Contributions To The Data On Theoretical Metallurgy - VII. The Thermodynamic Properties Of Sulphur And Its Inorganic Compounds ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
K. K. Kelley
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
158
File Size:
65471 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1937

Abstract

This work is a continuation of a program of study of the measurement and correlation of fundamental thermodynamic data inaugurated several years ago by the United States Bureau of Mines. Previous bulletins in this series were concerned with (1) The Entropies of Inorganic Substances (66),3 (2) High-Temperature Specific-Heat Equations for Inorganic Substances (67), (3) The Free Energies of Vaporization and Vapor Pressures of Inorganic Substances (68), (4) Metal Carbonates-Correlations and Applications of Thermodynamic Properties (71), (5) Heats of Fusion of Inorganic Substances (69), and (6) A Revision of the Entropies of Inorganic Substances-1935 (70). The present bulletin has as its primary purpose the correlation of the thermodynamic properties of elementary sulphur and its inorganic compounds and the presentation, after careful consideration of all available information, of a self-consistent system of thermodynamic relationships for these substances. It is believed that such a set of relationships, concerning substances of such great metallurgical importance as sulphur, sulphur oxides, hydrogen sulphide, metal sulphides, and metal sulphates, is of considerable value in indicating directions of possibly profitable experimental work and in clarifying subjects of technical interest upon which direct experimental information is difficult and expensive to obtain. It cannot be doubted that many problems of technical importance that at the outset appear almost hopelessly complex or obscure either may be solved, if enough information is available, or the specific lacking information clearly indicated by the adoption of the thermodynamic viewpoint. This has been demonstrated many times in the work of the Metallurgical Division, Pacific Experiment Station, Berkeley, Calif. Even when only crude basic information is available, a semiquantitative picture often may be developed by thermodynamic means in which general trends and approximate limits of a proposed process or modification of practice may be clearly portrayed and thus used as guides in further considerations and experimentation.
Citation

APA: K. K. Kelley  (1937)  Contributions To The Data On Theoretical Metallurgy - VII. The Thermodynamic Properties Of Sulphur And Its Inorganic Compounds ? Introduction

MLA: K. K. Kelley Contributions To The Data On Theoretical Metallurgy - VII. The Thermodynamic Properties Of Sulphur And Its Inorganic Compounds ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1937.

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