Cadmium Resources of the United States

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. L. Siebenthal
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
403 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 12, 1918

Abstract

C. E. SIEBENTHAL, ? Washington, D. C.-From being one of the most maligned of metals-a veritable bugaboo-cadmium has almost overnight become respectable, though its slender claim to respectability rests almost wholly on the possibility of its substitution for tin. Preliminary to any campaign for such substitution, particularly for enforced substitution, the possible supply of cadmium should he determined as closely as possible; for that reason the statistical inquiry of which this paper embodies the results was undertaken. Production Cadmium is marketed in two forms, as metallic cadmium, in sticks or bars, and as cadmium sulfide, the pigment. The metal has found its greatest field of use in this country as a component of an easily fusible alloy that is used in automatic fire extinguishers. The sulfide is .used to some extent in paints but chiefly to give color and luster to glass and porcelain. The metal was first made in this country by the Grasselli Chemical
Citation

APA: C. L. Siebenthal  (1918)  Cadmium Resources of the United States

MLA: C. L. Siebenthal Cadmium Resources of the United States. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1918.

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