Cleveland Paper - The Constitution and Melting-Points of a Series of Copper-Slags

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 1417 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1913
Abstract
There are comparatively few accurate data on the melting-or the freezing-point temperature of metallurgical slags, or on related physical phenomena, such as fluidity near the melting-point, specific heat, latent heat, etc. With the exception of the work of H. 0. Hofman,' and some older work by R. Akerman, P. Gredt, and H. M. Howe, no information is available that is of direct interest to the metallurgist. Hofman's valuable work is the only one that refers to slags produced in the metallurgy of copper and lead. The classic work of J. H. L. Vogt,2 who views slags from the standpoint of physical mixtures (solutions in which the entities are minerals), has opened up a new field in the study of slags, and has placed the investigation of such properties as melting-temperatures, etc., on a rational basis. The recent work of A. L. Day, E. T. Allen, and W. I?. White, of the Carnegie Institution, at Washington, and of European investigators3 on certain systems of silicate minerals confirms the value of the investigation of silicate series from this standpoint, and it is my aim to apply this method to metallurgical slags, in order to gain exact data of value in metallurgy. The work recorded in the present paper is the result of an investigation of reverberatory-furnace slags made for a Western smelting company to determine exactly the influence of change in composition, within comparatively narrow limits, on the melting-point. For a general discussion concerning the mineralogical character of slags and the principles on which this investigation is based, reference should be made to other work: for the subject is too large to be stated in this paper, except very briefly in the following outline:
Citation
APA:
(1913) Cleveland Paper - The Constitution and Melting-Points of a Series of Copper-SlagsMLA: Cleveland Paper - The Constitution and Melting-Points of a Series of Copper-Slags. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.