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  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of High-Temperature Reactions

    OF the many categories into which scientific knowledge has been arbitrarily divided, the one that has proved most applicable in our attempts to gain an insight into the details of steelmaking processe

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of High-Temperature Reactions (6e3526e8-bbd7-48aa-a5d2-33594a0bf7f4)

    OF the many categories into which scientific knowledge has been arbitrarily 'divided, the one that has proved most. applicable in our attempts to gain an insight into the details of steelmaking p

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of Liquid Steel

    THE metal iron has physical and chemical properties which are somewhat different from those of steels, but a knowledge of the pure metal is a useful starting point in studying the behavior of steels.

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of Liquid Steel (61e4e015-7754-4a9f-9acf-68f2fff60f20)

    THE metal iron has physical arid chemical properties which are some- what different from those of steels, but a knowledge of the pure metal is a useful starting point in studying the behavior of steel

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of Open-Hearth Refractories

    COMPARED with the equipment used in most industrial processes, the open-hearth furnace has a relatively short life. The most important quality of an open-hearth refractory, therefore, is its rate of f

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of Open-Hearth Refractories (a2767f51-5bc4-4625-8292-c2a4733b686f)

    COMPARED with the equipment used in most industrial processes, the open-hearth furnace has a relatively short life. The most important quality of an open-hearth refractory, therefore, is its rate of f

    Jan 1, 1964

  • 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
    Physical Chemistry Of Slag-Metal Reactions (caeb052a-f24f-41e1-8783-1ca087fb466f)

    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, 1964

  • AIME
    Physical Data Of Igneous Emanation.

    By Blamey Stevens

    (San Francisco Meeting, October, 1911.) My previous paper is entitled, The Laws of Igneous Emanation Pressure. The present paper lays no claim to the exactitude and completeness of a law, since it is

    Apr 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Physical Defects In Hollow Drill Steel

    By Francis Foley

    Small cracks in a plane normal to the axis of steels are found to be prevalent around the water hole of drill steels that have been in service for an unknown period of time. Cracks are not found on th

    Jan 3, 1924

  • AIME
    Physical Examination Previous To Employment

    By Charles Willis

    THE time is no longer when a man can act as an independent unit; the appreciation of the interdependence of one man upon another has emphasized the importance of the social unit. Epidemics have made u

    Jan 7, 1919

  • AIME
    Physical Examination Previous to Employment - Discussion

    THE CHAIRMAN ( F. K. COPELAND, * Chicago, ,Ill.).-This is an interest-ing and very troublesome proposition to all of us. Ten or fifteen years ago, when the old-fashioned idea prevailed that a man was

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    Physical Factors in the Metallurgical Reduction of Zinc Oxide

    By WOOLSEY MCA JOHNSON

    INDEPENDENTLY of the recognized chemical reactions involved in the production of metallic zinc, the process is affected by physical conditions in efficiency, and by commercial as well as technical eco

    Sep 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgists Apply Theoretical Data to Practice - Annual Review of the Institute of Metals Division

    By Albert J. Phillips

    FOR the most part, recent changes in nonferrous physical metallurgy have been gradual and of a transition nature rather than abrupt modifications of existing methods. Development of new alloys contain

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgy

    By R. L., Fullman

    During the past year there have been a number of significant investigations that have furnished evidence on the driving forces governing grain growth and on the role played by boundary impurities. Th

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgy - A Study of Age-hardening Using the Electron Microscope and Formvar Replicas (Metals Technology, June 1945)

    By D. Harker, M. J. Murphy

    The mechanism by which age-hardening takes .place is still not completely understood. The principal theories range from the extreme of "precipitaiion-hardening" to that of "order-hardening," with many

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgy - Fundamental Principles Involved in Segregation in Alloy Castings (Metals

    By R. M. Brick

    Segregation can occur only in cast alloys that solidify over a range of temperatures with a difference in composition of liquid and solid phases within this range (ignoring monotectic systems and chem

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgy - Internal Friction of Single Crystals of Brass, Copper and Aluminum (Metals Technology, June 1945) (With discussion)

    By George H. Found

    During recent years considerable interest has been focused on the energy-absorption characteristics of metal when it is cyclically stressed in vibration. The most familiar manifestation of this phenom

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgy - Orientation Changes during Recrystallization in Silicon Ferrite (Metals Technology, April 1945)

    By C. G. Dunn

    With respect to theories of recrystalliza-tion in metals plastically deformed. it has been said that the present status of this subject is far from satisfactory.1 It may also be said that before any m

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgy - Recrystallization of in Terms of the Rate of Nucleation and the Rate of Growth (Metals Technology, Feb. 1945) (With discussion)

    By W. A. Anderson

    Recrystallization of cold-worked metals has long been known to proceed by a process of nucleation and growth.' When a cold-worked metal is heated to a temperature at which recrystallization will

    Jan 1, 1945