Critical Studies of a Modified Ledebur Method for Determination of Oxygen in Steel, II

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
T. E. Brower
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
720 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1934

Abstract

SHORTLY after our previous paper on this subject was printed,1 we located a source of uncertainty in the results arising from the unexpected fact that hydrogen slowly reduces silica at 1100° C. in presence of iron, even when the iron nowhere touches the silica, although in absence of iron it does not do so. This difficulty has been completely obviated by the use of a small high-frequency furnace, which enables us to heat the specimen for analysis without raising the temperature of the silica vessel to a point at which any appreciable reduction of the silica glass occurs. We now describe this modification of procedure, and present some typical results obtained with it. For any given specimen of steel, the results are entirely definite and. reproducible, but their precise significance is still open to some question, as indeed is true of all methods of oxygen determination so far developed. Further elucidation of this question is to be expected from the cooperative comparison of the several methods now under way under the auspices of the Bureau of Standards at the instance of the Iron and Steel Division of the A.I.M.E.
Citation

APA: T. E. Brower  (1934)  Critical Studies of a Modified Ledebur Method for Determination of Oxygen in Steel, II

MLA: T. E. Brower Critical Studies of a Modified Ledebur Method for Determination of Oxygen in Steel, II. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1934.

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