Influence Of Dissolved Carbide On The Equilibria Of The System Iron-Carbon

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Yap Chu-Phay
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
19
File Size:
629 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1931

Abstract

IN the previous paper, the writer showed how, on the basis of thermodynamic reasoning, it seems probable that when true equilibrium conditions obtain, carbon exists as Fe3C in the liquid state and as elementary carbon in the solid state (7 Fe), in which case the solidus would be a straight line from 0.18 to 1.70 per cent. carbon (Fig. 1). In the same paper he concluded that the solidus obtained by Honda 'and his co-workers1 probably does not represent the same conditions, insuring a complete equilibrium. Except for a downward temperature displacement, the solidus obtained by Gutowsky,2 using the Heycock and Neville method, practically coincides with Honda's solidus as shown in Fig. 1. The writer at first thought that perhaps in some way Gutowsky's thermocouple was improperly calibrated for high-temperature measurements, as his liquidus was also much lower than those obtained by Carpenter and Keeling3 and by Ruer and Goerens.4 However, the eutectic temperature obtained by Gutowsky agrees with the generally accepted value of 1130° C., so that the validity of the inference regarding improper temperature calibrations is to be strongly doubted. In Fig. 1, Gutowsky's solidus is shown both in the original and in the corrected form. In the latter, a correction of 29.2° C. is made for all temperatures above 1416° C. in accordance with-
Citation

APA: Yap Chu-Phay  (1931)  Influence Of Dissolved Carbide On The Equilibria Of The System Iron-Carbon

MLA: Yap Chu-Phay Influence Of Dissolved Carbide On The Equilibria Of The System Iron-Carbon. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1931.

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