Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Chemical Constraints on In-Situ Leaching and Metal Recovery
By R. S. Rickard
Using a simple model, the necessary chemical conditions for sulfide leaching will be discussed. Also other chemical control- ling factors will be reviewed briefly.
Jan 1, 1974
-
Chemical Control in Copper Reduction
By AIME AIME
A MODERN copper reduction works has both a genera1 chemical laboratory for control work and a research laboratory for the study of improvement of present processes and better working-up of by-products
Jan 1, 1929
-
Chemical Engineer Views the Steel 1ndustry
By Charles Ramseyer
THE manufacture of iron and steel is one of the largest of our indus-tries; and in point of size of single plant and equipment certainly the biggest of all industries. By the general public it is gene
Jan 1, 1934
-
Chemical Equilibria During Solidification And Cooling Of White Cast Iron
By H. A. Schwartz
By analyzing cementite separated electrolytically from white cast iron of known composition and history, the distribution of silicon between austenite and cementite during and after freezing has been
Jan 7, 1924
-
Chemical Equilibrium Between Iron, Carbon, And Oxygen
By Matsubara, A.
THE problem of the equilibrium between iron, carbon, and oxygen was first carefully investigated by E. Baur and A. Glaessner,1 who determined the equilibrium conditions of the two reactions Fe304 + C
Jan 2, 1921
-
Chemical Equilibrium of Manganese, Carbon, and Phosphorus in the Basic Open-hearth Process
By C. H. Jr. Herty
The results of a study of the open-hearth process from the physicochemical view-point are given. This study includes experimentation in small laboratory furnaces and in standard 100-ton furnaces. The
Jan 2, 1926
-
Chemical Examination of Minerals
By William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
Examination in the Wet Way Examination by Means of the Blowpipe 479. The complete investigation of the chemical composition of a .mineral includes, first, the identification of the elements presen
Jan 1, 1922
-
Chemical Industry
By Robert B. Fulton
The use of industrial minerals by the chemical industry as raw materials for manufacturing and in processing spans a wide assortment of minerals. This chapter aims to supplement rather than duplicate
Jan 1, 1975
-
Chemical Industry (a8d58083-f85b-47d2-bffe-8cdcde9bafbc)
By Robert B. Fulton
The objective of this chapter is to discuss the interrelationship between industrial minerals and chemical manufacturing. It is intended to supplement rather than duplicate the commodity chapters. Par
Jan 1, 1983
-
Chemical Laboratories in Iron- and steel-works.
By George W. Maynard
IN the biographical notice of Thomas F. Witherbee, published in Bulletin No. 32, August, 1909 (p. xxv), it is said that ". he is believed to have been the first manager in America to use the chemical
Nov 1, 1909
-
Chemical Methods For Analyzing Rail-Steel
By Magnus Troilius
INTRODUCTION BY C. P. SANDBERG. SINCE the discussion On steel rails in America has forcibly drawn attention to the value of chemical analysis, if not as a necessary stipulation, at least as a guide
Jan 1, 1882
-
Chemical Oxidation of Cyanide Species by Ozone with Irradiation from Ultraviolet Light
By Charles E. Mauk, H. William Prengle, Robert W. Legan
A process breakthrough was needed for the complete destruction of total cyanide influent as high as 100,000 mg per 1, or below 1 mg per 1, to produce an influent with total cyanide below the limit of
Jan 1, 1977
-
Chemical Precipitation of Alkaline Earth Cations and Its Effect on Flocculation and Flotation of Quartz
By I. Iwasaki, R. H. Heerema
The presence of calcium and magnesium ions in iron ore pulps that are upgraded by selective desliming can result in indiscriminate flocculation of both iron oxide and siliceous gangue slimes. The remo
Jan 1, 1981
-
Chemical Processing-A Wave Of The Future
By John Dasher
Chemical processing is descended from alchemy, which developed our major lixivants. The profession might have done more if it had been less preoccupied with turning base metals into gold-a process tha
Jan 1, 1971
-
Chemical Processors Can Pose Tough Hurdles To Would-Be Suppliers Of Industrial Minerals
By J. K. Brooke, R. M. Dreyer
For mining engineers and geologists accustomed evaluating metallic mineral deposits, the problems inherent in determining the worth of non- metallic industrial minerals deposits for the chemical proce
Jan 8, 1962
-
Chemical Reactions in Flotation
By Arthur Taggart
SOME years ago, A. M. Gaudin and one of the authors published a paper showing removal of tar acids from solution by sulfides preferentially as compared to gangues (specifically by galena as compared t
Jan 1, 1930
-
Chemical Tools of Flotation
By G. H. BUCHANAN
ALTHOUGH the nomenclature of the chemical tools of flotation is probably familiar to you, it will do no harm to review it; . In order to make the terms more real I have employed an illustration which
Jan 1, 1930
-
Chemical Treatment Of Bentonitic Suspensions And The Relationship To The Heaving-Shale Problem
By H. H. Power, Charles R. Houssiere
THE development of effective and dependable methods for drilling through the so-called "heaving-shale" horizons, particularly in the Gulf Coast area, is believed to comprise a major contribution to dr
Jan 1, 1941
-
Chemical Treatment Of Coal And Coke
By P. Nicholls
PATENT records show that the attempt to improve the burning of fuel by mixture or pretreatment with chemicals dates back to the early years of the last century. By 1845 English and French patents had
Jan 1, 1937
-
Chemically Mining Coal
By Guy R. B. Elliott
If chemical mining is to work, it is extremely important to watch heat balances. Some reactions with coal give off heat and others absorb heat. The reactions of coal with oxygen or air give off heat,
Jan 9, 1973