A Chemical Explanation of the Effect of Oxygen in Strengthening Cast Iron

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Henry M. Howe
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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1
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59 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1917

Abstract

HENRY M. Howe, Bedford Hills, N. Y. (communication to the Secretary.) +-Mr. Johnson's explanation, that the rounding of the graphite masses in oxygen-bearing cast iron is clue to their being in part re-precipitated after re-solution in forming carbonic oxide temporarily with that oxygen, is certainly most attractive and suggestive. It remains to be shown whether this rounding occurs also when 'the solidiification is too rapid to permit this process to goon. J. E. Johnson Might easily test this by casting a single ladleful of his oxygenated iron in masses of varying size. If' this present hypothesis is true, then the rounding ought to increase progressively with the size of the casting, and with the distance from the outside, that is to say with the time available for re-solution and re-precipitation. I question whether a like benefit is to be expected even on this hypothesis, from the oxygenation of steel. The spheroidizing of graphite does good because graphite itself is so weak. But the constituent which can be spheroidized in steel is its cementite, which is a source of strength. Lamellar pearlite, in which this cementite in effect forms long dendrites, is far stronger than divorced pearlite, in which these dendrites have been broken up into spheroids. Even the surfaces of contact between ferrite and cementite are probably sources of strength because of the amorphous iron which probably fills them.
Citation

APA: Henry M. Howe  (1917)  A Chemical Explanation of the Effect of Oxygen in Strengthening Cast Iron

MLA: Henry M. Howe A Chemical Explanation of the Effect of Oxygen in Strengthening Cast Iron . The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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