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  • AIME
    Arthur Phillips, Chairman, Institute of Metals Division

    By AIME AIME

    THE 1944 Chairman of the Institute of Metals Division might be classed as metallurgically ambidextrous ; he is teacher of theory and practice of both nonferrous and ferrous metallurgy, and he is consu

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    A Useful New Selectivity Modifier in Nonsulphide Flotation

    By T. MacDONALD

    ATHOUGH flotation has been a commercial process for over twenty years, the last two years have witnessed a sudden and phenomenal increase in our knowledge of how to separate minerals heretofore not co

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Coal Dust: It Causes Explosions and Disease

    By R. R. Sayers

    TWO serious hazards from coal dust confront the bituminous-coal miner- -a physical or safety hazard and a physiological or health hazard. The first threatens the miner with loss of life from coal-dint

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Geomechanics of the Carr Fork Mine Test Stope

    By E. L. Corp, J. C. Johnson, W. G. Pariseau, M. Poad, M. E. Fowler

    This paper describes a comprehensive geomechanics case study of a full¬scale test stope at the Carr Fork Mine. The mine is owned by Anaconda Miner¬als Company and is located near Tooele, Utah. Large d

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Titanium And Columbium In Plain High-Chromium Steels

    By Frederick Beckett

    WIDESPREAD experimentation has been conducted in recent years to devise a means of preventing intergranular corrosion in austenitic chromium-nickel steels of the 18 per cent chromium-8 per cent nickel

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of Slag-Metal Reactions

    BASIC open-hearth slags have no obviously unique features when compared with slags from other metallurgical operations. Open-hearth slags form and exist at temperatures ranging from 2500 to 3100 F (13

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Papres - Aviation - Report of A.I.M.E. Aviation Committee for Year 1936-37

    By W. E. D. Stokes

    The application of aviation to mining and petroleum operations, on the basis of economy and attainment, has become a demonstrated fact. According to Dominion Government rccords, 30 Canadian compani

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - A Thermodynamic Model for the Deoxidation of Alloy Steels

    By S. Ramachandran, R. A. Walsh, J. C. Fulton

    A method has been developed for calculating the oxygen content of commercially melted stainless steels. Application of thermodynamics to the de-oxidation reaction in straight chromium and Cr-Ni stainl

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Metallography of Commercial Thorium

    By Edmund Davenport

    Tier; production of thorium of high purity by the Ca-CaCl2 reduction has been described by Marden and Rentschler,1 who also reported some of the properties of the coherent, ductile metal obtained from

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Studies upon the Widmanstätten Structure, VI-Iron-rich Alloys of Iron and Nitrogen and of Iron and Phosphorus

    By Robert Mehl

    THE precipitation of the nitride Fe4N from the solid solution of nitrogen in a Fe and of the phosphide Fe3P from the solid solution of phosphorus in a Fe both lead to the formation of structures that

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Clinton Iron-Ore Deposits In Kentucky And Tennessee.

    By S. WHINERP

    (Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) I AM indebted to L. E. Bryant, of Danville, Ky., President of the Virginia Mining Co., operating coal-mines in Scott county, Tenn., for the following information r

    Oct 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Philadelphia Meeting

    ASHBEL WELCH, Lambertville, N. J.: Dr. Dudley has given the wear of steel rails under four different conditions. He arrives at the conclusion that the softer rails, or those that from their compositio

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Technical Papers - Mining Practice - Cyprus Mines Copper Again (Mining Tech., Sept. 1948, TP 2459)

    By J. L. Bruce

    After six years of war-enforced idleness, Cyprus copper mines are operating again. This relatively long shutdown seems infinitesimal when compared with something like seventeen hundred years of inacti

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Notes on the Bessemer Process

    By Henry M. Howe

    The striking features of American Bessemer practice aré its large output and its low initial silicon and initial temperature. These are interdependent. Large outputs implies short blows and short inte

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    Climax Molybdenum Section – Molybdenum Mining

    From 1917 to 1926 mining at the Climax Molybdenum Co. property was confined to the Leal and White levels at elevations of 12,145 and 11,935 ft respectively and to surface outcrops above the Leal level

    Aug 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Feldspar

    By B. C. Burgess

    IN the first edition of this volume,44 feldspar was introduced as "the I commonest mineral of the crystalline rocks," usually in small grains associated with other minerals and commercially produced o

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - The Efficiency of Built-Up Wooden Beams (Discussion, 993)

    By Edgar Kidwell

    To any one acquainted with the practical conditions surrounding the mining engineer and mine-manager, especially in this country, the presentation to the American Institute of Mining Engineers of a pa

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Internal Oxidation In Dilute Alloys Of Silver And Of Some White Metals (a6b11dc4-0e95-472e-9b80-f31da10cb2b9)

    By A. H. Grobe, F. N. Rhines

    AT elevated temperatures the oxide of silver is unstable in the air at atmospheric pressure, consequently no external oxide scale forms upon pure silver under conditions of high-temperature annealing.

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Barite of the Appalachian States

    By J. Sharshall Grasty, Thomas L. Watson

    The users of barite in the United States derive their supply partly from the domestic production and partly from the imports from foreign countries. According to the Mineral Resource division of the U

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Cracks in Aluminum-alloy Castings (with Discussion)

    By R.J. Anderson

    Roughly, a crack in a casting may be considered, for the moment, to be due to fracture of the alloy resulting from the stress set up by the contraction in volume on passing from the liquid to the soli

    Jan 1, 1923