Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
New York Paper - Efficient Ventilation of Metal Mines (with Discussion)
By D. Harrington
Efficient ventilation of metal mines consists in having such complete control of air currents that there is always supplied at placcs where men work sufficient moving air to allow working at maximum c
Jan 1, 1923
-
Petroleum Engineering Education
By Harry H. Power
WHILE the attention of all engineering branches is focused today on changes and improvements in the several curricula, we are concerned here with the many questions arising in industry and college con
Jan 1, 1941
-
New York Paper - Shaft Sinking and Salt Mining at Goderich, Huron County, Ontario, Canada
By John Henry Harden
IN 1874, with Mr. H. Y. Attrill, of Baltimore, Md., I made an examination of some property at Goderich with reference to sinking for and mining salt. With this end in view we visited all the wells in
-
An X-Ray Study Of The Nature Of Solid Solutions
By Robert Phelps
A STUDY of solid solutions has long been a source of interest because of the conditions -controlling their formation. X-ray investigations so far have been conducted with the idea that there were two
Jan 1, 1932
-
New York Secondary Metals - Modern Non-ferrous Secondary Metal Producer (with Discussion)
By Don C. Blackmar
The production of non-ferrous secondary metals has become a large and important industry in the United States, and deals with practically cvery type of manufacturing concern. Its business is unique in
-
Washington D.C. Paper - Iron and Steel considered as Structural Materials – A Discussion, Papers and Remarks by (89dc7aa0-d7f2-4c63-ac0b-cdf2f18af8e5)
By Charles Macdonald
It may seem to be almost unnecessary to occupy the time of the Institute in further consideration of a question which has been so comprehensively treated in papers already on file in our own Transacti
Jan 1, 1882
-
Significance of the Critical Phenomena in Oil and Gas Production
By D. L. Katz
The critical phenomena have been studied during the past century but our knowledge of the critical temperatures and pressures of complex hydrocarbon mixtures still is very limited. The critical temper
Jan 1, 1938
-
Institute of Metals Division - The Production of Controlled Orientation Bicrystals for Grain Boundary Migration Studies (TN)
By J. W. Rutter, K. T. Aust
In previous studies of grain boundary migration in zone-refined lead, the authors used bicrystal specimens consisting of a striated crystal which was grown from the melt, and an adjacent striation-fre
Jan 1, 1962
-
Metal Consumption In Hammer Mills At Norris Dam (65e92132-9d85-4b27-bf4a-d99ec0f74f54)
By Francisco Cadena
THE construction of Norris Dam, built by the Tennessee Valley Authority on the Clinch River, a tributary of the Tennessee River, involved the production of coarse and fine aggregate for approximately
Jan 1, 1937
-
New Haven Paper - Conservation of Natural Resources
By James Douglas
In discussing the waste upon which hinges, or is supposed to hinge, so largely the preservation of our national resources, the conclusions reached would be more reliable if actual experience were cons
Jan 1, 1910
-
Improvements in Blast Furnace Construction
By J. P. Dovel
HAVING been requested to prepare a paper referring especially to my patents as applied to blast furnaces, I shall confine my discussion to those improvements and inventions pertaining directly to the
Jan 1, 1928
-
Ductile Tantalum And Columbium
By Clarence W. Balke
SMALL buttons of fused tantalum have been produced by arc fusion in a vacuum, by drawing an arc between sticks of pressed tantalum and a tantalum-faced water-cooled copper block. However, ingots of ap
Jan 1, 1938
-
Texas
While coal was undoubtedly seen by the Spanish explorers in Texas, no mention can be found of it in any of their available published records; it was likely noticed by the first Americans, and coal alo
Jan 1, 1942
-
Determining The Constants Of Oil-Production Decline Curves
By Harry Roeser
Short cuts for determining the constants of oil decline curves, with the method of least squares as a starting point, are presented and applications made to practical examples. The nature of the raw d
Jan 6, 1924
-
New York Paper - Important Factors in Talc Milling Efficiency (with Discussion)
By Raymond B. Ladoo
TIIe milling of talc, as is the case with many non-metallic minerals, until recently, has not received adequate technical consideration, for the talc industry has become of importance only within the
Jan 1, 1922
-
Papers - Economics - Competitive Relation of Coal and Petroleum in the United States (With Discussion)
By August J. Breitenstein, W. Spencer Hutchinson
The outstanding engineering accomplishment of the last three decades has been the development and application of more and cheaper power and its use instead of the labor of men and animals. Substitutio
Jan 1, 1934
-
St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - The Supposed Reversal of Inheritance of Ferrite Grain Size from that of Austenite (with Discussion)
By Henry M. Howe
The data which are collected in Table 1 show that the ferrite of low-carbon steel and of electrolytic iron, like the network of hypo- and hyper-eutectoid carbon steel, inherits, either absolutely or r
Jan 1, 1918
-
Washington D.C. Paper - An Improved Mining Lamp for Engineers
By Persifor Frazer
The accompanying diagrams represent a lamp provided with certain improvements which render it more serviceable for the use of the engineer or other mining official who is often compelled to visit seve
Jan 1, 1882
-
Part X – October 1969 - Papers - Galvanic Cell Studies Using a Molten Oxide Electrolyte: Part III-Thermodynamic Properties of the Pb-Ag-Au System
By John P. Hager, Adolfo R. Zambrano
The thermodynamics properties of the liquid Pb-Ag-Au system have been determined from galvanic cell measurments five pseudobinary systems of fixed XAg/XAu ratio. The galvanic cell employed a molten Pb
Jan 1, 1970
-
New York Paper - Barrel-day Values (with Discussion)
By G. H. Alvey, A. W. Foster
The measure of value of an oil property is approximated by the length of time it takes to "pay out;" viz., the time required for it to return the original investment. This time varies in different fie
Jan 1, 1921