Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Papers - Variants Influencing Austenite Grain Size as Determined by Standard Methods (With Discussion)By C. L. Shapiro, R. Schempp
DuRing the past few years, general interest in the steel-producing and steel-consuming industries has been centered on the so-called "inherent characteristics" of steels. While often vaguely described
Jan 1, 1937
-
Detroit Paper - Equilibrium Relations in Aluminum-silicon and Aluminum-iron-silicon Alloys of High Purity (with Discussion)By A. C. Heath, E. H. Dix
The importance of aluminum-silicon alloys in thc light alloy field is now generally recognized. Where silicon was once considered detrimental to the properties of aluminum, useful alloys now contain a
-
Papers - Theory of Metallic Crystal Aggregates (With Discussion)By Charles G. Maier
It has long been supposed that when crystalline materials are comminuted the energy used in the production of increasingly smaller grain sizes is not entirely dissipated as heat but that a certain por
Jan 1, 1936
-
New York Paper - The Reduction and Refining of Tin in the United States (with Discussion)By J. R. Stack, H. H. Alexander
Prior to 1915, numerous attempts were made to treat tin concentrates in the United States, but for various reasons they were unsuccessful. Tin ore is said to have been found in nearly every state, but
Jan 1, 1924
-
Precipitation of Alpha from Beta BrassBy Oscar Marzke
STUDIES on the precipitation of a face-centered from a body-centered structure-a common occurrence in alloy systems-are essential to the development of a theory for the formation of segregate structur
Jan 1, 1933
-
Arizona Paper - The Diastrophic Theory (with Discussion)By Marcel R. Daly
The writer has devoted a number of years to practical operations and to the study of geology in the oil fields. In consequence, he has been brought to investigate the theories advanced to account for
Jan 1, 1917
-
Annealing Of Commercial Copper To Prevent Embrittlement By Reducing GasesBy Susasn Leiter
THAT oxygen in copper has been a source of trouble is well known and that that trouble has been real in the commercial world has been shown by Fuller.1 Moore and Beckinsale's paper2 at the annual
Jan 2, 1926
-
Air-gas Lifts - Air-gas Lift Practice in Seminole Field (with Discussion)By S. F. Shaw
The Seminole field was first drilled in 1913. During the next 10 years other attempts were made to discover oil in this field, but without encouragement until March, 1926, when the Indian Territory Il
Jan 1, 1928
-
Baltimore Paper - A Preliminary Sketch of the Phosphates of FloridaBy George H. Eldridge
The existence of phosphate of lime within the State of Florida has been known for over a decade; but until the spring of 1887, the extent and value of its deposit.;, possibly with one exception, were
Jan 1, 1893
-
Coal Washers Of The Classifier Type (Chapter 10)By John Griffen
THEORY HYDRAULIC classification as explained by Rittinger and others was largely restricted to conditions wherein the free-falling velocities of the particles were conceived as governing the separa
Jan 1, 1950
-
Plastic Deformation And Subsequent Recrystallization Of Single Crystals Of Alpha BrassBy M. R. Pickus, C. H. Mathewson
THE study of the plastic deformation and recrystallization of metals has been the subject of many investigations. In regard to the simple deformational processes, such as tension and compression, the
Jan 1, 1938
-
Solubility of Oxygen in Solid CopperBy F. N. Rhines
DESPITE the large amount of study which has been devoted to the subject our present knowledge of the copper-oxygen system remains incomplete and unsatisfactory in many respects. This applies particu-l
Jan 1, 1934
-
Specific Efficiency of the Blast FurnaceBy Richard Franchot
IN the inevitable conquest of the blast furnace by metallurgical science in the solution of the problem of how to make more and better iron or to burn less coke, or both, it is highly desirable first
Jan 9, 1926
-
Early Days In ColoradoThe beginning of Colorado's mining industry is linked on one side with that of the Appalachian districts and on the other side with that of California, because the first discoveries were made by
Jan 1, 1932
-
Modern Mining Methods-- Longwall, Shortwall (dcb68740-95a4-4eda-84c1-0f718876c42b)By Kenneth P. Katen
INTRODUCTION Though the use of continuous mining machines consolidated the operations of cutting, drilling, blasting, and loading in one machine that would theoretically provide uninterrupted prod
Jan 1, 1981
-
Modern Mining Methods-- Longwall, ShortwallBy Kenneth P. Katen
INTRODUCTION Though the use of continuous mining machines consolidated the operations of cutting, drilling, blasting, and loading in one machine that would theoretically provide uninterrupted prod
Jan 1, 1981
-
Institute of Metals Division - High Damping Ferromagnetic AlloysBy A. W. Cochardt
THERE are a number of effects that can cause material damping or internal friction. Some of these are frequency dependent, such as the thermo-elastic effect' and the stress-induced ordering.&apos
Jan 1, 1957
-
Montreal (Annual) Paper - Note on Anthracite " Coal-Apples" from PennsylvaniaBy W. S. Gresley
The object of this communication is to give a description of some remarkable spheroidal specimens of anthracite coal recently encountered in stripping the Mammoth seam at Milnesville, Luzerne county,
Jan 1, 1893
-
Mexican Paper - The Coal-Fields of Las Esperanzas, Coahuila, MexicoBy Edwin Ludlow
For many years, coal has been known to exist in the valley of the Sabinas river, in the State of Coahuila, and for about 15 years it has been worked by the Mexican International Railway Co., which ope
Jan 1, 1902
-
Papers - Density Changes in Solid Aluminum Alloys (With Discussion)By H. L. Hopkins, L. W. Kempf
Aluminum alloys, in common with most other metallic alloys exhibit slight density changes with variations in temper achieved by heat-treatment, which usually are the result of the variation with tempe
Jan 1, 1936