Bismuth - Its Effect On The Hot-Working And Cold-Working Properties Of Alpha And Alpha-Beta Brasses

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William B. Price Ralph W. Bailey
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
520 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1942

Abstract

INTRODUCTION ARSENIC, antimony and phosphorus are now used in the brass industry as standard inhibitors in preventing dezincification in [ ] condenser tubes. This subject has been thoroughly covered by Barry,1 who described the testing procedure by total immersion of suitable specimens in a I per cent cupric chloride solution at definite temperatures. Effects of dezincification were then determined by loss in tensile strength and elongation of the test specimens after definite periods of immersion. In the crystallography of the chemical elements as tabulated by William Hume Rothery,2 phosphorus (metallic), arsenic, antimony and bismuth are placed in group V-B and the type of crystal lattice for arsenic, antimony and bismuth is given as rhombohedral. The Metals Handbook3 [ ] lists them as "rhombohedral hexagonal," with the additional notation that for arsenic this is the ordinary form at 20°C.; other modifications known or probable at other temperatures. In view of these statements and of the fact that phosphorus, arsenic and antimony are effective in increasing the resistance to dezincification, it was natural to assume that bismuth would act in the same manner. A series of tests was therefore carried out employing the methods described by Barry. Much to our surprise, bismuth did not inhibit dezincification, but rather seemed to accelerate it. Tensile-test speci-
Citation

APA: William B. Price Ralph W. Bailey  (1942)  Bismuth - Its Effect On The Hot-Working And Cold-Working Properties Of Alpha And Alpha-Beta Brasses

MLA: William B. Price Ralph W. Bailey Bismuth - Its Effect On The Hot-Working And Cold-Working Properties Of Alpha And Alpha-Beta Brasses. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1942.

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