RI 5833 Electric-Furnace Synthesis Of Spinel In Dusting Slags - Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 43
- File Size:
- 5441 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1961
Abstract
Despits its high melting point (2,135° C.), resistance to attack by molten metals, and its hardness (8), spinel (MgO?Al203) synthesized by the fusion of alumina (Al 2 0.) and magnesia (MgO) is not used on a large scale as a commercial furnace lining, mainly because of the prohibitive cost. This investigation by the Federal Bureau of Mines was prompted by the possibility of producing synthetic spinel from inexpensive raw materials by methods outlined in U.S. Patent 2,029,773, "Process for Obtaining Products Containing Spinets," dated February 4, 1936. In this patent Ture B. Haglund described a process for recovering crystalline spinels from melts in the system Mg0?Al203-2CaO-SiO2, a system well suited to the use of starting materials such as dolomite CaMg(C03)2, olivine [2(Mg?Fe)0.Si02], and bauxite (Al203?2H20) which are abundant in the southeastern United States. Compositions, ranging from a low content in the eutectic mixture of 35 percent spinal and 65 percent dicalcium silicate (2 CaO?SiO2) to a high of 75 percent spinel and 25 percent dicalcium silicate, were fused in electric furnaces of the arc-resistance and internal-resistance types. So long as members of the system were in proper chemical balance, "dusting" slags could be produced over the entire range of spinel concentration.
Citation
APA:
(1961) RI 5833 Electric-Furnace Synthesis Of Spinel In Dusting Slags - SummaryMLA: RI 5833 Electric-Furnace Synthesis Of Spinel In Dusting Slags - Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1961.