RI 3218 Volatilization of Impurities from Zinc Concentrates

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. L. Oldwright W. E. Keck F. K. Shelton
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
55
File Size:
17082 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 1, 1933

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Zinc must be of high grade to satisfy the present demand. Even when the amount of premium paid is small, the purer metal as the buyers' preference. The following specifications for spelter were taken from the American Society for Testing Materials for 1927, Part I, pane 524. (The specifications for 1930, p. 582, are tile same.)Another specification for zinc of a much higher grade than any of the above has been established lately by the same society. The committee on zinc die-casting (Proc. Am. Soc. Test. Mat., vol. 31, 1931, p. 263) reached the following, conclusions: I. ""That the purest of zinc is necessary to produce stable zinc-base die castings, and as a result requested specifications for zinc spelter .with total impurities not over 0.02 percent."" Their tests showed that the die castings made of the purest zinc had the least elongation and the greatest tensile strength, and exhibited the least changes with temperature.Still more far-reaching claims are made for the properties of zinc containing over 99.99 percent metal. Zinc foil, for instance, may someday be made as a common commercial product. It would seem likely that the demand for zinc of high grades rill continue and that even purer varieties may be desired. This demand fits in with the modern trend in manufacturing plants of reducing the number of variables to a minimum by using pure materials, and of controlling the processing of metals during their various stages of fabrication by mechanical means instead of by expert laborers."
Citation

APA: G. L. Oldwright W. E. Keck F. K. Shelton  (1933)  RI 3218 Volatilization of Impurities from Zinc Concentrates

MLA: G. L. Oldwright W. E. Keck F. K. Shelton RI 3218 Volatilization of Impurities from Zinc Concentrates. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1933.

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