Canadian Paper - Effect of Silicon on Equilibrium Diagram of System Carbon-iron near Eutectoid Points (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. A. Schwartz H. R. Payne A. F. Gorton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
367 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

In a previous paper1 we published what we believed to be a correct stable equilibrium diagram for an iron-carbon alloy containing + 1.20 per cent. silicon. The purpose of the present paper is to record the results of studies concerning the effect of silicon on the location of the eutectoid points of both systems, including also certain incidental observations of general interest. We prepared white cast irons containing roughly 21/2 per cent. carbon, 0.05 per cent. manganese, and 0.03 per cent. each of phosphorus and sulfur, but of accurately known silicon contents which varied from 0.40 to 3.32 per cent. These were completely graphitized, and both A1 points determined, as in our previous work, the specimens being converted from the stable to the metastable condition and vice versa by appropriate heat treatments. Each stable alloy was heated to a few degrees above Arl for 3 to 7 hr., quenched and analyzed for total and graphitic carbon, the difference being the "combined" or, better, agraphitic2 carbon content of the saturated solid solution just above the eutectoid transformation. One specimen was lost through accident, and the 0.40-per cent. silicon material gave an anomalous result ascribed to difficulty in maintaining the stable system in the presence of but little silicon.
Citation

APA: H. A. Schwartz H. R. Payne A. F. Gorton  (1923)  Canadian Paper - Effect of Silicon on Equilibrium Diagram of System Carbon-iron near Eutectoid Points (with Discussion)

MLA: H. A. Schwartz H. R. Payne A. F. Gorton Canadian Paper - Effect of Silicon on Equilibrium Diagram of System Carbon-iron near Eutectoid Points (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1923.

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