Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Review Of Coal-Dust Investigations
By George Rice
TEN years ago, October, 1914, the author had the privilege of giving an-illustrated address on investigations of coal-dust explosions1 to this Institute at one session of its fall meeting in Pittsburg
Jan 3, 1925
-
Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Sulfur on the Ductile-Brittle Fracture Temperature of Chromium
By Nicholas J. Grant, Raymond E. Cairns
A high-purity chromium, made by solid-state extrusion, and a series of molten, extruded, dilute alloys containing carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur were studied to establish the effects of composit
Jan 1, 1964
-
Institute of Metals Division - The Absorption and Effusion of Hydrogen in Alpha Iron
By J. R. Hornaday, A. E. Morris, N. A. Parlee, D. C. Carmichael
Rates of absorption and effusion of hydrogen in solid iron were measurede by a Sieverts type of apparatus. With clean a iron these rates are diffusion controlled down to 420°C and are represented by t
Jan 1, 1961
-
Part V – May 1968 - Papers - Ternary Diffusion in Cu-Zn-Sn Solid Solutions
By M. A. Dayananda, R. E. Grace, P. F. Kirsch
Ternary diffusion experiments were carried out at 750°C with vapor-solid diffusion couples in single-phase copper-rich Cu-Zn-Sn alloys. The Philibert-Guy method was used to calculate intrinsic diffus
Jan 1, 1969
-
Electric Blasting Practices Of The Tennessee Copper Company (0069a3de-c371-4f4f-bf99-bee2bf8f5bd2)
By R. G. Clay, C. F. Seaman
THE mines of The Tennessee Copper Co. are in the Ducktown Basin, in southeastern Tennessee. The ore is a heavy sulphide consisting principally of chalcopyrite, pyrite and pyrrhotite and in places runn
Jan 1, 1942
-
Magnesium and Magnesium Alloys - Correlation of Optical and Electron Microscopy (Metals Tech., June, 1948, TP 2364)
By J. S. Bryner
In the study of metallographic specimens in the electron microscope, there is need for a method of locating the same field in both the light microscope and the electron microscope. This need arises ch
Jan 1, 1949
-
Technical Notes - Solid Nuclei in Liquid Metals
By C. S. Smith
The partial persistence of grain size and grain shape on melting and resolidifying crystalline substances, as well as the general effects of pre-solidifi-cation and of superheating on nuclea-tion rate
Jan 1, 1950
-
Institute of Metals Division - Four-Point Probe Evaluation of Silicon N/N+ and P/P+ Structures
By E. E. Gardner, P. A. Schumann
A description of a new four-point probe configuration which permits measurement of epitaxial layer resistivity is given. An analytic solution to the potential distribution due to a point current sourc
Jan 1, 1965
-
Papers - Flotation of Nonsulfides - Relative Floatability of Silicate Minerals. (With Discussion)
By John Mark Patek
Knowledge of the relative floatability of silicate minerals is increasing in importance as flotation is being applied to the concentration of nonsulfides. Many silicates are in themselves commercial p
Jan 1, 1935
-
Institute of Metals Division - Powder Metallurgy of Zirconium
By Roswell P. Angier, Herbert S. Kalish, Henry H. Hausner
POWDER metallurgical methods as applied to zirconium are of great interest because they permit not only the fabrication of parts directly to shape with a minimum loss of material but also the utilizat
Jan 1, 1952
-
Institute of Metals Division - Dilatometric Investigation of Vacuum-Melted Zircaloy-2
By Josef Intrater
A dilatometric determination of the a + ß region temperature limits was performed on vacuum melted Zircaloy-2. The temperature of transformation for a-a+ß and a+ß — ß on heating and cooling as a funct
Jan 1, 1962
-
Reservoir Engineering - A Reservoir Analyzer Study of the Woodbine Basin
By H. H. Spain, R. C. Rumble, H. E. Stamm
This paper presents a reservoir analyzer study of the performance of the Woodbine formation in the East Texas basin. The study was made possible by the compilation of available information on the conf
Jan 1, 1951
-
Gypsum and Anhydrite
By Frank C. Appleyard
Gypsum, the dihydrate form of calcium sulfate, has a history of usefulness to man dating back several thousand years, and a worldwide industry has been built on the mining and processing of this versa
Jan 1, 1975
-
Institute of Metals Division - Preferred Orientations in Swaged and Drawn Tungsten Wire
By S. Leber
Pole figures and pole distributions were used for the quantitative detevinination of the preferred orientations in swaged tungsten rods and the effect of subsequent wire drawing on the texture. In the
Jan 1, 1965
-
Institute of Metals Division - Constitution of Iron-Chromium-Molybdenum Alloys at 1200°F
By Pol Duwez, Spencer R. Baen
A LTHOUGH the practical importance of Fe-Cr--iV Mo alloys has long been recognized, constitution studies have been limited to a few alloys within rather narrow ranges of composition. The purpose of th
Jan 1, 1952
-
The Extraction of Uranium from In-Situ Leach Solutions Using the NIMCIX Ion Exchange Contactor
By Ronald J. McGregor, Anton R. Hendriksz
INTRODUCTION The NIMCIX contactor was developed in the late sixties at the National Institute for Metallurgy in South Africa, for the main purpose of extracting uraniuy from relatively low-grade u
Jan 1, 1980
-
Operating Costs, Wisconsin Zinc District
By Russell Paul
THE Wisconsin zinc district, also known as the Upper Mississippi lead and zinc district, is an area of about 2500 sq. mi. in the southwestern portion of Wisconsin and adjacent parts of Illinois and Io
Jan 7, 1928
-
Reservoir Engineering-General - A Model Study of Viscous Fingering
By R. W. Olson, A. L. Benham
Viscous fingering was studied as it occurred in an open Hele-Shaw model (1 ft x 4 ft x 1/16 in.); it was also studied in the same model packed with 80-mesh glass beads during miscible displacements un
-
Miscellaneous Metals and Alloys - Thermal and Electrical Properties of Ductile Titanium (Metals Tech., Sept. 1948, TP 2466)
By W. C. Ellis, E. S. Greiner
Metallic titanium has been prepared in small quantities since the beginning of the century. Hunter1 reported in 1910 that he obtained a malleable product of 99.9 pct purity by the reduction of the tet
Jan 1, 1949
-
Papers - Comminution - Experiences in Grinding Raw Materials for Portland Cement (T. P. 1893, Min. Tech. Nov. 1945)
By C. D. Rugen
Ground raw material as fed to the cement kiln generally is a mixture of two to four components, each of which may have widely varying physical and grinda-bility characteristics. Chemically similar mat
Jan 1, 1947