IC 7473 Making Iron Powder in the Tunnel Kiln

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
V. H. Gottschalk
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
20
File Size:
1647 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 1948

Abstract

Among the procedures developed by the Germans for providing the tonnage of iron powder needed to make rotating bands for artillery shells is the use of a ceramic tunnel kiln, not only for finishing the reduction of centrifugal powders but also for making so-called "brickyard sponge iron," which, after crushing and grinding, seems to yield a product suitable for powder-metallur- gical purposes. The final report issued jointly by the German Powder-Metallurgical Society (DPG) and the Chemical-Metallurgical Branch of the Research Depart- ment of the Metallgesellschaft, Inc. (ZFC of MG) gives the available details of this procedure, which may be regarded as a further development of the process in commercial use since 1911 at a ceramic plant in Hoeganaes, Sweden. The Bureau of Mines' wartime development of the Hoeganaes process also cul- minated in the adaptation of ceramic tunnel kilns for carrying out the solid- carbon reduction of iron ores, and comparison with the German technique should further advance the art. This information circular is issued as a supplement to Bureau of Mines reports of investigations Nos. 3819,2 3822, 3841,2 and 4271, on brick- yard sponge iron and is based on four German reports entitled "Making Iron. Powder in the Tunnel Kiln," translated from FIAT microfilm reel H-46, frames 9190-9209, 9280-9299, 9339-9357, and 9377-9384 (PB L 70042), which represent the four original research reports, Nos. 2005, 2008, 2010, and 2012, respec- tively, of the Metallgesellschaft, Inc.
Citation

APA: V. H. Gottschalk  (1948)  IC 7473 Making Iron Powder in the Tunnel Kiln

MLA: V. H. Gottschalk IC 7473 Making Iron Powder in the Tunnel Kiln. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.

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