefficient of spectroscopically pure nickel over a wide temperature range under a hydrogen atmosphere.
Jan 1, 1970
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Institute of Metals Division - Easy Glide and Grain Boundary Effects in Polycrystalline AluminumBy R. L. Fleischer, W. F. Hosford
Tensile data for coarse grained aluminum Polycrystals suggest that the "grain size" effect is not due to dislocations piled up at grain boundaries but rather is primarily a relative size effect due t
Jan 1, 1962
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Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - The Effect of Production History on Determination of Formation Characteristics From Flow TestsBy G. W. Nabor, A. S. Odeh
The effect of production history of a well on the results of two-rate flow tests, and conventional build-up analyses was investigated. The effect was examined by means of digital computers and an R-C
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Engineering-General - The Diffusional Behavior and Viscosity of Liquid MixturesBy A. W. Adamson
A model for transport processes in liquid mixtures is discussed which supposes that the elementary act involves a position exchange between two species and that the exchange is so confined by the solv
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A Hurdle Lowered - Editorial Reprinted From Mining And Metallurgy, May, 1935SOME days ago a visiting member from Pittsburgh who is an ardent supporter of the Institute remarked: "There are a lot of men who would be members of the Institute if it weren't so expensive. It
Jan 1, 1935
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Institute of Metals Division - The Solid Solubility of Zirconium in Copper (TN)By Walter Showak
The published phase diagrams for the copper-zirconium system1,2 indicate that the solid solubility of zirconium in copper is not accurately known. Studies made on relatively impure alloys by Pogodin,
Jan 1, 1962
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Grain Refinement Of Magnesium Alloys Without SuperheatingBy Ralph Hultgren, David W. Mitchell
MAGNESIUM alloys usually are superheated before casting in order to ensure fineness of grain. Superheat temperatures in common use range from 1600° to 1700°F while the casting temperature, which depen
Jan 1, 1945
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Magnesium Alloys - Grain Refinement of Magnesium Alloys without Superheating (Metals Technology, June 1945)By Ralph Hultgren, David W. Mitchell
Magnesium alloys usually are superheated before casting in order to ensure fineness of grain. Superheat temperatures in common use range from 1600" to r 7o0°F.; the casting temperature, which depends
Jan 1, 1945