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  • AIME
    Papers - Grinding - Ball-mill Liners (Mining Technology, March 1943)

    By Warren L. Howes

    This paper deals primarily with an investigation of ball-mill liners that was conducted by the writer over a period of six years at the Mammoth mill in Arizona. The investigation covered a wide variet

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Some Recent Applications of Heavy-media Separation (Sink-float) Processes (Mining Technology, July 1943)

    By G. B. Walker, S. A. Falconer, S. J. Swainson, H. H. Vogel

    During the past few years much interest and attention has been focused on a relatively new method of ore concentration, which utilizes the principles of sink and float and employs as the heavy medium

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Heavy-media Separation Plant of the Barton Mines Corporation (Mining Technology, May 1943)

    By H. H

    This paper describes the milling practice and operating results of the recently installed heavy-media separation plant of Barton Mines Corporation, the world's largest producer of garnet. This pi

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Beneficiation of Scheelite Ores by Gravity Concentration (Mining Technology, Nov. 1942)

    By E. H. Burdick

    The difficulties inherent in table concentration operations as applied to gold, silver, lead and zinc ores, are accentuated in the scheelite mill, which has a flowsheet that is similar in general prin

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - The Mechanism of Jigging (Mining Technology, March 1943) (with discussion)

    By Arthur Taggart

    Recent jig practice has shown such marked departures from the pronouncements of the textbooks, particularly as to particle size recovered and size range of feed, as to make it desirable to reexamine t

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Principles of Flotation, X-Influence of Cations on Air-mineral Contact in Presence of Collectors of the Xanthate Type (Mining Technology, Nov. 1942) (with discussion)

    By Keith Leonard Sutherland

    This paper is a study of the differential flotation of the sulphide minerals in the presence of salts of silver, lead and zinc. In practice, accidental activation due to these salts is more important

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - The Mechanism of Activation in Flotation (Mining Technology, May 1942.) (with discussion)

    By Alfonso Rizo-Patrón, A.M. Gaudin

    Previous studies of activation in flotation have directed attention to the action of the activator on the mineral to be floated rather than to the relationship of the activator to the collector. The l

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Experiments with Slime-coatings in Flotation (Mining Technology, Nov. 1941)

    By S.G. Bankoff

    Ince1 proposed that electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged particles was responsible for slime-coating. Del Giudice2 postulated the metathetic formation of a cementing compound. Wark3 sug

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - The Mechanism of Slime-coating (Mining Technology, July 1943)

    By Shiou-Chuan Sun

    There are several postulations for the mechanism of slime-coating. Incel proposed the electrostatic hypothesis, del Giudice2 suggested the chemical theory; Bankoff3 reported that slime-coating is inhi

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - The Nature of Dispersed Mineral in Flotation Pulps (Mining Technology, March 1943)

    By Arthur F. Taggart, A. W. Thomas, T.C. Fitt

    It was noticed early by operators that high recoveries and flocculation of the sulphide minerals were closely correlated in agitation-froth flotation. Later, this readily visible flocculation was foun

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Collector Coatings in Soap Flotation (Mining Technology, July 1943.) (with discussion)

    By Arthur F. Taggart, Nathaniel Arbiter

    The fact that the floatability of minerals with fatty-acid collectors changes as the pH of a pulp varies was utilized in the early days of flotation, when sulphuric acid was used with oleic acid to fl

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Nature of the Adsorption of Fatty Acids from Organic Solvents by Inorganic Lead Compounds (Mining Technology, May 1941.) (with discussion)

    By Dwight L. Baker, Alexander Knoll

    The work herein reported shows that galena in certain organic solutions of fatty acids becomes coated with lead soaps, and that this coating is not only highly water-repellent but is also repellent to

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Organic Sulphides as Oily Collectors. (Mining Technology, May 1943)

    By M. D. Hassiallis

    The claim is made in a number of patents1'2'3'4 that some compounds of the class known as aryl sulphides have collector properties. One of these patents generalizes the claim to include

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - The Mechanism of Collection of Metals and Metallic Sulphides by Amines and Amine Salts (Mining Technology, May 1943)

    By Arthur F. Taggart, Herbert H. Kellogg, Nathaniel Arbiter

    The experimental work herein described is presented in support of the following broad hypothesis: Conditioning of metals and metallic sulphides by amine collectors involves metathetic reaction at the

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Oxygen-free Flotation, II-Further Experiments with Galena (Mining Technology, Jan. 1940) (with discussion)

    By S. F. Ravitz

    In his excellent book on the Principles of Flotation, Warkl makes the following significant statement concerning the theory of flotation: Two questions of first-rate importance must be considered .

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Blast Furnace and Raw Materials - The Low-temperature Gaseous Reduction of a Magnetite (Metals Technology, October 1942) (with discussion)

    By C.H. Lorig, M.C. Udy

    Through the years much interest has been centered in attempting to develop a direct method of iron-ore reduction, to replace or supplement the present indirect blast-furnace process. It would not be d

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Steelmaking -Problems of Total Operation in Steelmaking (Metals Technology, April 1934) (with discussion)

    By Frank G. Norris, William C. Marshall

    The term "total operation" is meant to include problems that cannot be answered from the standpoint of either the blast furnace or the open hearth separately but must be studied by considering the int

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Steelmaking -Silicon-oxygen Equilibria in Liquid Iron (Metals Technology, September 1942) (with discussion)

    By C.A. Zapfee, C. E. Sims

    An investigation of the behavior of inclusions in steel several years ago1 led to the conclusion that some of the commonly occurring inclusions in steel have appreciable solubilities, part

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Steelmaking -Equilibria of Liquid Iron and Simple Basic and Acid Slags in a Rotating Induction Furnace (Metals Technology, September 1942) (with discussion)

    By C.R. Taylor, John Chipman

    The study of chemical reactions of liquid steel and basic open-hearth slag involves a complex slag system of at least eight important components, and often a number of others. In initiating an experim

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Steelmaking -Rapid Analysis of Oxygen in Molten Iron and Steel (Metals Technology, January 1943) (with discussion)

    By Gerhard Derge

    The extension of metallurgical control of steelmaking processes has always made it desirable to have some quick method for determining the oxygen content of molten steel. To meet the practical demands

    Jan 1, 1943