Solubility Of Oxygen In Solid Cobalt And The Upper Transformation Point Of The Metal

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
A. U. Seybolt C. H. Mathewson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
17
File Size:
718 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

As is well known, many questions affecting the properties and uses of a metal cannot be answered without careful consideration of the state of purity realized in the various operations of preparation, refining, or special treatment that have brought the product to its final state. The occurrence of an impurity in minute quantity offers no guarantee that its effect will be inconsiderable because dissolved substances often modify the properties of a metal quite out of proportion to their concentration. In such cases the determination of solid solubility must be accepted as a problem of considerable difficulty, requiring the use of especially purified materials and methods not ordinarily used in the metallurgical laboratory. This aspect of the equilibrium between metals and their oxides is especially important and a search for fundamental data reveals little except conflicting opinion even concerning the systems of common occurrence and interest. Rhines and Mathewson1 in 1934 studied the solubility of oxygen in solid copper by annealing to equilibrium in air and gave reasons for the failure of other methods, notably the ordinary procedure of heat-treatment followed by microscopic examination, to yield reliable results. In this paper, a similar study has been made of the solubility of oxygen in cobalt. The simple theory of this method is outlined below.
Citation

APA: A. U. Seybolt C. H. Mathewson  (1935)  Solubility Of Oxygen In Solid Cobalt And The Upper Transformation Point Of The Metal

MLA: A. U. Seybolt C. H. Mathewson Solubility Of Oxygen In Solid Cobalt And The Upper Transformation Point Of The Metal. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.

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