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Bituminous Coal for Higher Temperatures in Open-hearth FurnacesBy Theodore Nagel
Fuel-oil, natural gas and coke oven gas, producing the higher temperatures of open-hearth current practice, have been gradually displacing producer gas the lowest cost fuel for open hearth operations.
Jan 1, 1936
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Part X – October 1969 - Communications - Residual Stresses and Cracking in WC-Co AlloysBy David N. French
In a recent paper, Miyoshi, Hara, and sugimotoL have shown that hardness increases and crack resistance decreases with polishing time in tungsten car-bide-cobalt alloys. They attribute the changes in
Jan 1, 1970
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Concerning The Properties And Differences Of Charcoals And The Customary Methods Of Making Them.I HAVE already described to you many kinds of fusions and fires and still have many to describe if1 am to guide you, as I intend, among the operations of these processes. In all these, quantities of c
Jan 1, 1942
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Personnel Service (64aa9f52-8cf7-4a72-9276-e942a3786b0e)THE following employment items are made available to AIME members on a nonprofit basis by the Engineering Societies Personnel Service, Inc., operating in cooperation with the Four Founder Societies. L
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - A New Method for Determining Iron Oxide in Liquid Steel (With Discussion)By J. M. Gaines, C. H. Herty, M. W. Lightner, H. Freeman
Few subjects have attracted the attention of metallurgists more than oxygen in steel. From the days of Mushet and Ledebur interest in this subject has been increasing, and as additional knowledge has
Jan 1, 1930
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Bituminous Coal for Higher Temperatures in Open-hearth FurnacesBy Theodore Nagel
Fuel-oil, natural gas and coke oven gas, producing the higher temperatures of open-hearth current practice, have been gradually displacing producer gas the lowest cost fuel for open hearth operations.
Jan 1, 1936
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Electrochemical Potentials of Nitrified SteelsBy Shun-ichi Satoh
A NEW method of treating steel by ammonia has recently been intro¬duced into the metallurgical industry, by means of which piston cylinders of internal combustion engines, shafts and other similar ste
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Non-ferrous Metallurgy - High-zinc Slags in Australia (With Discussion)By Philip S. Morse
THE Australian lead-smelting plants began to use charges carrying high zinc percentages somewhat earlier than was common with American plants. When lead smelting first started in Australia the immense
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Preparation - Flotation Treatment of Washery Water at the Empire, Alabama, Mine of the DeBardeleben Coal Corporation (T.P. 2205, Coal Tech., May 1947, with discussion)By H. L. Riley, B. W. Gandrud
A froth flotation unit was added to the DeBardeleben Coal Corporation's Empire washer at Empire, Alabama, in the fall Of I94O following an investigation of possible ways and means of recovering c
Jan 1, 1949
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Minerals Beneficiation - Concentration of Pyrochlore OresBy J. A. Faucher
The mining industry has undergone significant technological advances in metallurgical process methods in recent years. The 1000 tpd concentrator of St. Lawrence Colum-bium Metals Corp. portrays the
Jan 1, 1964
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Part VII – July 1968 – Communications - The Formation of Layer PorosityBy J. Campbell
Long freezing range casting alloys are particularly susceptible to a type of porosity which is observed to form in layers parallel to the supposed position of the isotherms in the solidifying casting.
Jan 1, 1969
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Industrial Minerals - Anaconda Phosphate Plant, Beneficiation and Treatment of Low Grade Idaho Phosphate RockBy R. J. Caro
The Anaconda phosphate plant was put into operation in the fall of 1923. Its present daily operating capacity is approximately 170 tons of treble superphosphate and 16 tons of phosphoric acid analy
Jan 1, 1950
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Officers and Directors (2f012bf6-86d7-4c1e-aa21-7384fbb09f2d)PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR JOHN R. SUMAN HOUSTON, TEXAS PAST PRESIDENTS AND DIRECTORS DONALD B. GILLIES CLEVELAND, OHIO H.- G. MOULTON NEW YORK, N.Y. TREASURER AND DIRECTOR KARL -EILERS SEA CLIFF
Jan 1, 1941
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Local Section News (d16c1123-0e34-4190-894a-f708a8cb9a8e)H. W. NICHOLS, Secretary-Treasurer, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Ill. , R. S. BONSIB, H. B. PULSIFER, . HORACE H. CLARK, H. T. WALSH. Seventy-four members of' the two organizat
Jan 7, 1917
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Institute of Metals Division - Transformation in Cobalt-Nickel AlloysBy J. B. Hess, C. S. Barrett
TO reach equilibrium between different phases in cobalt-rich alloys requires prohibitively long annealing cobalt-richalloystimes when temperatures are below about 700°C. The fact that a transformation
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - Instability of a Smooth Solid-Liquid Interface During SolidificationBy D. Walton, W. C. Winegard, W. A. Tiller, J. W. Rutter
It is shown that the cellular substructure observed in binary alloy crystals grown from a melt of known concentration can be eliminated by the proper choice of growth conditions. For a given solute co
Jan 1, 1956
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Part II - Papers - Fatigue Fracture in Copper and the Cu-8Wt Pct Al Alloy at Low TemperatureBy W. A. Backofen, D. L. Holt
Push-pull fatigue tests have been carried out at 4.2°K, 77oK, and room temperature on two poly crystalline materials of widely different stacking-fault energy (?): pure copper (? - 70 ergs per sq cm)
Jan 1, 1968
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Roasting For Amalgamating And Cyaniding Cripple Creek Sulphotelluride Gold Ores (e6a0ce9b-3903-4a71-b2d6-bb1a46061cc7)J. M. TIPPETT? Colorado Springs, Co1o.-There are several points which offer ground for discussion, although the authors' indicated results leave small chance for argument. Under classification of
Jan 11, 1918
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Instrumentation And Control Of Rotary KilnsBy John R. Green
ROTARY kilns, varying in construction, are used in a variety of processes. Products differ and operating conditions vary according to economic requirements. All of these variables influence the degree
Jan 1, 1941
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PART V - Papers - On the Thermodynamic Properties of Several Solid Phases of the Compound InSbBy M. D. Banus, M. B. Bever, A. K. Jena
Measurements of the heat effects on addition of various solid phases of InSb to a solution calorimeter have confirmed the existence of a new high-pressure plzase InSbQII), which was jormed at 37 kbar
Jan 1, 1968