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Fluorine Consumption Trends of the Aluminum Industry - 1978 (af91ba2e-341f-49ac-a81e-d4ebfb843ebd)
By Guy D. Bruno
Through the remainder of this century, world consumption of fluorine per ton of primary aluminum produced will continue to be substantially reduced. Growth of the primary industry will offset some of
Jan 1, 1979
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Fluorine In Western Coals
By Harold R. Bradford
EXPANSION initiated during and after the war has placed industrial plants in new areas and increased reduction and manufacturing facilities in communities already established. With added expansion int
Jan 1, 1957
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Fluorite and Barite in Tennessee
By Thomas L. Watson
MY thanks are due to Mr. Frank Firmstone, Easton, Pa., who has called my attention to the statement in my papers that " Barite, fluorite and quartz, though not observed in the Tennessee area," . . . a
Jan 1, 1907
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Fluorochemical Collectors in Flotation
By R. B. Strathmore Cooke, Eugene L. Talbot
The perfluoro acids and derivatives show unusual surface-active properties that qualify them as possible flotation reagents. They lower the surface tension of water from 15 to 20 dynes below that obta
Nov 1, 1955
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Fluorspar
By Henry Siegmann
HISTORY OF PRODUCTION AND USE In 1899 the consumption of fluorspar in the United States was reported as 16,000 tons. The invention of the open-hearth method of steel manufacture, plus the beginning
Jan 1, 1976
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Fluorspar . . . Domestic And Foreign
By Gill Montgomery
The strong upward curve of fluorspar consumption continued through 1968, with domestic producers unable to furnish more than 30% of U.S. requirements. Stocks of all grades were quite short at all poin
Jan 3, 1969
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Fluorspar and Cryolite
By Robert M. Grogan, Gill Montgomery
Fluorspar, the commercial name for fluorite, is a mineral composed of calcium fluoride, CaF,. Its valuable properties are due to its content of fluorine, and it is the principal commercial source of t
Jan 1, 1975
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Fluorspar And Cryolite (21a84ea9-d225-49fb-8578-f562b0457b96)
By Robert B. Fulton, Gill Montgomery
Fluorspar is the commercial name for fluorite, a mineral that is calcium fluoride, CaF2. The name, derived from the Latin word fluere (to flow), refers to its low melting point and its early use in me
Jan 1, 1983
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Fluorspar And Cryolite (38a2d78e-1177-4545-9bc8-fe862e0f85c6)
By Henry T. Mudd
FLUORSPAR is a nonmetallic mineral aggregate or mass containing a sufficient quantity of fluorite (CaF2) to be of commercial interest. It has only moderate value per unit of weight and its cost as a p
Jan 1, 1949
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Fluorspar And Cryolite (b29bb0cf-0a83-4fc6-9c6b-4f26ad21f4d3)
By Robert M. Grogan
Fluorspar is the commercial name for fluorite, which is the mineral having the composition CaF2, calcium fluoride. Its valuable properties are due to its content of fluorine, and it is the only import
Jan 1, 1960
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Fluorspar and Its Uses
By E. L. BROKENSHIRE
FLUORSPAR, a little known non-metallic mineral, referred to technically as fluorite, chemically as calcium fluoride, is a compound of calcium and fluorine in the ratio of one molecule of calcium to tw
Jan 1, 1929
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Fluorspar Deposits In The Western States
By J. L. Gillson
IN a brief summary of the many occurrences of fluorspar in our western states, it is not possible to go into detail in regard to the geology, mining and milling methods, and reserves about individual
Jan 1, 1945
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Fluorspar Deposits in Western United States
By Ernest Burchard
FLUORSPAR is found in most of the states from the Rocky Mountains westward, and commercial production of the mineral has been reported from Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Washington.
Jan 1, 1933
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Fluorspar Mining In Hardin County, Illinois
LARGEST known fluorspar deposits in the world are mined in southern Illinois (Hardin County), and northwestern Kentucky (Crittenden County). Colorado, New Mexico, Montana, and Utah are the principal w
Jan 1, 1958
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Fluorspar-The Domestic Supply Situation
By Wm. I. Weisman, C. W. Tandy
Consumption of fluorspar in the United States in the last ten years has doubled to 1.34 million tons. One main, reason for the increase has been the use of the basic oxygen furnace to produce steel wh
Jan 1, 1975
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Fluosolids Roasting Of Dowa's Yanahara Sulfides
By R. M. Foley, Hidesaburo Kurushima
About 25 pct of all Japanese pyrite comes from the Yanahara mine on Honchu Island. For the past 40 years lack of an economical recovery process forced the operator, Dowa Mining Co., to sell the pyrite
Jan 10, 1958
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Fluxes
By Frederick V. Lawrence
Broadly speaking, fluxes are substances which promote wetting and spreading or enhance the fluidity and manipulative properties of materials in joining, fusion, and smelting operations. The term most
Jan 1, 1975
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Fluxes (5b4b20f7-bc75-494d-bc6d-f7c7890735f5)
By Frederick V. Lawrence
Broadly speaking, fluxes are substances which promote wetting and spreading or enhance the fluidity and manipulative properties of materials in joining, fusion, and smelting operations. The term most
Jan 1, 1983
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Fluxing Silicio Us Iron Ores
By T. F. Witherbee
(Read at the Amenia Meeting, October, 1877.) THE subject of an article in the Engineering and Mining Journal for October 13th, 1877, namely, Blast Furnace Treatment of Silicious Iron Ores,, is of g
Jan 1, 1878
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FMC Corporation's North Carolina Phosphate Research Project
By Lewis Robert M.
The importance of phosphate in feeding the people of the world has been recognized by mining companies as they continue their search for new ore deposits and ways of improving phosphate production. An
Jan 1, 1975