RI 5200 Homogeneous Alloy Ingots Produced By Consumable-Electrode Arc Melting ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. A. Beall
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
15
File Size:
4640 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1956

Abstract

Homogeneous zirconium-alloy ingots have been cast on a production basis by the consumable-electrode arc-melting process at the Northwest Electrodevelopment Experiment Station, Bureau of Mines, Albany, Oreg. This paper describes the various methods used to introduce alloying materials into the ingot and evaluates 1 each method by the degree of homogeneity of resulting ingots, as determined in tests on sections cut from the ingots. As many as 30 or more ingots, each 6 to 10 inches in diameter and weighing 300 to 500 pounds, were melted, using each method; and, as most of them subsequently were fabricated to strip 0.1 inch thick, the test results are considered to be representative of production practice. Ingot homogeneity has been considered more difficult to achieve in arc-melting practice than by methods where the molten metal is poured into molds and the addition can be stirred into the total mass of metal before casting. Owing to the unique requirements of consumable-electrode arc melting the addition can be made only to that part of the total mass of the ingot that is molten at one time. Observation of the flowlines in 500-pound ingots produced at Albany indicates that the molten pool has a maximum depth about equal to the ingot diameter. The weight of metal molten at one time is, therefore, not over 100 pounds. Characteristically, the arc-melting process is conducive to segregation, which can be overcome, at least partly, by adding the alloy constituents almost continuously during casting.
Citation

APA: R. A. Beall  (1956)  RI 5200 Homogeneous Alloy Ingots Produced By Consumable-Electrode Arc Melting ? Introduction

MLA: R. A. Beall RI 5200 Homogeneous Alloy Ingots Produced By Consumable-Electrode Arc Melting ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1956.

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