IC 6455 Zirconium Part 1 General Information

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 32
- File Size:
- 2379 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 1, 1931
Abstract
Before the World War the use of zirconium and its compounds was largely
experimental and confined almost wholly to Germany and Austria . Occasionally
small lots of zirconium ore had been produced in the United States ( 1,000
pounds in 1869 , 26 tons in 1883 , and 3,000 pounds in 1903 ) and used (with
monazite ) in the manufacture of various lighting devices , especially incandescent
gas mantles ; but it was not until 1906 that the discovery of the natural
zirconium oxide in large quantities near Sao Paulo , Brazil , first gave promise
that a zirconium industry eventually might be developed . Edward Rietz , who
worked the Brazilian deposits , interested German chemists in extending the use
of zirconium , and by 1911 trade journals were listing German firms as manufacturers
of compounds or products derived therefrom . For a time zirconia was
one of the various oxides used in the Nernst lamp . It was used also for crucibles
and hearths as refractory material ; in the manufacture of chemical
utensils ; in enamels ; in the place of bismuth subnitrate for defining Röntgenray
pictures of the stomach ; as a pigment ; in medicine ; and in a number of
other ways .
The Germans
were credited
also with producing
a remarkable
zirconium
steel , which , it was claimed
, was much superior
to other alloy
steels .
During the World War the United States Government investigated the
possibilities of zirconium , as well as those of other steel -hardening elements ,
and a large automobile manufacturer actually purchased a substantial quantity
of ore with the purpose of employing zirconium in automobile steels . Immediately
after the armistice the Government ceased its investigations ; but despite
the difficulties experienced by various investigators in reaching concordant
results , interest in the use of zirconium as a steel -hardening agent , as well
as in other uses of the element and its compounds , continued . In 1918 the
Foote Mineral Co. , which had been interested in zirconium for several years ,
was exploiting the deposit in Brazil formerly worked by the Germans and was
supplying zirconia in the form of ore , brick , and cement for refractory and
other purposes . About the same time the Electro Metallurgical Co. , which before
the entrance of the United States into the war was experimenting with zirconium
alloys , supplied in tonnage quantities the demand for these alloys . In 1919
it was reported that American manufacturers , after several years of research,
were producing in commercial quantities pure zirconium oxide , which was finding
a place in the manufacture of small refractory articles , scorifying dishes ,
crucibles , tubes , and one- piece furnace linings .
In 1920 the lowering of the price of zirconium metal powder ( because
of improved metallurgical methods ) promised the production of the metal on a
semicommercial scale . In 1924 the Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Co. introduced
a new opacifying agent , " Opax , " made from zircon . A year or two later some
of the large pottery manufacturers became interested in the use of zirconium
oxide as an opacifying agent , the increased production of titanium pigments
having resulted in the production of zirconium as a by-product at a price that
could compete with tin oxide . In 1928 it was reported that the industrial use
of zirconium oxide was increasing steadily in the manufacture of brick , crucibles
, and other refractory products , such as high- temperature cements . However
, the reluctance of producers to install additional and more suitable
Citation
APA:
(1931) IC 6455 Zirconium Part 1 General InformationMLA: IC 6455 Zirconium Part 1 General Information. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.