Papers - Improvements in the Vacuum Fusion Method for Determination of Gases in Metals (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Lewis Reeve
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
29
File Size:
1448 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1934

Abstract

As part of a program of investigation of the properties of electric arc welds carried out in the laboratories of the A. 0. Smith Corporation, considerable work has been done on the determination of the oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen content of different types of weld metal, employing for this purpose the so-called "vacuum fusion method." It is the purpose of this paper to describe certain improvements that have been introduced in this method of determining the gas content of metals, with particular references to the steel specimens examined in this investigation. The method and apparatus used at the beginning of the investigation were essentially those of the Bureau of Standards as described by Vacher and Jordan.' Later a number of changes were introduced which resulted in more rapid evacuation of the graphite crucibles employed and which enabled larger volumes of gas to be dealt with than could be handled conveniently in the Bureau of Standards equipment. In addition, the analyzing of the gases evolved from a melt in the same apparatus as collected was abandoned in favor of analysis outside the equipment using standard methods of gas analysis. The time required for gas analysis in the apparatus itself, as described by the Bureau of Standards, was found to be considerable, and during this time the rest of the equipment was tied up, preventing its use for the analysis of further steel samples. As a result of the modifications introduced, the time required for the analysis of a steel sample for gas content was reduced from about 8 hours to less than 3 hours. Subsequently, the whole procedure of melting the sample and collecting the gases evolved was modified so as to enable a distinction to be drawn between the easily reducible oxides such as iron oxide and the more stable oxides such as silica and alumina. At the same time evidence was obtained indicating the probable existence in the steels of other nitrides than those of iron alone and making possible their quantitative etermination.
Citation

APA: Lewis Reeve  (1934)  Papers - Improvements in the Vacuum Fusion Method for Determination of Gases in Metals (With Discussion)

MLA: Lewis Reeve Papers - Improvements in the Vacuum Fusion Method for Determination of Gases in Metals (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1934.

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