Iron and Steel Division - Density of Liquid Iron Silicates

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
John Henderson. R. G. Hudson R. G. Ward G. Derge
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
1637 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

Densities of melts of the iron oxide-silica system in contact with solid iron have been measured by the maximum hubble pressure method in the composition range O to 37 wt pct SiOz and the temperature range 1255 to 1410C. The constitution of the melts is discussed and it is postulated that the structure changes from a dislribution of iron ions in an oxygen ion network at pure "FeO" to a distribution. of iron ions in a network of silicate tetrahedra at the orthosilicate composition. JOHN HENDERSON, Junior Member AIME, was formerly with the Metals Research Loborotory, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa., on leave from Broken Hill Proprietary Co., Ltd., Research Division, Shortland, Australia. R. G. HUDSON, formerly with Metals Research Laboratory, is now with the John Jay Hopkins Loborotory for Pure and Applied Science, General Atomic Division, General Dynamics Corp., LaJolla, Calif. R. G. WARD, was formerly with the Department of Metal lurgical Engineering, Carnegie lnstitute of Technology, while on leave from the Department of Metallurgy, University of Sheffield, England. G. DERGE, Member AIME, is Jones and Laughlin Professor of Metallurgical Engineering, Carnegie lnstitute of Technology. Manuscript submitted January 19, 1961. ISD The system iron oxide-silica is an important one metallurgically because it forms the basis of several complex slag systems in use for industrial smelting and refining processes. In recent years considerable work has been done on liquids of this system but there are still many points of difference among workers using different experimental techniques and theoretical approaches. Phase equilibria/"3 activity,4-6 electrical conductivity,' current efficiency,' transference number,8 viscosity,9 surface tension,'' and density" measurements have all contributed to an understanding of the problem. Measurement of density is one procedure which is directly indicative of liquid structure since any deviation from ideality must be a result of structural interactions. Liquids of the iron oxide-silica system are of special interest because this is one of the few metal oxide-silica systems on which measurements can be carried out conveniently over the entire composition range from pure oxide to silica saturation. This includes the range of high basicity which has received relatively little attention in other systems. Although one investigation of density in this system has previously been undertaken," the results seem of sufficient importance to warrant the independent redeter-mination reported here.
Citation

APA: John Henderson. R. G. Hudson R. G. Ward G. Derge  (1962)  Iron and Steel Division - Density of Liquid Iron Silicates

MLA: John Henderson. R. G. Hudson R. G. Ward G. Derge Iron and Steel Division - Density of Liquid Iron Silicates. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1962.

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