Discussions - Of Mr. Gayley's Paper on The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron, published under the title of Blast-Furnace Practice (see Trans., xxxv., 746; also p. 315 of the present volume)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1906

Abstract

A Discussion of the papers of James Gayley, on "The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron" (see Trans., XXXV., 746, 1022, also pp. 315 and 745 of the present volume, and of J. E. Johnson, Jr., on "The Physical Action of the Blast-Furnace," p. 454. Chas. B. Dudley, Altoona, Pa.:—I am not a blast-furnace man, and this always puts me at a disadvantage because I cannot go into the details of the making of iron and steel. I have not the experience, and have to take the statements of other people, so what I say regarding the subject of this paper is not in the sense of an expert. When I first heard of Mr. Gayley's experiments, I said to myself, a I fear they will result in failure, since, apparently, Mr. Gayley has forgotten one chemical fact, namely, that carbon does not combine with oxygen in the absence of mater-vapor." This fact which was so astonishing when it was first brought out some years ago, and which those who are interested may find in the Journal of the Chemical Society of London, for 1885, page 349, and 1894, page 611, led me to think that the drying of the air would be a mistake. The general subject of the influence of water-vapor on chemical action is a large one; but the special point in which we are, for the moment, interested, namely, the influence of water-vapor on the combustion of carbon, was especially treated by Mr. H. B. Baker, in the papers referred to. Apparently, however, as the result of Mr. Gayley's experiments, we are to learn that the amount of moisture still left in the desiccated air is sufficient to secure perfectly satisfactory combustion. In thinking over Mr. Gayley's paper, it occurred to me that there were two alternatives, either of which might be chosen, namely, we might dry the air as Mr. Gayley does, or possibly we might, in a very much easier way, simply saturate the air at a constant temperature, and thus get uniform working and
Citation

APA:  (1906)  Discussions - Of Mr. Gayley's Paper on The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron, published under the title of Blast-Furnace Practice (see Trans., xxxv., 746; also p. 315 of the present volume)

MLA: Discussions - Of Mr. Gayley's Paper on The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron, published under the title of Blast-Furnace Practice (see Trans., xxxv., 746; also p. 315 of the present volume). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1906.

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