Industrial Minerals - Relationship of Hardness, Friability and Particle Size to the Abrasive Performance of Diatomaceous Silica

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. L. Kady Jr. F. R. Hutto Jr. L. E. Weymouth
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
1271 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1961

Abstract

The behavior of particulate non-metallic materials in moving contact with smooth surfaces is of interest and concern to manufacturers and users of abrasives, of fillers, and of pigments alike. The theoretical aspects of the subject have been treated to considerable extent in the literature, and correlatic,ns are available that attempt to relate various methods of hardness determination." 2 The particle size and friability are characteristics of the abrasive that are not related to the smooth surface. The hardness, on the other hand, may be visualized as relative to that of the smooth surface. In a study of abrasive action, the role that hardness, per se, plays is a complicated one. For it is necessary to compare the "hardness" of the abrasive, usually a non-metallic, with that of the smooth surface, generally a metal. Hardness of non-metallics is defined as resistance to scratch and is almost universally described with respect to the Mohs scale.3 Minerals have been rated by Mohs numerically from the softest (talc = 1) to the hardest (diamond = 10). By definition, a mineral has a designated hardness when it is scratched by the standard that is numerically just above it on the scale; and conversely, when it scratches the standard that is just below it. Hardness of metals. however.. implies resistance to indentation, a property that has been measured by a number of methods. In fact, the indentation hardnesses of the standard minerals on the hlohs scale have been determined by the Rockwell tester. Reproduced below are two versions of this correlation. 'A conversion chart, prepared by Wilson Mechanical Instruments Division of American Chain and Cable Co., merely gives the conversion from Rockwell to Knoop hardness. The relation between Knoop indentation hardness and Mohs scale has been reported by G. S. Smith — A New Scale of Hardness, The Engineer, Aug. 26. 1949. G. F. Kinney in Engineerin Properties and Aplications of Plastics reports the Rockwell hardness of the minerals directly in the Mohs scale. The question immediately arises as to whether this relation is valid when applied in reverse; namely,
Citation

APA: F. L. Kady Jr. F. R. Hutto Jr. L. E. Weymouth  (1961)  Industrial Minerals - Relationship of Hardness, Friability and Particle Size to the Abrasive Performance of Diatomaceous Silica

MLA: F. L. Kady Jr. F. R. Hutto Jr. L. E. Weymouth Industrial Minerals - Relationship of Hardness, Friability and Particle Size to the Abrasive Performance of Diatomaceous Silica. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1961.

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