Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - A Laboratory Investigation of Borehole StabilityBy H. C. H. Darley
The principal causes of unstable boreholes* have been known for many years. For example, in a paper published in 1938, Halbouty and Kaldenbachl listed nearly all the classes of troublesome shales that
Jan 1, 1970
-
Petroleum Facts and FanciesBy F. G. Clapp
IT is to be hoped that no casual reader will erroneously refer to the latest publication' of the Division of Public Relations of the American Petroleum Institute, as being "Petroleum Facts and Fa
Jan 1, 1929
-
The Mineral Resources Of Korea.By Hallet R. Robbins
KOREA, the ancient " Hermit Kingdom," is a peninsula jutting out from the coast of eastern Asia. By the natives it is called " Chosen," which, translated, means " Land of the Morning Calm." It lies be
Jan 7, 1908
-
Hardening Effects Resulting From The Formation Of Both A Precipitate Phase And A SuperlatticeBy M. R. Pickus, I. W. Pickus
ORDINARILY age-hardening is thought of as being associated with a limited solubility of one metal in another. Much less has been written about the type of age-hardening that attends the formation of s
Jan 1, 1943
-
Erskine RamsayONE DAY IN the mid-1880s, in a suburb 0f Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, there dismounted from a train the two foremost leaders of the day in the coal and steel industries-Andrew Carnegie and H. C. Frick. T
Jan 1, 1953
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Recent Development of Stability Studies of Steep Rock Slopes in EuropeBy K. W. John, L. Mueller
The rock mechanics approach to stability problems of steep rock slopes dealt with in this article has particular reference to the concept and methods of analysis developed by the Salzburg, Austria, sc
Jan 1, 1963
-
Factors Affecting the Replacement of EquipmentBy H. B. FERNALD
THE interesting and carefully developed formula which Professor Bucky presents for answering the question of whether proposed new equipment will give a net return on investment equal to or greater tha
Jan 1, 1930
-
Reservoir Engineering - General - Three-Phase Reservoir SimulationBy E. H. Herron, J. H. Perry
Mathematical simulation of reservoir behavior may be used to help understand reservoir processes and to predict reservoir behavior, thereby leading to the most economically desirable form of exploitat
Jan 1, 1970
-
Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Temperature Distribution in a Circulating Drilling FluidBy L. R. Raymond
With the trend toward deeper and consequently hotter holes, measurements of drilling mud properties at atmospheric temperatures are becoming increasingly inadequate.' Both the prediction and cont
Jan 1, 1970
-
Elimination of Waste in IndustryBy AIME AIME
THE Committee on Elimination of Waste in industry came into existence from a speech in Washington by Mr. ,Hoover, in November, in which, he said: It is primary to mention the three-phase waste in pr
Jan 1, 1921
-
Reservoir Engineering - General - A Mathematical Model of Repeated Steam Soaks of Thick Gravity Drainage ReservoirsBy G. E. Perry, R. D. Seba
The steam soak process is the most widely applied and most successful thermal supplemental recovery process in use today. This process, which consists of injection of steam in various quantities into
Jan 1, 1970
-
The 4 W’s of Fuel Cells – Who-What-Where-WhenBy Ernst M. Cohn
The demonstrations of the "Silent Sentry" by Union Carbide Corp. in 1957 and of a special tractor-plow by Allis-Chalmers in 1959 ushered in the technology era of fuel cells. The idea for direct conver
Jan 9, 1964
-
The New York Annual MeetingBy AIME AIME
EITHER the 2300 people who came to the Annual Meeting were in a better frame of mind or they were resigned to their fate, or it was a better meeting than usual. Whatever the reason, at the 1nstitute?s
Jan 1, 1938
-
Division Lectures - The Thirty-eighth Henry Marion Howe Memorial Lecture - Role of Chemistry in Metallurgical ResearchBy Lawrence S. Darken
STAFF: Editor, Gerhord Derge Cornegie Institute of Technology Schenley Pork Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Editorial Assistant, M. A. Redmerski Production Editor, Otto T. Johnson THE METALLURGIC
Jan 1, 1962
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Adsorption Mechanisms in Nonmetallic Activation SystemsBy D. A. Elgillani, M. C. Fuerstenau, J. D. Miller
Adsorption of lead and ferric iron on quartz and alumina is presented as a function of pH. Only the hydrolyzed species of these metal ions, FeOH++ and PbOH+, adsorb significantly on each of these mine
Jan 1, 1971
-
Technical Papers and Notes - Iron and Steel Division - High-Temperature Deformation of Steels: A Study of Equicohesion, Activation Energies, and Structural ModificationsBy C. Crussard, R. Tamhankar
It is the policy of The Metallurgical Society to provide, in the TRANSACTIONS OF THE METALLURGICAL SOCIETY OF AIME, a prompt and accurate medium for publication of reports of significant new research
Jan 1, 1959
-
Iron and Steel Division - Activities of Components in Oxide Solid Solutions: The Systems CoO-MgO, CoO-MnO and CoO-"FeO" at 1200°CBy Arnulf Muan, Egil Aukrust
Activities of COO in the three solid solution series COO-MgO, COO-MnO, and COO-"FeO" have been determined at 1200°C by equilibrating oxide samples with a metal phase (cobalt or a Co-Fe alloy) in atmos
Jan 1, 1963
-
Mesabi Enters A New EraBy Paul C. Merritt
The story now unfolding on the Mesabi Range is more than just another chapter in the continuing history of iron mining. It is an epic of foresight, research and pioneering instinct just now culminatin
Jan 10, 1965
-
Milwaukee Paper - Effect of Impurities on Hardness of Cast Zinc or SpelterBy G. C. Stone
AS the term "hardness" is used with many different meanings, it should be understood that it here means resistance to deformation by compression. It was determined by measuring the pressure, in pounds
Jan 1, 1919
-
Industrial Minerals ? New Products, New Processes, New Uses for the NonmetallicsBy Oliver Bowles
PRICES of quartz sold in the United States in 1938 ranged from $1.15 to $36,000 a ton. This startling variation was due simply to the differences between glass sand and rock - crystal, materials that
Jan 1, 1939