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  • AIME
    Zinc - Direct Production of Metallic Zinc from Lead Blast-furnace Slag

    By W. T. Isbell, Carleton C. Long

    Zinc recovery from lead blast-furnace slags has heretofore been an indirect process, involving, first, the fuming off and collecting of an impure zinc oxide, and second, the reduction of the zinc port

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Production Engineering and Research - Role of Connate Water in Secondary Recovery of Oil (T.P. 1608, Petr. Tech., July 1943).

    By Parke A. Dickey, Robert B. Bossler

    The presence of connate water in oil sands is of far greater practical significance in secondary oil-recovery operations than it is in primary operations. The percentage saturations of oil, water, and

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Papers - Iron Ores and Blast Furnace Practice - Selection of Blast-furnace Refractories ( Metals Technology, April 1944)

    By H. M. Kraner, E. B. Snyder

    This paper shows that volume stability, low porosity and decreased pyroplasticity are desirable for blast-furnace linings, partitularly for the hearth. It shows further that a hot load test is a valua

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Segregation In Babbitt

    By T. E. Eagan, W. R. McCrackin

    IN dealing with segregation in babbitt, and its effect on the final cast structure, which is a bearing, it is obviously impossible to cover all of the compositions manufactured. Each composition, of c

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Production Engineering and Research - Selective Adsorption of Hydrocarbon and Water Vapor on Alumina at Atmospheric Pressure (T.P. 1628, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1943)

    By R. L. Huntington, L. S. Reid, Chen Chun Ku

    The simultaneous adsorption of water and hydrocarbon vapor from natural gas by three grades of alumina has been studied at atmospheric pressure and temperature. Results of this investigation reveal th

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
  • AIME
  • AIME
    Experience With Flotation Machines At The Sullivan Concentrator

    By H. R. Banks

    THE Sullivan concentrator has completed 20 years of operation. During this period a considerable amount of data has been accumulated concerning the characteristics of several types of flotation machin

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    The Fly-Ash Problem With Domestic Stokers And The Use Of Settling Chambers And Firebox Baffles

    By T. S. Spicer, C. C. Wright, R. G. Bowman

    IN recent years considerable publicity has been given to the problem of atmospheric pollution by fuel-burning equipment. Legislation has been stimulated and smoke ordinances have been enacted, the pro

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    The Kalunite Process

    By Arthur Fleischer

    THE Kalunite process? for the production of metal-grade alumina from alumina-containing ores is applicable, considered from a general point of view, to any aluminous raw material that can be converted

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Lead - Treatment of Speisses and Drosses as Produced in Lead Smelting

    By R. A. Perry

    A speiss is an artificial arsenide, sometimes an antimonide, formed in lead smelting, smelting of oxide copper ores, and in some lead-refining operations. The production of speiss is closely allied wi

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Fracture And Comminution Of Brittle Solids (5edc1e4b-0d2b-47eb-915f-7c6f16f1693e)

    By Eugene F. Poncelet

    GLASS squares compressed on edge by steel jaws in poor contact with them developed jagged "partial-contact" cracks caused by the formation of local tensile stresses. Compressed by steel jaws in perfec

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Some Physical Characteristics Of By-Product Coke For Blast Furnaces (8da97269-ee23-4ea8-a7f6-662bb875a2b7)

    By Michael Perch, Charles C. Russell

    Nearly 75 per cent of the total coke production in the United States in 1940 was consumed in blast furnaces. In 1939 the percentage was 69.9, and in 1938 it was 61.3. To produce a net ton of pig iron

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Discussions - Physical Metallurgy - Metallography with the Electron Microscope (Metals Technology,

    By Charles S. Barrett

    This paper is a progress report covering metallographic applications of the electron microscope that have been made during the past year at Carnegie Institute of Technology. An account is presented of

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Papers - Hardenability - Effect of Some Elements on Hardenability (Metals Technology, January 1944) (With discussion).

    By John L. Lamont, Walter Crafts

    An investigation has been made of the multiplying factors for some of the more common alloying and deoxidizing elements for use in calculating hardenability of steel according to Grossmann's meth

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Flow Of Heat From An Intrusive Body Into Country Rock

    By C. E. Van Orstrand

    AN intrusive body is a mass of igneous rock that has migrated upward, presumably from great depths. Great variations in form, composition and depth of burial occur. It is not proposed in this paper to

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    The Chemistry Of Collection Of Nonmetallic Minerals By Amine-Type Collectors

    By Nathaniel Arbiter, Arthur F. Taggart

    THE chemical reaction occurring in collection of nonmetallic minerals with amine-type collectors was early postulated by students of flotation phenomena to be metathesis between the mineral and the co

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Preperation - The Recovery of Pyrite from Coal-mine Refuse (T. P. 1744)

    By David R. Mitchell

    The mineral pyrite (or marcasite) occurs in coal beds as balls, lenses, veinlets and bands. Several million tons are wasted annually on the refuse dumps from coal mining and coal-preparation activitie

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Papers - Mechanical Properties - Hardness Measurement as a Rapid Means for Determining Carbon Content of Carbon and Low-alloy Steels (Metals Technology, January

    By K. L. Clark, Nicholas Kowall

    Maximum furnace efficiency and close control of final steel composition demand that the steel melter be able to follow closely the variations in the carbon content of the bath. For many years, the

    Jan 1, 1944