Deoxidation of Open Hearth Steel with Manganese-Silicon Alloys

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 74
- File Size:
- 5670 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1957
Abstract
One of the numerous requirements of many grades of present- day steel is that the steel shall be free from non-metallic inclusions. These inclusions may be composed of oxides, sulphides, complex oxy- sulphides, and nitrides, which enter the steel with the furnace charge, result from sulphur absorption from the furnace gases, or are formed in the steel during the deoxidation process. Although few' data are available which indicate in any quantitative manner the specific effects of inclusions in steel, there is a large mass of circumstantial evidence which points to the advisability of producing steel free from these impurities for many purposes. At the present time there is a growing feeling among metallurgists that non-metallic inclusions should be divided into two distinct types: (I) those readily visible under the microscope at ordinary magnifications; and (2) those in colloidal suspension or in solid solution. Both types are profoundly influenced by the character of the charge, the manipulation of the furnace slag, and the method of deoxidation. The work described in this bulletin deals primarily with inclusions visible under the microscope at ordinary magnifications, but the steels made by the various methods of deoxidation are being used LO study certain effects which may be ascribed to the second classification, named above. This latter work will be the subject of further bulletins on the effect of deoxidation practice on the physical properties of the steels involved.
Citation
APA:
(1957) Deoxidation of Open Hearth Steel with Manganese-Silicon AlloysMLA: Deoxidation of Open Hearth Steel with Manganese-Silicon Alloys. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1957.