IC 8821 Availability Of Critical Scrap Metals Containing Chromium In The United States - Superalloys And Cast Heat- And Corrosion-Resistant Alloys

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 57
- File Size:
- 23388 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1980
Abstract
This Bureau of Mines report presents the results of a study conducted to assess the domestic availability of chromium from superalloy and cast heat- and corrosion-resistant alloy scrap material. Six alloy classes included in this survey were investment cast, hardfacing, and wrought nickel- and cobalt-base alloys, wrought nickel-iron-base alloys, and heat- and corrosion-resistant alloy castings. Data were collected for 1976 on metallic scrap generation, use patterns, and production practices for these alloy producing and using industries. A model was developed that allowed an assessment of the materials flow circuits within the industries that produce these alloys. The types, amounts, sources, secondary products, and ultimate destinations of chromium- containing metallic scrap for the six alloy classes were determined. Regarding the overall recycling efficiency of these alloy producing and using industries, of the 580.9 million pounds of scrap generated from these six alloy classes in 1976, about 72 percent (416.8 million pounds) was remelted by the same alloy-producing industries, about 18 percent (104.9 million pounds) was downgraded into stainless and low-alloy steels, about 3 percent (19.7 million pounds) was exported, and about 7 percent (39.5 million pounds) was lost through landfill or other disposal or service wastage. The lost material is primarily contaminated oxides for which recovery is currently uneconomic. However, the 124.6 million pounds of scrap material downgraded or exported in 197b contained potentially recoverable critical strategic elements. The amount of scrap material lost to the six alloy-producing industries in this manner contained 22.1 million pounds of chromium, 53.4 million pounds of nickel, 5.9 million pounds of cobalt, 35.9 million pounds of iron, and 7.3 million pounds of other alloying elements.
Citation
APA:
(1980) IC 8821 Availability Of Critical Scrap Metals Containing Chromium In The United States - Superalloys And Cast Heat- And Corrosion-Resistant AlloysMLA: IC 8821 Availability Of Critical Scrap Metals Containing Chromium In The United States - Superalloys And Cast Heat- And Corrosion-Resistant Alloys. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1980.