Papers - Miscellaneous - Quantitative Estimation of the Impurities in Tin by Means of the Quartz Spectrograph (Abstract with Discussion. See also A.I.M.E. Tech. Pub. 494.)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. Stansfield Hitchen
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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7
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327 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1933

Abstract

The paper describes the application of the logarithmic wedge sector method of quantitative spectrography to the estimation of commonly occurring minor impurities in crude and refined tin. Both arc and spark methods of emission were employed and with the former a new device was used to overcome difficulties arising from the low melting point of the metal. The impurities investigated included antimony, arsenic, bismuth, copper, iron, lead, and zinc, their concentrations lying, in general, between 0.01 and 0.50 per cent. The results obtained show that the method may be usefully employed for the estimation of bismuth, copper, iron, lead, and zinc, in amounts ranging from 0.50 per cent to well below 0.01 per cent. Arsenic and antimony, however, could not be estimated in amounts less than 0.03 and 0.07 per cent respectively. Out of a total of 116 estimations by arc and spark emission, in 96 the errors were less than 5 per cent of the total quantity of the element present, whereas in the remaining twenty, the errors lay between 5 and 25 per cent. Spectro-analytical data for the several impurities studied are given in the form of tables, and curves correlating line-intensity with concentration have also been included. DISCUSSION (R. G. Waltenberg presiding) D. M. Smith, London, England (written discussion).—I am interested in Dr Hitchen's account of his investigations on the application of spectrographic methods to the assay of tin and congratulate him on his valuable contribution to the literature on the subject of quantitative spectrum analysis. Some of the results obtained in the course of investigations carried out for the British Non-Ferrous Metals Research Assn., although obtained under somewhat different experimental conditions, may be of interest in connection with this paper. Arc and spark spectra of standard samples of tin containing various known amounts of antimony, bismuth, cadmium, copper, lead, silver and arsenic have been investi-
Citation

APA: C. Stansfield Hitchen  (1933)  Papers - Miscellaneous - Quantitative Estimation of the Impurities in Tin by Means of the Quartz Spectrograph (Abstract with Discussion. See also A.I.M.E. Tech. Pub. 494.)

MLA: C. Stansfield Hitchen Papers - Miscellaneous - Quantitative Estimation of the Impurities in Tin by Means of the Quartz Spectrograph (Abstract with Discussion. See also A.I.M.E. Tech. Pub. 494.). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1933.

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