Bulletin 54 Foundry-Cupola Gases and Temperatures

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
A. W. BELDEN
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
33
File Size:
1657 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1913

Abstract

Among the investigations that the Bureau of Mines is conducting witha view to increasing efficiency in the utilization of fuels belonging to or for the use of the Government is an investigation of the processesthat take place in a foundry cupola during a melt. Some observations on the results of cupola tests of cokes at the Government fuel-testing plant in St. Louis, Mo., the coke being fromcoal from many coal fields of the United States, have been stated in a previous bulletin.s Especial attention was given to the meltinglosses that resulted from the use of different grades of coke, light and porous or heavy and dense. These losses amounted in one instance to 52.5 per cent of the iron charged and showed, in convincing manner, the need of exact information in regard to conditions in the fuelbed of the cupola.b Melting losses of iron have been fully appreciated but little under-- stood. The fact that these losses were possible with either light or heavy coke led to the belief that by using small charges 80 placed that. melting would take place in that zone of the cupola where the highest heat and the smallest percentage of oxygen prevailed and by confiningall melting to this zone these losses would be eliminated and the economical use of practically any coke produced for metallurgical purposes would become possible. This widening of the field from whichcoke might be drawn for foundry purposes would serve to place the foundryman in an independent position as regards his source of supply, and would tend to conserve the better grades of coking coals, which are being rapidly exhausted, by making the poorer grades available for mixing with them. In order to investigate conditions within a cupola, the Bureau of Mines as a first step decided to install a commercial cupola, to sample the gases during their travel from the tuy~res upward, and to determine the temperature of the fuel bed.
Citation

APA: A. W. BELDEN  (1913)  Bulletin 54 Foundry-Cupola Gases and Temperatures

MLA: A. W. BELDEN Bulletin 54 Foundry-Cupola Gases and Temperatures. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1913.

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