RI 5283 Synthetic Mica Investigations, VIII: The Manufacture Of Fluor-Phlogopite By The Internal Electric-Resistance Melting Process ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. A. Hatch
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
53
File Size:
10726 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1956

Abstract

The United States depends mainly on foreign imports, principally India, for an adequate supply of sheet mica suitable for its many uses in the electrical and electronics industries. Sheet mica has, in fact, played an indispensable role in developing these industries,4/ and, in turn, the products of these industries (radio, radar, electric motors, and many others) have become indispensable to the military forces. Because or these conditions, sheet mica in its better qualities long has been classified as a strategic and critical material, and from this stems the wide-spread interest in substitute materials of which synthetic mica is one potential type. The United States Departments of the Navy and the Army entered into a cooperative agreement with the Bureau of Mines in 1947 to study ways and means of synthe-sizing and growing mica crystals. This is one of a series of reports5/ that describe the results of this program.
Citation

APA: R. A. Hatch  (1956)  RI 5283 Synthetic Mica Investigations, VIII: The Manufacture Of Fluor-Phlogopite By The Internal Electric-Resistance Melting Process ? Summary

MLA: R. A. Hatch RI 5283 Synthetic Mica Investigations, VIII: The Manufacture Of Fluor-Phlogopite By The Internal Electric-Resistance Melting Process ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1956.

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