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New York Paper - The Injection of Cement Grout into Water-Bearing Fissures (with Discussion)
By Francis Donaldson
The direct injection of cement grout into water-bearing fissures as a means of checking or stopping the flow of water into shafts and tunnels has been experimented with for a decade or longer and seem
Jan 1, 1915
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Exudations On Brass And Bronze
By W. B. Price
AT the New York meeting of the American Institute of Mining-and Metallurgical Engineers held in February, 1926, W. H. Bassett and J. C. Bradley presented a paper entitled "Exudations on Copper Casting
Jan 10, 1926
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Part VIII - Plastic Deformation During Cleavage of LiF
By S. J. Burns, W. W. Webb
The dislocation arrangements formed during unsteady propagation of cleavage fractures on (010) planes in LiF have been investigated by high-resolution etch-pit techniques and by X-ray diffraction topo
Jan 1, 1967
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Electrolytic Zinc From Complex Ores
By U. C. Tainton
The paper reviews the evolution of electrolytic zinc, describing some of the major obstacles that have been encountered and overcome. The chief remaining limitations of present-day standard practice a
Jan 2, 1924
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PART VI - Papers - The Effect of Aluminum Additions to Cr-Fe Coatings on the Properties of the Diffusion Coatings
By J. J. Demo
The effect of aluminum additions on the coating vale and corrosion resistance of Cr-Fe diffusiou coalings on a mild steel substvate has been studied. Aluminum additions up to 2 wt pct increase the chr
Jan 1, 1968
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Launder and Table Washing of Fine Coal
By J. T. Crawford
COAL-CLEANING plants using the launder process generally wash the fine coal (minus 3/8 or minus 5/16-in.) separately in a plant consisting of washing launders or troughs placed one below another and s
Jan 1, 1940
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Sculptor Molds A Mountain With Mining Techniques
By Henry A. Pohs
It is a rare work of art that attains the proportions of a major construction project. One instance of such a phenomenon is Bartholdi's Miss Liberty, which was designed and built section by secti
Jan 11, 1966
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Thermal Changes In Melting And Refining (25c097f4-af14-4338-8f81-e894e767b45d)
ALTHOUGH the open-hearth charge contributes CO, C02, H2, A and water vapor to the combustion gases and absorbs oxygen from them, in the main the thermal effects in the melting charge and molten bath c
Jan 1, 1964
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Correlation of Earth Resistivity with Geological Structure and Age
By R. H. Card
THE geophysicist is interested greatly in the resistivities of different formations or parts of the earth's crust; sometimes he is interested in a single figure in the nature of an average, or wh
Jan 1, 1937
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Part II – February 1968 - Papers - The 1967 Institute of Metals Lecture Spinodal Decomposition
By John W. Cahn
The spinodal has long been regarded as a limit beyond which a homogeneous phase could no longer be metastable. But only recently has it become apparent that a phase beyond the spinodal would decompose
Jan 1, 1969
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Factors Involved In Heat-Treating A Magnesium Alloy - Introduction
By J. T. Lapsley, I. I. Cornet, A. E. Flanigan, R. Hultgren, J. E. Dorn
WITH the greatly expanding use of magnesium during the war, it appeared necessary to the War Metallurgy Committee that procedures of heat treating common magnesium casting alloys be investigated syste
Jan 1, 1947
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General - Cemented Tungsten Carbide; a Study of the Action of the Cementing Material (With Discussion)
By F. C. Kelley, L. L. Wyman
In order to clarify and amplify the existing data concerning the action of the cementing material in cemented tungsten carbide alloys, the authors have initiated this investigation of the entire range
Jan 1, 1931
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Institute of Metals Division - Creep Rupture Properties and Structural changes in Carbon and Low Alloy Steels
By E. F. Ketterer, D. B. Collyer, A. B. Wilder
The microstructural stability of 59 carbon and low alloy steels after 34,000 hr exposure at 900' and 1050°F, including the weld heat-affected zone, is discussed. The tensile and creep rupture pro
Jan 1, 1955
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New York Paper - Manganese Ores of Russia, India, Brazil and Chile (with Discussion)
By E. C. Harder
The situation in the United States, at the present time, regarding the supply of manganese ores and alloys of manganese is one of great seriousness and is likely to become increasingly so while the Eu
Jan 1, 1917
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Primary Crushing - History
The earliest U. S. patent on a crushing machine was issued in 1830. The device incorporated the drop hammer principle later used in the famous stamp mill, whose history is so intimately linked with th
Jan 1, 1978
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Plant Waste and Environmental Considerations (48ac2316-068e-4411-bcf2-e319b88ecda6)
By David R. Maneval, W. E. Foreman, J. Richard Lucas
INTRODUCTION The objective of this chapter is to inform the industry, as well as the public, of the challenges in dealing with problems associated with air and water contamination by coal preparat
Jan 1, 1979
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Earth Resistivity As Applied To Problems Of Exploration In The Potash-Bearing Region Near Carlsbad, New Mexico
By H. Cecil Spicer
THE results described in this article are based on field work conducted during the periods April-May, 1939, and May-July, 1940. The United States Potash Co. is mining potash on Government land under a
Jan 1, 1941
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Earth Resistivity As Applied To Problems Of Exploration In The Potash-Bearing Region Near Carlsbad, New Mexico
By H. Cecil Spicer
THE results described in this article are based on field work conducted during the periods April-May, 1939, and May-July, 1940. The United States Potash Co. is mining potash on Government land under a
Jan 1, 1941
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Symposium on Practical Aspects of Diffusion - The Influence of Gas-metal Diffusion in Fabricating Processes (Metals Technology, Jan. 1944) (With discussion)
By Frederick N. Rhines
Because of the nature of the environments in which metals are handled, it is natural that gases should be suspected of intruding into metallurgical operations, there to produce effects both beneficial
Jan 1, 1944
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Symposium on Practical Aspects of Diffusion - The Influence of Gas-metal Diffusion in Fabricating Processes (Metals Technology, Jan. 1944) (With discussion)
By Frederick N. Rhines
Because of the nature of the environments in which metals are handled, it is natural that gases should be suspected of intruding into metallurgical operations, there to produce effects both beneficial
Jan 1, 1944