Production Application Of Fused Aluminum Oxide And Silicon Carbide To The Mining Industry

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
E. P. Lunghofer
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
316 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1985

Abstract

Silicon Carbide and Aluminum Oxide were two of the early forms of man-made abrasives often referred to as synthetic and were invented at the turn of the century. Edward G. Acheson invented Silicon Carbide in 1893 and Charles F. Jacobs filed a patent for the manufacture of fused alumina from bauxite in 1900. Jacobs' patent provided a method for tempering the alumina by reduction and fusion to a degree of hardness and toughness suitable for abrasive purposes. These two inventions are the basis of the synthetic abrasive industry today. Improvements have been made in the equipment used in the process, however the process itself remains basically the same. In 1904 A. C. Higgins observed that hot spots developed on the shell of the pot furnace used in the reduction of bauxite. He found that by spraying water on the hot spots they could be prevented and, in addition, they failed to return in the same place. Higgins reasoned that the cooling effect of the water caused the melt contacting the metal shell to freeze as an insulating autogenous refractory. This suggested that an improved furnace design could be obtained by using a metal shell which is continuously flooded with water on the exterior surface. Paradoxically, a furnace required to contain tons of molten Aluminun Oxide was thus constructed of nothing but a sheet steel shell with no refractory lining at all. A test of such an arrangement was tried by Higgins with considerable trepidation and was found to be extremely satisfactory.
Citation

APA: E. P. Lunghofer  (1985)  Production Application Of Fused Aluminum Oxide And Silicon Carbide To The Mining Industry

MLA: E. P. Lunghofer Production Application Of Fused Aluminum Oxide And Silicon Carbide To The Mining Industry. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1985.

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