New Methods for the Production of Magnesium

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. M. Pidgeon
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
19
File Size:
5542 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1944

Abstract

MAGNESIUM metal, with a specific gravity of 1.73, is two-thirds the weight of aluminium and one-quarter that of steel. It is the lightest metal which is stable in the atmosphere. Before the war it had begun, though somewhat slowly, to take a place among the established metals. In 1939, magnesium production on this continent amounted to some 3,000 tons per annum and was confined to one company. At that time, Germany produced perhaps 20,000 tons. The advent of war, however, increased the demand to fantastic heights and introduced production problems of unprecedented magnitude. By the end of 1943, North American production is expected to reach 300,000 tons per annum (1), an increase of one hundredfold. Such a rate of expansion has not been witnessed previously in the history of metallurgy. It has given the metallurgist an opportunity to try new production methods and to learn in a short time what might otherwise have taken many years. The metallurgy of magnesium is still in its formative years and at this time widely different production methods are in operation side by side. This paper will discuss these methods in so far as information is available for publication at this time. A general description of the new Canadian industry will be included.
Citation

APA: L. M. Pidgeon  (1944)  New Methods for the Production of Magnesium

MLA: L. M. Pidgeon New Methods for the Production of Magnesium. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1944.

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