Comparison of Methods for the Determination of Iron and Phosphorus in -Steel

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 166 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 1, 1906
Abstract
Continued Discussion of the Paper of Messrs. von Jonstorff, Blair, Dillner and Stead, presented at the New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, October, 1904.* (Bethlehem Meeting, February, 1906.) CLEMENS C. JONES, Richmond, Va. (communication to the Secretary+) :-In the chapter of this paper entitled "Method for the Determination of Phosphorus," by Andrew A. Blair, a form of the reductor used by Mr. Blair is illustrated. This form was employed by me in my earliest experiments, and abandoned after my adoption of the final apparatus described in my paper on the subject in 1889. The results reported by Mr. Blair are very closely accordant; but my experience was that, in the use of this form, a loss of the solution, amounting to almost a cubic centimeter, was occasioned by minute bubbles of hydrogen rising to the surface, and there exploding. My final reductor was designed to prevent this loss; and the most satisfactory results were obtained with a reductor having the open cup replaced by a bulb-shaped receptacle, provided with a glass stopper, similar to that of a separatory funnel of similar capacity, as suggested in a foot-note in my original paper. In my experience, the use of this later form of reductor repeatedly gave duplicate results which were, coincident to the fourth decimal place. R. W. RAYMOND, New York, N. Y.:-The. remarks of Mr. Jones recall to my mind an interesting part of the history of the Institute, and, of its relation to modern progress in the department covered by this interesting and valuable paper. In
Citation
APA:
(1906) Comparison of Methods for the Determination of Iron and Phosphorus in -SteelMLA: Comparison of Methods for the Determination of Iron and Phosphorus in -Steel. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1906.