Atlantic City Paper - The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School (Discussion, p. 971)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles H. White
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
210 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1905

Abstract

+1HARVARD UNIVERSITY, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. The equipment of a laboratory in which students are to be trained for practical work in metallurgical chemistry presents many difficulties not encountered in the fitting up of a commercial or works laboratory. At an industrial plant the chemical work required usually demands the frequent repetition of a comparatively limited number of methods. In a steel-works laboratory, for instance, by far the larger part of the work consists in making determinations of the usual impurities found in iron and steel; at a smelter the great bulk of the work is confined to the analysis of ores, slags, mattes, and fuels, which involve the frequent application of perhaps not more than a dozen different methods. In a laboratory of this character, therefore, those operations most frequently applied may each have a certain section set apart and fitted permanently with such apparatus as best facilitates the carrying out of this one operation. The work of a commercial or custom laboratory is perhaps more varied than that of a works laboratory, but the couditions are similar in these respects, that there is usually no great need for economy of space, and that a few skilled workmen are employed to carry the determinations through from beginning to end without interruption. On the other hand, the laboratory of a technical school should be planned on such a scale that a comparatively large number of students may work at the same time, and each desk should be equipped for general metallurgical analysis. In most institutions for technical education the student's program is so arranged that his day is divided among several subjects in the course of study; only a few consecutive hours being devoted to one subject, or spent in one laboratory. Therefore, those appliances should be provided that render possible the safe continuation of such processes as
Citation

APA: Charles H. White  (1905)  Atlantic City Paper - The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School (Discussion, p. 971)

MLA: Charles H. White Atlantic City Paper - The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School (Discussion, p. 971). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.

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