The Significance of Manganese in American Steel Metallurgy (f6d6fd48-7888-450d-a50a-013c0c31368d)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. H. Willcox
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
474 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 4, 1917

Abstract

THE CHAIRMAN (HENRY D. HIBBARD, Plainfield, N. J.).-This paper is timely because of the changed conditions due to the great war, but apparently its scope is limited to oxidation process steels. Referring to the four numbered observations on page 199: No. 1 seems to ignore Johnson's discoveries about oxygen in cast iron. No. 2 ignores crucible steel. No. 3 ignores red short steel containing enough gas solvents to make it solid, while No. 4 assumes that a deoxidizer is necessarily a gas decomposer or solvent and vice versa, which it not always is. From these observations it is deduced. that the only hole-forming gas in steel is an oxide of carbon (CO presumably is meant), which is not true.
Citation

APA: F. H. Willcox  (1917)  The Significance of Manganese in American Steel Metallurgy (f6d6fd48-7888-450d-a50a-013c0c31368d)

MLA: F. H. Willcox The Significance of Manganese in American Steel Metallurgy (f6d6fd48-7888-450d-a50a-013c0c31368d). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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