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RI 2966 Smelting In The Lead Blast Furnace - V. - Effect Of Conditions At Various Tuyeres On The Form Of Lead And Composition Of The Slag.
By G. L. Oldright
[This paper is the fifth 4/ of a series of publications on smelting in the load blast furnace. The objects of this investigation are to determine the conditions obtaining within the blast furnace by d
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2967 The Dissolution Of Cuprite In Sulphuric Acid And In Ferric Sulphate Solution
By G. L. Oldright, John D. Sullivan
"The present article is the second of a series of papers dealing with the dissolution of copper minerals in various reagents. Work done on the problem has been carried out at the Southwest Experiment
Dec 1, 1929
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RI 2968 Xylenols And Higher Phenols That Have Been Found In Primary Tars
By E. J. Schneider
In view of the growing commercial interest In the higher boiling fractions of low-temperature tar, a study of the literature has been undertaken to obtain as many data as possible regarding the proper
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 2969 The 1, 3-Dimethyl-5-Phenoxyacetic Acid And The 1, 2-Dimethyl-3-Phenoxyacetic Acid
By E. J. Schneider
In view of the current interest in the constituents of low-temperature tar, the Synthesis of three known xylenols and their hydroxyacetic acid derivatives has been undertaken by the U. S. Bureau of Mi
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2970 Reaction of Metallic Iron and Copper Sulphate
By Fred D. DeVaney, C. W. Ambler
"Copper sulphate is a common flotation reagent for blende ores. Metallic iron also is present in the mill circuit, and a reaction between the iron and the salt would be in accord with well-known chemi
Dec 1, 1929
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RI 2970 Reaction Of Metallic Iron And Copper Sulphate In The Flotation Of Sphalerite ? Introduction
By Fred D. DeVaney
Copper sulphate is a common flotation reagent for blonde ores. Metallic iron also is present in the mill circuit, and a reaction between the iron and the salt would be in accord with well-known chemis
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2971 A System of Accounts for the Slate Industry
By Oliver Bowles
"Simple systematic accounting that adequately records all transactions has long been regarded as essential to the welfare of any business enterprise. Some of the defects that detract from the prosperi
Nov 1, 1929
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RI 2971 A System Of Accounts For The Slate Industry ? Introduction
By Oliver Bowles
[Simple systematic accounting that adequately records all transactions has long been regarded as essential to the welfare of any business enterprise. Some of the defects that detract from the prosperi
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2973 Re-Forming Natural Gas In Water-Gas Generators, With Substantially Complete Elimination Of Entrained Carbon ? Introduction
By Wm. W. Odell
In distributing natural and mixed gas, the industry is each year confronted with the problem of manufacturing gas in increasing amounts as the supply of natural gas becomes more nearly exhausted. The
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2974 Abnormal Pressures In Explosion-Proof Compartments of Electrical Mining Machines
"One of the functions of the United States Bureau of Mines is to investigate the ability of electrical mining equipment to operate in a gassy mine without danger of igniting explosive atmospheres. To
Dec 1, 1929
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RI 2975 Dynamites: Their Propulsive Strength, Rate Of Detonation, And Poisonous Gases Evolved ? Definition Of Propulsive Strength
By N. A. Tolch
[In this partner ?propulsive strength? or "strength" is defined as the relative propulsive effect of an explosive as determined by means of the United States Bureau of Mines ballistic pendulum. The da
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2976 Permissible Explosives - A Study of Test Data
By G. St. J. Perrott, N. A. Tolch
"The testing of explosives for permissibility for use in coal mines was begun by the technologic branch of the United States Geologic Survey in February, 1909, and continued by the United States Burea
Dec 1, 1929
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RI 2977 Rock barriers for coal mines
By G. S. Rice, H. P. Greenwald, H. C. Howarth
"""Rock-dust barriers""5 as they are termed in this country, are for the purpose of confining a coal-dust mine explosion to the limited area in which it originates. These barriers were first tested in
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 2978 Flow Of Gas In The Blast-Furnace Shaft
By S. P. Kinney
During 1925, at Holt, Ala., the United States Bureau of Mines made a study of the composition of the gases at four elevations in the shaft of a furnace producing foundry iron. A report3 of the work wa
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2979 Odor Intensity And Symptoms Produced By Commercial Propane, Butane, Pentane, Hexane, And Heptane Vapor ? Hazard Of Contaminated Atmosphere
By F. A. Patty
[Health and safety hazards from contamination of the atmosphere in places frequented by persons depend to a considerable extent on whether the contaminating agent possesses sense-perceptive properties
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2980 Coke As A Domestic Heating Fuel
By P. Nicholls
[This paper sets forth the burning characteristics of coke used as a domestic fuel as shown by work of the U. S. Bureau of Mines and others. Coke is a truly smokeless solid fuel and is held in high re
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2981 Leaching Silver In Unroasted Tailings With Ferric Salts In Saturated Brine
By G. L. Oldright
[Processes by which silver alone is extracted from ores that also cant contain base metals are usually associated in the mind of the period when mines were changing from the production of noble metals
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 2982 Method For Comparison Of The Size Of Materials Used In Blast-Furnace Burdens ? Importance Of Knowing Size Of Materials Charged
By S. P. Kinney
[The blast-furnace operator is often confronted with the problem of determining the size of the materials which are used in the furnace burden. The statement is heard that the coke is larger or smalle
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 2983 Ore Size And Blast-Furnace Economy ? Importance Of Gas-Solid Contact
By S. P. Kinney
Economy in blast-furnace practice depends largely upon efficient gas-solid contact in the shaft of the furnace. If efficient work is not done in the shaft the hearth and bosh will not function properl
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 2984 A Diaphragm Or "Breather" Roof For Oil-Storage Tanks ? Introduction
By Ludwig Schmidt
The economic value of reducing the evaporation losses of crude oil and of gasoline is so well founded that the petroleum industry is constantly seeking new and improved storage tanks and methods of ha
Jan 1, 1930