Technical Notes - Structure of the Yellow Crystalline Fraction of Blast-Furnace Salamander

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
John R. Weeks Dan McLachlan John R. Lewis
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
201 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

DURING the operation of the iron blast furnace, aggregates of hard, infusible, yellow, cubic crystals frequently form in the interstices of the lining and on the hearth of the furnace. These were first examined by Wohler&apos; and were identified by him as a complex cyanonitride of titanium, having a formula Ti(CN)2 • 3Ti3N2, or more simply Ti10C2N8. However, recent investigators have suggested that this complex compound does not exist. Recent work by Hume-Rothery, Raynor, and Little2 on the carbide and nitride particles in titanium steels suggests that a complete series of solid solutions of the general type Ti<0+y>C0Ny exists between titanium carbide (Tic) and titanium nitride (TiN). Assuming this to be true, it seems likely that Wohler&apos;s cyanonitride of titanium is in reality a solid solution of 20 mol pct Tic in 80 mol pct TiN, .the nearly consistent carbide-to-nitride ratio probably resulting from temperature and pressure conditions in the blast furnace. The object of the present work was to investigate thoroughly this possibility of a solid solution by using the single-crystal methods of X-ray analysis. A spectrographic qualitative analysis of a sample of the yellow crystals furnished by the Geneva Steel Co. sh&apos;owed, in addition to the titanium, strong lines of vanadium and moderate to weak lines of iron, magnesium, silicon, aluminum, and calcium. The last five were probably slag impurities, but the vanadium was possibly included in the yellow crystals, owing to a great structural similarity of its carbide (VC) and its nitride (VN) to the titanium compounds, Table 11. A chemical analysis was made
Citation

APA: John R. Weeks Dan McLachlan John R. Lewis  (1952)  Technical Notes - Structure of the Yellow Crystalline Fraction of Blast-Furnace Salamander

MLA: John R. Weeks Dan McLachlan John R. Lewis Technical Notes - Structure of the Yellow Crystalline Fraction of Blast-Furnace Salamander. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1952.

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