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RI 8792 - Corrosion of Selected Metals and a High-Temperature Thermoplastic in Hypersaline Geothermal Brine
By R. K. Conrad
The Bureau of Mines conducted corrosion research to determine suitable construction materials for geothermal resource recovery plants. Weight loss, pitting and crevice corrosion, U-bend stress corrosi
Jan 1, 1983
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OFR-126-81 Evaluation Of Control And Protection Circuits
By E. C. Strycula
Solid-state equipment offers a number of potential advantages in the coal mining industry. These advantages can only be realized, however, through careful and judicious design of the control and prote
Jan 1, 1981
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RI 2776 Hydrogen Sulphide Poisoning In the Texas Panhandle, Big Lake, Texas, And McCamey, Texas Oilfields
By W. P. Yant, H. C. Fowler
"INTRODUCTIONHydrogen sulphide is probably the most toxic gas associated with crude oil. Hydrocarbon (petroleum) vapors themselves are harmful to the human system, but hydrogen sulphide, when present,
Oct 1, 1926
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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 6246 Sources And Recovery Methods For Rhenium
By P. E. Churchward
Rhenium sources and recovery methods were investigated by the Bureau of Mines to delineate potential resources of the metal. The only significant rhenium resource appears to be about 28,000 lb of rhen
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 9165 - Preparation of Ammonium Paratungstate From a Sodium Tungstate-Sodium Chloride Phase
By A. E. Raddatz
Previous Bureau of Mines research has shown that tungsten ores containing as little as 40 pct W032-can be processed by a high-temperature molten-salt extraction technique to produce a tungstate-bearin
Jan 1, 1988
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RI 2739 Gases From Blasting In Heavy Sulphides
By E. D. Gradner
During 1924 a number of lives were lost and other men incapacitated by the toxic effects of gases produced in blasting in massive sulphides. In one mine, three men working in a raise were caught by ga
Jan 1, 1926
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RI 2464 Physiological Effect of High Temperatures and Humidities with and without Air Movement
By D. Harrington, R. R. Sayers
For several years the writers have been studying various phases of the effect of air conditions in metal mines upon underground workers ; in 1918 a short study was made in certain hot and deep mines a
Apr 1, 1923
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RI 2547 A Floating Roof For Oil Tanks. ? Introduction
By Ludwig Schmidt
The petroleum industry has recently shown sucks great interest in the evaporation of crude oil and of gasoline, and in the prevention of evaporation losses that almost daily there is being developed a
Jan 1, 1923
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Mine Fire Source Discrimination Using Fire Sensors and Neural Network Analysis (55f50308-9407-4980-bfb6-201496866bae)
By J. C. Edwards
Fire experiments were conducted in the Safety Research Coal Mine (SRCM) at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, with coal, diesel-fuel, electrical
Jan 1, 2000
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Mine Fire Source Discrimination Using Fire Sensors and Neural Network Analysis
By J. C. Edwards
Fire experiments were conducted in the Safety Research Coal Mine (SRCM) at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, with coal, diesel-fuel, electrical
Jan 1, 2000
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RI 2355 Determination of the Relative Comfort of Mine Working Places by Means of the Katathermometer
By G. E. McElroy, D. Harrington
In connection with the cooperative metal-mine dust and ventilation investigations of the U. S. Bureau of Mines and the U. S. Public Health Service , some underground data have been obtained with inten
May 1, 1922
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7 Basis For The Recommended Standard - 7.1 The NIOSH Rel For Respirable Coal Mine Dust
NIOSH recommends that exposures to respirable coal mine dust be limited to 1 mg/m3 as a TWA concentration for up to 10 hr/day during a 40-hr workweek, measured according to current MSHA methods (see S
Jan 1, 1997
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Do light-emitting diode cap lamps enable improvements in miner safety?
By J. Sammarco
Proper illumination is critical to a miner?s ability to detect hazards in underground mines. Moving hazards are often located in the miner?s peripheral field-of-view, while slip/trip/ fall hazards ar
Jan 1, 2009
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RI 2913 A Study Of Gauze Heating In Miners Flame Safety Lamps
By A. B. Hooker, P. G. Guest, E. J. Gleim
"From time to time the United States Bureau of Mines has received reports of gas explosions alleged to have been caused by correctly assembled flame safety lamps. In most of the mines where the explos
Feb 1, 1929
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RI 6941 Kinetics Of Gas Synthesis Using Recycle Systems
By J. F. Shultz
The Bureau of Mines investigated the hydrogenation of carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide over Raney nickel catalyst and nitrided fused-iron catalyst using both a single-pass and a recycle system. Acti
Jan 1, 1967
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IC 6735 Cost Of Equipping And Developing A Small Gold Mine In The Bradshaw Mountains Quadrangle, Yavapai County, Ariz. ? Introduction
By David C. Minton
This paper describes in detail the cost of equipping and developing the Golden Belt mine, Yavapai County, Ariz. These costs should be typical of the average small gold mine in central Arizona which ha
Jan 1, 1933
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RI 5060 Bureau Of Mines Liquid-Level Gage ? Summary
By H. C. Hamontre
The liquid-level gage described in this report is an instrument designed to locate liquid levels in wells rapidly and accurately and, with auxiliary equipment described, to follow moving liquid levels
Jan 1, 1954
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IC 8766 Simulation Of Man's Respiratory And Metabolic Functions By The Automated Breathing Metabolic Simulator
By Maria I. DeRosa
This Bureau of Mines report describes the Automated Breathing Metabolic Simulator and its hardware and software systems with emphasis on the role exerted by the software program subroutines in control
Jan 1, 1978
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RI 9572 - A Comparison of Mine Fire Sensors
By R. S. Conti, C. D. Litton
This U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) report discusses the results of research conducted in the USBM experimental mine at its Lake Lynn Laboratory to determine the alarm times of smoke and carbon monoxide(
Jan 1, 1995