RI 3120 Determination Of Magnetite In Copper Slags ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Lathrop E. Roberts
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
16
File Size:
5910 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1931

Abstract

[The opinion is general among smelter operators that magnetite formed in the converter and reverberatory furnace has much to do with the loss of copper in the slag. Its action appears to be due in part to its relatively high infusibility, chemical stability, and specific gravity, as a result of which it tends to fern a layer of highly viscous. "magnetite mush" between slag and matte. Particles of matte which might otherwise settle out of the slag are unable to pass through this layer. Maier and, Van Arsdale4 have shorn that the inclusion of prills of matte in the slag is also at times very probably due to chemical reaction between magnetite and the constituents of the matte. In smelter control and in envy laboratory study of slats the determination of magnetite is therefore a matter of some importance. The difficulties in the ray of making such a determination with any accuracy are rather obvious. Iron may occur in slog as ferric oxide, magnetite, various intermediate oxides, sulphides, silicates, as free metal, and in solid solution of several of these substances. Even of only the total iron content is to be determined, accuracy can be obtained only by painstaking and time-consuming separation ions from interfering elements. The determination of ferrous, ferric, and free iron in the presence of each other is a difficult matter under the most favorable conditions, and linen present in a slag the difficulties are increased by the refractory nature of the sample, by the presence of sulphides, and by ouch elements as vanadium and molybdenum.]
Citation

APA: Lathrop E. Roberts  (1931)  RI 3120 Determination Of Magnetite In Copper Slags ? Introduction

MLA: Lathrop E. Roberts RI 3120 Determination Of Magnetite In Copper Slags ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.

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