Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Mica (28ee116a-8aa3-4d28-9751-f6d0eeb35a0a)
By Eugene H. Dawson
MICA is a mineral that once was a familiar sight as fireproof windows in stove and furnace doors and as lamp chimneys and shades. Since 1878, the beginning of the electrical age, the use of mica for s
Jan 1, 1949
-
Iron and Steel Division - The Rate and Mechanism of the Sulfurization of Carbon-Saturated Iron
By G. Derge, L. D. Kirkbride
In recent years the problem of sulfur elimination in iron and steel-making has been of increasing importance. This interest has been due to the increasing amounts of sulfur coming into the system via
Jan 1, 1961
-
High-Zinc Slags In Australia
By Philip Morse
THE Australian lead-smelting plants began to use charges carrying high zinc percentages somewhat earlier than was common with American plants. When lead smelting first started in Australia the immense
Jan 1, 1929
-
Technical Papers and Discussions - Copper and Copper-rich Alloys - Correlation of Mechanical Properties and Corrosion Resistance of 24S-type Alluminum Alloys as Affected by High Temperature Precipitation (Metals Tech., Oct. 1945, T. P. 1934,
By W. D. Robertson
A considerable quantity of experimental data is available on the effect of time, temperature, work-hardening and composition on the mechanical properties and corrosion resistance of aluminum alloys. T
Jan 1, 1946
-
Industrial Research - Its Aims, Organization, And Facilities (db3b0338-349a-41af-a14d-f9ea90930601)
By D. Swan
Industrial research may be defined as a critical and exhaustive investigation to create new and better ways of doing things. The results of industrial research are new and improved products, processes
Jan 1, 1964
-
Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - The Temperature Dependence of Flow and Fracture in Coated Zinc Single Crystals
By L. C. Weiner
For zinc single crystals, xo = 3o, a surface coating raises both the cleavage and yield strengths over a large temperature range. The "brittle temperature," associated with slip after completion of tw
Jan 1, 1959
-
Papers - Crushing and Grinding - Some Fine-grinding Fundamentals
By A. W. Farenwald
Fine grinding cannot be accomplished in machines in which the component parts move in definite and restricted paths with respect to each other. Such machines are crushers. A "grinding mill" may be def
Jan 1, 1935
-
Washington D.C. Paper - The Mining Work of the United States Geological Survey
By S. F. Emmons
In the yew 1879, Congress, acting tinder the advice of tile National Acdemy of Sciences, discontinued the temporary surveys or explorations under Hayden, powell, and Wheeler, and established as a perm
Jan 1, 1882
-
New York Paper - Dry-Hot versus Cold-Wet Blast-Furnace Gas Cleaning (Discussion, pp. 322 and 337)
By Linn Bradley, W. W. Strong, H. D. Egbert
Marked differences of opinion have been expressed by engineers interested in cleaning iron blast-furnace gases for use in hot-blast stoves and under boilers, in reference to the advantages of a hot-dr
Jan 1, 1917
-
The Recovery Of Pyrite From Coal Mine Refuse
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
-
Factors For The Calculation Of Hardenability
By Sidney Siegel, J. Gardner Brooks, Irvin R. Kramer
IN 1942 Grossmann1 proposed that the hardenability of a steel may be calculated from its chemical composition by considering the base hardenability associated with its carbon content and grain size an
Jan 1, 1946
-
Production Systems Engineering
By Thomas V. Falkie
4.3-1. Introduction. DEFINITION OF PRODUCTION SYSTEMS ENGINEERING. Surface mines, like most other mining and manufacturing operations, are usually organized along functional departmental lines. Freque
Jan 1, 1968
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Recovery of By-Product Molybdenite at Toquepala
By L. C. De Jong, J. F. Shirley, M. L. Campbell
At the Southern Peru Copper operation in Toque-pala, Peru, a new process flowsheet for the recovery of byproduct molybdenite has proved successful in dealing with complex and highly variable ores. Thi
Jan 1, 1968
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Effect of Roasting on Recovery of Uranium and Vanadium from Carnotite Ores by Carbonate Leaching
By F. A. Forward, A. H. Ross, J. Halpern
IN treating carnotite ores by carbonate leaching it is often necessary to subject the ore to a prior roast. Among the advantages that may result from roasting are: 1) improvement in settling and filte
Jan 1, 1958
-
PART XII – December 1967 – Communications - Grain Boundary Precipitation in Sheet Rolled from Beryllium Ingots
By V. K. Grotzky, F. J. Fraikor
A number of investigators have noted the importance of various precipitation reactions on the properties of commercial-purity beryllium.1-5 Carrabine, for example, has demonstrated the interaction of
Jan 1, 1968
-
Canada’s New Uranium Camp at Blind River
By Howard Steven Strouth
The Blind River mining camp in Canada is all set to stage a major revolution. Enthusiasts on the scene say it will bring large-scale mining to North American uranium operation. If orebodies already di
Jan 5, 1955
-
New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Wear of Metal as Influenced by its Chemical and Physical Properties
By C. B. Dudley
In October, 1878, and again in February, 1881, I had the honor to make public, through the medium of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, the results of an extended study of steel rails which h
Jan 1, 1891
-
Papers - - Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during the Year 1933
By H. W. Miller, V. H. Wilhem
Although the year 1933 was a period of uncertainty, considerable new development was initiated, with a high percentage of favorable results, for owing to financial conditions only projects of merit we
Jan 1, 1934
-
Production Methods At Hiwassee Dam Aggregate Plant (5382f9f4-a95e-4cb7-8c79-3c5de8797d21)
By F. Cadena
HIWASSEE Dam, now under construction by the Tennessee Valley Authority on the Hiwassee River, a tributary of the Tennessee River, will require aggregate for approximately 800,000 cu. yd. of concrete.
Jan 1, 1939
-
New York Paper - Mine Fires and Hydraulic Filling (with Discussion)
By H. J. Rahilly
Mine fires, in the Butte district, have been a source of trouble and expense for the past thirty years, for while the actual fire area in most of the mines has been comparatively small, the handling o
Jan 1, 1923