Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys - German Practice in Refining Secondary Aluminum (Metals Tech., April 1947, T.P. 2143with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
James T. Kemp
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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16
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1110 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1947

Abstract

Some interesting and, to American eyes, rather unusual processes for refining impure aluminum derived from scraps were found by American and British investigators who went into Germany in 1945 for the Technical Industrial Intelligence Committee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. What was found was recorded in a series of reports (see page ), many of which have been released for general reading. This paper gathers under one title and summarizes the German work in refining light metal scrap. Reference must be made to the original reports for greater detail. Basically, the occasion and stimulus for the German developments in treating light metal scrap were hard necessity. Germany needed the metal for a rapacious war industry. Adequate supplies of new aluminum from reduction works were not assured. Great quantities of airplane and other light metal war scraps were forecast. It was evident that the scrap metal would have to be reabsorbed by the producing industry and would have to be kept of good quality. The normal current production of manufacturing scrap was being and could be consumed as generated. It offered no technical problem. The mixed scraps, especially those arising from crashed and decommissioned airplanes, however, presented problems of another kind. Airplane Scrap The recovery of usable aluminum alloy from the mixed assemblies that made up the piles of airplane scrap was attacked in different ways by different groups and with differing degrees of success. Three procedures actually were used on a commercial scale, one was in pilot-plant stage and another had come to a halt in the laboratory a year before Germany collapsed. Four of these five processes actually involved "refining"; that is, some measure of purification of the metal after melting. Sorting and Separation on a Sloping Hearth The simplest procedure for utilizing airplane scrap involved no refining in the strict sense of the word. This was the practice adopted by two representative plants visited by the author, the Leipziger Leichtmetalle Werke, Rackwitz, Saxony, and the Vereinigte Leichtmetalle Werke, Hanover. These firms did essentially the same thing that was done in England but not with equal success, to judge by their shorter experience, the smaller tonnage handled and by the number and quality of alloys produced. The two German firms named rough-sorted scraps by their easily recognizable alloys, essentially by part and shape. They used hand labor to chop and hack and tear apart. The easily separated heavy metal and nonmetallic scraps were discarded as they were found. Steel and the higher-melting-point metal parts riveted to aluminum or built into
Citation

APA: James T. Kemp  (1947)  Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys - German Practice in Refining Secondary Aluminum (Metals Tech., April 1947, T.P. 2143with discussion)

MLA: James T. Kemp Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys - German Practice in Refining Secondary Aluminum (Metals Tech., April 1947, T.P. 2143with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.

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