Bulletin 222 Metallurgy of Quicksilver (Mercury)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 129
- File Size:
- 11168 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1925
Abstract
In the years 1850 to 1923, the United States produced 2,426,000
flasks- (73,600 metric tons) of quicksilver worth $120,500,000. California
yielded 2,195,000 flasks of this total; the remainder came from
Texas, Oregon, Nevada, and A.rizona. Most of this metal has been
extracted from low-grade ores, those containing less than 0.5 per
cent mercury or 10 pounds per ton. The finished product or " virgin
metal" is made at the mine and shipped in flasks.
Quicksilver is unique in being the only metal that is liquid at
ordinary temperature. Because of this and other physical and
chemical properties, it is perhaps more indispensable to industry
than any other metal. On the other hand, the quicksilver industry
of the world is of vanishing significance" when compared to the
major mineral industries with respect to quantity and value of product,
capital invested, or the number of men employed. The peculiar
value of quicksilver is due to the fact that in some of its applications
no substitute is available and in others the substitutes would be
unsatisfactory or extremely expensive. Scarcely a branch of science
or industry fails to make some use of mercury or its compounds.
As a detonator for explosives, mercury fulminate holds first place
and in safety and reliability could be replaced only by the highly
expensive silver fulminate.t vThrough its use in detonators and in
the metallurgy of the precious metals quicksilver is of special importance
to mining. In medicine,in the manufacture of electrical
apparatus, the production of pigments and antifouling paints, and
the general field of experimental science quicksilver is equally indispensable.
Citation
APA:
(1925) Bulletin 222 Metallurgy of Quicksilver (Mercury)MLA: Bulletin 222 Metallurgy of Quicksilver (Mercury). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1925.