Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Chemistry of Coal (4162ff12-8f10-449f-a869-5aa997788092)By Wilbur C. Helt
The United States is self-sufficient in bituminous coal and lignite resources to meet the high range of energy demands forecast for the remainder of this century and beyond. The known or proved recove
Jan 1, 1973
-
Reservoir Engineering Equipment - Application of a Resistance Network for Studying Mobility Ratio EffectsBy Harold B. Janzen, M. A. Nobles
Campbell and Martin1 described a new exploratory logging tool which was developed as the result of a new concept of the phenomenon that takes place when a porous formation containing mobile hydrocarbo
-
New York Paper - Water Intrusion and Methods of Prevention in California Oil Fields (with Discussion)By Franklyn W. Oatman
In order that the conditions which obtain in an oil well may be readily understood, a brief description of a typical California well and a number of the phenomena accompanying same will be given. That
Jan 1, 1915
-
Papers - Refining - Fire Refining - The Fire Refinery of British Copper Refiners, LimitedBy C. H. Aldrich
For many years the City of Prescot, about 8 miles northeast of Liverpool, has been the home of British Insulated Cables, Ltd., one of the largest wire mills and manufacturers of electrical equipment i
Jan 1, 1934
-
Division Lectures - The 1962 Institute of Metals Lecture - On Specific Features of Strengthened MetalsBy G. V. Kurdjumou
STAFF: Editor, Gerhard Derge Acting Editor, Paul G. Shewmon Carnegie Institute of Technology Schenley Park Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Editorial Assistant, M. A. Redmerski Production Editor,
Jan 1, 1962
-
Coal - Municipal-water Needs vs. Strip Coal MiningBy Gregory M. Dexter
Recent litigation in Pennsylvania between three coal-mining companies and a private water company resulted in the payment by the coal companies of the equivalent of about $500,000 to buy a new water s
Jan 1, 1950
-
Part XI - Papers - The Kinetics of Simultaneous Internal Oxidation and External Scale Formation for Binary AlloysBy H. D. Colson, Robert A. Rapp
When a binary alloy is oxidized to form simultaneously an internal oxidation zone and an external scale which grows at a constant rate, the oxidation should reach a condition of steady shale, in which
Jan 1, 1967
-
Cleaning - Heat Drying of Washed Coal (With Discussion)By S. M. Parmley
Experience has shown that there are some factors connected with the drying of fine washed coal that are not present in drying of slack coal as normally practiced at cement kilns or pulverized coal pla
Jan 1, 1931
-
Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Hydrogen on the Tensile Properties of Iodide VanadiumBy O. N. Carlson, A. L. Eustice
The tensile properties of iodide vanadium were determined as a function of hydrogen concentration. It was shown that the presence of 10 ppm H is sufficient to cause embrittlement of vanadzum over a li
Jan 1, 1962
-
Extractive Mettallurgy Division - Reduction of Nickel by Hydrogen from Ammoniacal Nickel Sulfate SolutionsBy V. N. Mackiw
IN the process employed by Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd. for the production of metallic nickel, a sul-fide concentrate is leached with ammonia and air under pressure. Following the removal of iron, coppe
Jan 1, 1958
-
Part X – October 1969 - Papers - The Nonequilibrium Freezing Range and its Relation to Hydrostatic Tension and Pore Formation in Solidifying Binary AlloysBy John Campbell
An approximate theoretical model is proposed to quantitatively predict freezing ranges Tf and hydrostatic tensions P developed within solidifying binary alloys, allowing for a certain amount of diffus
Jan 1, 1970
-
Papers - Porosity, Reducibility and Size Preparation of Iron Ores (With Discussion)By T. L. Joseph
Blast furnaces are most efficient thermally when the CO2 in the top gas is highest. Oxygen introduced in the air blast is converted to CO in the combustion zones. The extent to which CO, generated in
Jan 1, 1936
-
Papers - Porosity, Reducibility and Size Preparation of Iron Ores (With Discussion)By T. L. Joseph
Blast furnaces are most efficient thermally when the CO2 in the top gas is highest. Oxygen introduced in the air blast is converted to CO in the combustion zones. The extent to which CO, generated in
Jan 1, 1936
-
Mining Geology - Notes on the Geology of East Tintic (with Discussion)By G. W. Crane
When ore was discovered on the Tintic Standard property in the spring of 1916, new developments were immediately started both north and south of that property, on the supposition that in East Tintic t
Jan 1, 1927
-
Iron and Steel Division - Transformation Mechanisms in a Hypereutectoid Titanium-Chromium AlloyBy W. B. Triplett, H. I. Aaronson, G. M. Andes
A detailed morphological study has been made of the pro-eutectoid TiCr, and the eutectoid reactions in a Ti-17.42 pct Cr alloy isothermally transformed at temperatures from 775° through 5561°C. The
Jan 1, 1961
-
Chicago Paper - Coals of Ohio and Their Limitations for Byproducts CokeBy Wilber Stout
In Ohio, the annual output of coke made from native coals has averaged not more than 70,000 tons, or about enough to run a 200-ton blast furnace. Raw coal locally mined from the Sharon, or No. 1, bed
Jan 1, 1920
-
Cleaning - Operation of Rheolaveur Plant at Dorrance Colliery, Lehigh Valley Coal Co. (With Discussion)By Edgar Schweitzer
The original Dorrance breaker of the Lehigh Valley Coal Co. was erected in 1883. The coal beds were clean and dry, consequently a dry preparation system was used, consisting of revolving cylindrical s
Jan 1, 1931
-
Institute of Metals Division - Copper-Silica and Copper-Alumina Alloys Of High Temperature InterestBy Nicholas J. Grant, Klaus M. Zwilsky
EVER since the unusual high temperature creep resistance and structure stability of SAP (Sintered Aluminum Powder) and similar aluminum-alumina alloys were reported,'," there has been a need to d
Jan 1, 1958
-
Papers - Underground Mining - Influence of Rate of Advance and of Time Factor in Support of Active Workings in Bituminous Coal Mines (T. P. 933, with discussion)By L. E. Young
The purpose of this paper is to start a discussion on: (I) methods of supporting the immediate roof, particularly of local areas of poor roof, during the mechanical loading of coal; (2) methods of inc
Jan 1, 1938
-
Papers - Underground Mining - Influence of Rate of Advance and of Time Factor in Support of Active Workings in Bituminous Coal Mines (T. P. 933, with discussion)By L. E. Young
The purpose of this paper is to start a discussion on: (I) methods of supporting the immediate roof, particularly of local areas of poor roof, during the mechanical loading of coal; (2) methods of inc
Jan 1, 1938