PART I – Papers - Solute Interactions with Zinc in Dilute Solution with Molten Bismuth: 1-Third-Element Effects

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. V. Gluck R. D. Pehlke
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
2873 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

A study was made of the effect of small additions of metallic solutes on the thermodynamic activity of zinc in dilute solution with molten bismuth in the range 450o to 650°C. The experimental measurements were made in a multielectrode galvanic cell using. a fused LiCl-KCl electrolyte. The activity of zinc in binary solution exhibited a strong positive deviation from Raoult's law and obeyed Henry 's law to at least 0.050 mole fraction. The ternary addition of lead, gallium, or indium increased the activity of zinc. Cadmium or tin additions slightly decreased the zinc activity. Copper, mercury, silver, or antimony caused moderate decreases, while gold strongly decreased the zinc activity. The results are expressed in terms of Wagner's interaction parameter ejZn and a second-order cross-interaction parameter. The interactions for copper, gold, silver, and antimony showed a linear dependence with reciprocal absolute temperature, while the other interactions were essentially independent of temperature over the experimental range. Since tin and antimony decreased the zinc activity, the hypothesis of a purely periodic variation with atomic number was rejected. A semiquantitative explanation was possible with a free-electron model when relative electronegativities were used to express changes in the electron/atom ratio caused by the solute addition. Random solution and quasi-chemical models correctly predicted the majority of the interactions for which binary data were available to apply them. A knowledge of the thermodynamic interactions in liquid (and solid) metallic solutions is of considerable theoretical and experimental interest in the formulation of quantitative thermodynamic relations for metallurgical processes. The approaches to defining the interactions may be either phenomenological (i.e., "What mathematical function adequately describes observed behavior and permits extrapolation to new situations?") or theoretical, such as a specific model
Citation

APA: J. V. Gluck R. D. Pehlke  (1968)  PART I – Papers - Solute Interactions with Zinc in Dilute Solution with Molten Bismuth: 1-Third-Element Effects

MLA: J. V. Gluck R. D. Pehlke PART I – Papers - Solute Interactions with Zinc in Dilute Solution with Molten Bismuth: 1-Third-Element Effects. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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