IC 7791 Titanium - A Materials Survey

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Jesse A. Miller
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
211
File Size:
28719 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1957

Abstract

ALTHOUGH the element titanium was discovered by William Gregor in 1790, over a hundred years passed before it was put to commercial use. The first commercial application of titanium was as an alloy additive to iron and steel, and the first ferroalloys were produced domestically in 1906. Titanium pigments were developed somewhat later and have been produced in the United States since 1918. The use of titaniferous material in welding-rod coatings first gained acceptance ill the mid-30's. The metal titanium has only had commercial importance since 1948; domestic production for that year was 10 tons. The relative importance of these major uses of titanium in various forms may he gaged by the consumption of titanium dioxide (Ti02) for these purposes in 1954. Of a total of 440,000 short tons of Ti02 consumed in 1954, 95 percent of the total was consumed for pigments; 2 percent for welding-rod coatings; 1 percent for non-titanium-base alloys and carbide; and 2 percent for miscellaneous uses. The titanium-metal industry is in its infancy, but it has more than doubled its output every year from 1948 to 1954, reaching 5,370 short tons in 1954.
Citation

APA: Jesse A. Miller  (1957)  IC 7791 Titanium - A Materials Survey

MLA: Jesse A. Miller IC 7791 Titanium - A Materials Survey. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1957.

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