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Estimating the Cohesive Strength of Randomly Jointed Rock Masses (b8fadf9f-a4ec-4a93-bb68-8795f23046bf)
By Dermot Ross-Brown, Brian Stimpson
The use of point load test data by the authors to estimate rock mass cohesion is a very ingenious approach. It must be emphasized that this estimate is indeed only an estimate since the point load str
Jan 11, 1979
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Discussion - Estimating the Cohesive Strength of Randomly Jointed Rock Masses – Technical Papers, MINING ENGINEERING, Vol. 31, No. 2, February 1979, pp. 182-188 – Stimpson, Brian and Ross-Brown, Dermot
By Donald P. Richards
The use of point load test data by the authors to estimate rock mass cohesion is a very ingenious approach. It must be emphasized that this estimate is indeed only an estimate since the point load st
Jan 1, 1980
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Communications - Stability of Inclusions and the Formation of Secondary Grains in Silicon-Iron Alloys
By J. Groyecki, M. Markuszewicz, J. Lassota, A. Zawada
The ratio of stable to unstable inclusions was found to ploy an essential role in the process of sccorldar-y recrystatlizalion in Si-Fe. The analysis of the free energy of inclusions in the range of h
Jan 1, 1967
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Papers - Reaction Kinetics in Processes of Nucleation and Growth.
By William A. Johnson, Robert F. Mehl
It is now recognized that several important types of reactions in metallic systems proceed by the formation of nuclei and the growth of these nuclei. The process of freezing is a simple example of thi
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Reaction Kinetics in Processes of Nucleation and Growth.
By William A. Johnson, Robert F. Mehl
It is now recognized that several important types of reactions in metallic systems proceed by the formation of nuclei and the growth of these nuclei. The process of freezing is a simple example of thi
Jan 1, 1939
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Erratum.
By EDWARD B. DURHAH
The illustration Fig. 12, of the paper of Edward B. Durham, "Electrolytic Refining at the U. S. Mint, San Francisco, Cal.," printed in Bulletin No. 58, October, 1911, p. 830, contained an error. The c
Nov 1, 1911
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Papers - Magnetic Properties Versus Allotropic Transformations of Iron Alloys (With Discussion)
By T. D. Yensen, N. A. Ziegler
The elements aluminum,' arsenic,2 silicon,3 tin2 and vanadium,~.~ when used in relatively small amounts as alloying elements, seem to have a beneficial effect on the magnetic properties of iron—i
Jan 1, 1931
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Iron and Steel Division - A Survey of the Sulphur Problem Through the Various Operations in the Steel Plant
By B. M. Larsen, T. E. Brower
A perspective is presented of the steel plant sulphur distribution and elimination problem from coal to liquid steel ready for teeming, giving distributions of sulphur over a range of coke sulphur con
Jan 1, 1952
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Spokane Paper - The Influence of Ingot-Size on the Degree of Segregation in Steel Ingots
By Henry M. Howe
The natural effect of large ingot-size should be to increase segregation. I have previously pointed1 to the excessive segregation in many large ingots as tending to confirm this, but I have shown that
Jan 1, 1910
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Institute of Metals Division - The Morphology of Brittle Fracture in Pearlite, Bainite and Martensite
By A. M. Turkalo
IT is a well-known fact that martensitic steels show a greater resistance to brittle fracture than do pearlitic and bainitic steels. It was, therefore, thought worthwhile to investigate the mode of br
Jan 1, 1961
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Minerals Beneficiation - Behavior of Platinum Electrodes as Redox Potential Indicators in Some Systems of Metallurgical Interest
By K. A. Natarajan, I. Iwasaki
Platinum electrodes are not inert as often thought to be. The reactivity of platinum electrodes can explain their erratic behavior in many electrochemical measurements of metallurgical interest, e.g,
Jan 1, 1971
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Production Speeded Up and Organized on War Basis
By Lyon F. Terry
SPEED-UP of production of crude oil and its products, accompanied by rising prices and the organization of the industry on a war basis, featured the economic aspects of petroleum in 1941. Early in th
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Paper - End-Lines and Side-Lines in the U. S. Mining Law
By R. W. Raymond
There is apparently no end to the doubts, inconsistencies and absurdities in which the courts of our mining States and Territories are involved in their attempts to apply to conditions of ever-increas
Jan 1, 1889
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Certain Wettability Effects in Laboratory Waterfloods
By N. Mungan
Laboratory imbibition and displacement experiments were performed using crude oil and cores drilled with water and preserved under anaerobic conditions. The purpose of these tests was to determine res
Jan 1, 1967
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Mechanization Continues to Cut Coal Mining Costs
By R. E. Salvoti
IN underground coal mining, the increasing trend towards mechanical methods is ever apparent. Figures for 1939 showed that 28 per cent of the total bituminous coal production was mined mechanically 19
Jan 1, 1941
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Institute of Metals Division - A Study of Low-Temperature Failures in High-Purity Iron Single Crystals
By D. S. Tomalin, D. F. Stein
The effect of reducing oxygen to low concentrations on the fracture of high-purity iron single crystals has been examined at 78° and 20°K. It is found that iron single crystals grown by the strain-ann
Jan 1, 1965
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Admonitions And Cautions That Should Be Observed In Gunmaking.
SINCE it seems to me that guns are of greater importance in the art of casting than any of the other things that are made by it, and that they require more foresight and care because they need many pe
Jan 1, 1942
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Institute of Metals Division - Calculation of Martensite Nucleus Energy Using the Reaction-Path Model
By D. Turnbull, J. C. Fisher
ACCORDING to the "reaction-path" modell,2 of martensite nucleation, the shear angle of the embryonic martensite plate must be treated as a variable, and included in any calculation of nucleus critical
Jan 1, 1954
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Papers - Steelmaking - Significance of the Bessemer End Point (T.P. 1428, with discussion)
By H. T. Bowman
For more than 80 years the Bessemer process has depended upon the ability, skill, and judgment of the blower, although as early as the I860's it was recognized that the process would benefit by s
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Steelmaking - Significance of the Bessemer End Point (T.P. 1428, with discussion)
By H. T. Bowman
For more than 80 years the Bessemer process has depended upon the ability, skill, and judgment of the blower, although as early as the I860's it was recognized that the process would benefit by s
Jan 1, 1942