RI 6734 Electric Arc Furnace Reduction Of Tin Slag For Production Of Columbium Tantalum-Bearing Alloy

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 22
- File Size:
- 1150 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1966
Abstract
The smelting of tin slags was undertaken at the Bureau of Mines Albany Metallurgy Research Center (AMRC) to produce crude columbium-tantalum ferro-alloy as a unit operation in the production of pure columbium and tantalum oxides or chlorides. Columbium and tantalum-rich alloy was prepared during short unrelated campaigns over a total period of 12 years. Tin slags from Malaya and the Congo (Geomines) were smelted. These slags were reduced by carbon in a small, single-phase, steel-making furnace} a larger three-phase, steelmaking furnace, and a three-phase, submerged-arc furnace, In all cases depleted slags were fluid and easily tapped from the furnace. However, unless diluted by iron additions, the metal product was a viscous, high-melting, heterogeneous mixture that could be removed from the furnace only by hand rabbling.
Citation
APA:
(1966) RI 6734 Electric Arc Furnace Reduction Of Tin Slag For Production Of Columbium Tantalum-Bearing AlloyMLA: RI 6734 Electric Arc Furnace Reduction Of Tin Slag For Production Of Columbium Tantalum-Bearing Alloy. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1966.