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  • AIME
    Personal (8d568b1e-c9e3-4553-b336-fd87e732ebb8)

    (Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their fellow-members.) Members and guests who registered at Institute headquarters during January: A. Neu

    Jan 2, 1914

  • AIME
    Societies, Boards, Etc. on Which the Institute has Representation

    Societies, Boards, Etc , on Which Institute Has Representation United Engineering Society WILLIAM L SAUNDERS, President GEORGE H PEGRAM, 1st Vice-president ALFRED D FLINN, Secretary J V W REYNDER

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Orientation Sensitivity of Alpha Titanium to Electrostaining

    By R. H. Hiltz, R. W. Douglass

    Large-grain specimens of iodide titanium prepared metal-lographically were stain etched using the technique of New York University as modified by Watertown Arsenal Laboratories. Orientations of grain

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Part XII – December 1968 – Papers - The Effect of Alloying Elements on the Solubility of Nitrogen in Liquid Iron-Chromium-Nickel Alloys

    By R. D. Pehlke, W. M. Small

    The effect of added alloying elements on the solubility of nitrogen in a liquid alloy of 74 wt pct Fe. 18 wt pct Cr, and 8 wt pct Ni has been studied. At 1600°C and 1 atm nitrogen pressure, aluminum,

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Wollastonite (c502e11a-c3c0-4577-8bd3-10874a0fd952)

    By L. A. Roe, E. A. Elevatorski

    Wollastonite, named after William H. Wollaston, an English chemist, is a calcium metasilicate, CaSiO3; CaO: 48.30%, SiO2: 51.70%. It has a short history as an industrial mineral. The earliest product

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Why Geology in the Cement Industry?

    By K. N. Weaver

    In the early 1950's the cement industry began putting a new emphasis on geology. This article points up some of the industry's raw materials problems that geologists are uniquely qualified t

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Coal - Wet Scrubbing of Coal Dust From Thermal Dryers with the Peabody Scrubber

    By T. Gleason

    Problems involved in applying wet scrubbers to gas cleaning coal dust from thermal dryers are reviewed. Careful consideration of all the elements going into a modem coal preparation plant is required

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Effect of Manganese on the Activity of Sulphur in Liquid Iron and Iron-Carbon Alloys

    By J. P. Morris

    PREVIOUS investigations1,2 have shown that alloying elements in liquid iron influence the thermodynamic activity of sulphur and thereby affect the partition of sulphur between metal and slag in the de

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Quantitative Deformation Textures of Aluminum, Copper, Silver and Iron Wires

    By B. D. Cullity, A. Freda

    It is well known that deformation by cold drawing or swaging produces a kind of preferred orientation called fiber texture in metal wires. Such textures have been extensively studied by means of X-r

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - A study of the {1011} and {1013} Twinning Modes in Magnesium

    By R. E. Reed-Hill

    The lattice reorientations in (1011) and (1013) twins of pure magnesium have been investigated using polarized light. Both forms (Ire subject 20 almost complete second-order twinning on the (1012) p

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Geographical List Of Members (13c6dddb-c6e4-4759-8d38-e3aa418ec199)

    [NORTH AMERICA UNITED STATES ALABAMA Birmingham CORD, Richard H DISMUKES, Edward B Citronelle PERRIN, Huey P Fairfield PAGEL, Herbert Ervin Huntsville ENG, Harvard KELLE

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Product of the Hibernia Iron-Nine, N. J.

    By J. Wesley Pullman

    It is stated by Dr. Tuttle in a paper read before the New Jersey Historical Society, that the celebrated Dickerson mine at Succasunna, Morris Co., N. J., yielded ore, about as early as 1710, for use a

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Drilling – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Use of Chemicals to Maintain Clear Water for Drilling

    By J. E. Fox Jr., J. L. Lummus, J. P. Gallus

    Fresh water or brine drilling fluids may be kept free of suspended drilled solids by the addition of a water soluble acrylamide-carboxylic acid copolymer at the flowline. Addition of from .01 to 0.2 l

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Order-Disorder Transformation in Cd-Rich Mg-Cd Alloys

    By R. S. Craig, W. E. Wallace, G. S. Kamath

    The destruction of long-range order in Mg-Cd, has previously been thought to occur as a second order process. In the present work a variety of X-ray diffraction techniques are employed to show that in

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Cross-Cuts Or Break-Throughs In Coal Mining

    By J. J. Rutledge

    THE first method of working coal mines in the middle western states, more particularly in Illinois, Indiana and Missouri, was by means of the so-called single-entry method. In this method a single mai

    Jan 2, 1927

  • AIME
    The Hardness and Toughness of Rocks

    By Emile Gyss

    THE speed of drilling rock has become an impor-tant factor in mining operations, while the place-ment of holes, kind, and quantity of explosive used. are equally important. These are a function of the

    Jan 6, 1927

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Marketing of Asbestos

    By E. A. Farrell

    A comprehensive survey is made of the status of the asbestos industry as it relates to marketing the product. Included are descriptions of the various types of asbestos and the grading and classificat

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    The Zinc Ores Of The Joplin District. Their Composition, Character And Variation And Variation

    V. H. GOTTSCHALK, Rolla, Mo. (written discussion*).-In connection with Mr. Waring's quotation of Urbain's work, attention may be drawn to a remark found in the report of the session of the S

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Physical Changes in Iron and Steel Below the Thermal Critical Range (with Discussion)

    By Zay Jeffries

    It has been known for centuries that iron and steel could be hardened by cold hammering and that the metal could be restored to the normal condition by heating to a red heat arid cooling, either rapid

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Physical Changes in Iron and Steel Below the Thermal Critical Range (with Discussion)

    By Zay Jeffries

    It has been known for centuries that iron and steel could be hardened by cold hammering and that the metal could be restored to the normal condition by heating to a red heat arid cooling, either rapid

    Jan 1, 1922