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Kaolin-Based Pigments -Their Classification And Application In The Paper IndustryBy A. R. Negele
Kaolin-based pigments are the most widely used pigments in the paper industry. Several types are available and include standard hydrous, delaminated, calcined, chemically-structured, and most recently
Jan 1, 1993
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Wearable Sensors for Continuous, Real-Time Monitoring and Risk Assessment of Mine Workers Health and Safety - SME Annual Meeting 2024By Jupneek Singh, Zachary A. Kiehl, Leila Safazadeh, Gareth Kennedy, Eleonora Widzyk-Capehart, Jeremy W. Ward
Mine workers are continuously exposed to a host of nonfatal stressors and potentially fatal hazards: noise exposure, excessive vibration, poor air quality, toxicant exposure, ignition of combustible g
Feb 1, 2024
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Combustion Characteristics Of Coal Fine Refuse - Limestone Agglomerates For Sulfur FixationBy Felicia F. Peng
A laboratory fixed bed reactor was used in a study of generating clean thermal energy from coal fine refuse-limestone agglomerates. The major operation variables, including Ca/S mole ratio, agglomerat
Jan 1, 1984
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Improving The Plant Metallurgical BalanceBy Ronald L. Wiegel
In a mineral processing plant there are a number of routine decisions which are based at least in part on the plant's metallurgical performance. Among these are those related to: 1) equipment f
Jan 1, 1978
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Environmental Challenges In Vietnamese MiningThe mining industry is an important economical factor in Vietnam. Mining is presently being conducted at about 60 locations and at over 1000 mines. Petroleum extraction and coal mining are the most im
Jan 1, 2006
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Underground Storage for Hydrocarbon FluidsBy R. L. Loofbourow
SEVERAL categories of storage are used depending on capacity. Operational storage, which is small in comparison with the market, facilitates handling surges of a few hours' or a few days' du
Jan 1, 1959
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Induced Fluorescent Sorting Technique Holds PromiseBy R. C. Beers, R. J. McKinley, R. D. Stewart
Preliminary test results at Occidental Research Corp.’s Irvine, CA, research facility indicate the viability of a new induced fluorescent sorting technique for preconcentration of limestone, coal, an
Jan 6, 1980
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Recent Mine-Seal Issues Observed By The Mine Safety & Health Administration (MSHA)By J. Urosek
Since the promulgation of the Mine Safety and Heath Administration?s (MSHA?s) Final Rule on mine seals (30 CFR § 75.335(b)), which became effective on October 20, 2008, many seal designs have been app
Jan 1, 2010
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Roofex® Bolt And Its Application In Underground ConstructionBy R. Gradnik
The continuous need for infrastructure expansion forces the mining industry to develop underground structures into more sensitive and violent environments. When underground excavation enters into d
Jan 1, 2011
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Exploratory Finite Element Analysis (FEA) And Conceptual Design Findings Of Large-Diameter, Segmentally Lined ShaftsBy D. Kruse
Top-down constructed large-diameter (up to 90 m or 300 ft) shaft design and constructability issues present an interesting suite of challenges and opportunities highlighted in this paper. The study co
Jan 1, 2011
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A Case Study In The Use Of Kinetic Models To Justify Expansion Of The Rougher Flotation Circuits At The Metcalf ConcentratorBy Richard C. Travis, Edward C. Dowling
A detailed kinetic study of the flotation installation at the Metcalf Concentrator revealed a rougher flotation circuit operating under less than optimal conditions. Based on these results, a project
Jan 1, 1993
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Removal Of Metal Ions From Water By Water Hyacinth RootsBy G. X. Wang
The nonliving dried water hyacinth (E. crassipes (Mart.) Solms) roots were investigated for biosorption of cadmium and lead and other heavy metal ions in aqueous solutions. Dried water hyacinth roots,
Jan 1, 1997
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The Application Of Deformation Measurements For Roof Stability EvaluationBy H. Maleki
Roof falls continue to affect productivity and safety in U.S. coal mines in spite of significant increases in support utilization in recent decades. To minimize roof stability problems while controlli
Jan 1, 1993
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An Overview Of The Geology And Production Of Wyoming Trona ? IntroductionBy Ray E. Harris
A resource of 134,400,000,000 tons of minable trona and mixed trona and halite underlies an area of about 1,300 square miles vest of Green River, Wyoming (Culbertson, in preparation)(Figure 1). In 198
Jan 1, 1984
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Rock Mechanics Implications Of Secondary Recovery Under Highwalls - IntroductionBy K. F. Unrug
An overview of the history of mining technology, both past and present, shows that some of the new concepts being successfully applied have changed the reserve categorization and are having an overall
Jan 1, 1983
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Recovery Of Lead From Lead Blast Furnace SlagsBy J. L. Watson
n the U.S., lead has been produced via blast furnace processing for over a century, and the slags from that pyro-metallurgical process have been accumulating on industrial sites over that extended per
Jan 1, 1995
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Natural And Synthetic GraphitesBy Erle I. Shobert
In the comparison and consideration of synthetic and natural materials, graphites represent a situation in which natural graphites amount to less than 10% of the total carbon and graphite production b
Jan 1, 1964
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Acid Mine Water Processing and Metal Recovery by Fast Solid Phase ExtractionBy Richard F. Hammen
Mineral extraction from sulfide ore deposits usually leads to the combined action of oxygen and water on the newly exposed ore. The result is acid mine drainage, a low pH solution of various metal sul
Jan 1, 1993
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Coal : One of the Few Bright Spots Amidst the Mining GloomBy Donald E. Ralston, A. T. Yu, Richard P. Killmeyer, Peter Phillips, R. W. Vander Laan, John N. Murphy, John R. Messineo, John Peters
Overview Coal production in the first half of 1982 remained near the high levels begun in mid-1981. Production then fell sharply during the latter part of the year due to recession-weakened demand. E
Jan 5, 1983
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Simulation And Measurement Of Space And Time Varying Pollutant Concentrations From A Diesel Powered Vehicle In A Dead-Ended DriftBy Harold J. Schock
The cases of no auxiliary ventilation and ventilation with tubing were mathematically modeled, using a turbulent dispersion model. The scooptram that is used to load is modeled as a variable-speed, va
Jan 1, 1981