Lake Superior Paper - Nitrogen in Steel, and the Erosion of Guns (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. E. Wheeler
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
60
File Size:
10953 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1922

Abstract

The work described was carried out during 1917 and 1918 at the testing laboratory of Watertown Arsenal at the instigation of the Nitrate Division and later with the concurrence of the Cannon Section of the Ordnance Department, U. 8. A. The experiments follow three principal lines of work: First, the effect of nitrogen under pressure on steel containers of various compositions at a red heat; second, the effect of decomposing ammonia on various alloy steels, iron, and non-ferrous alloys; third, a new theory of the erosion of guns in respect to the effect of nitrogen in steel. Part I In the Haber process for the manufacture of ammonia from its elcnlents, it is necessary to have nitrogen and hydrogen of 1500 lb. per sq. in. (105.5 kg. per sq. cm.) at a temperature of 500 to 600' C. The steel containers for these gases gave trouble by failing without apparent cause. When the General Chemical Co. began to develop its method for the production of ammonia, it experienced the same difficulty and, knowing that the Haber process had solved the difficulty by the use of alloy steels, it made several small steel bottles of different compositions and kept them filled with these gases at this pressure and temperature until they failed. The time of service varied from a few days, for the plain steel casting, to two years for a chrome-vanadium forging. Four of these steel bottles were sent to this laboratory for investigation; they were a plain carbon-steel forging, a nickel-stee1 forging, a chrome-vanadium steel forging, and a chrome-steel forging. The time of service was as follows: plain carbon steel, 4 mo.; nickel steel, 6 mo.; chrome-vanadium steel, over 2 yr.; chrome steel, 4 mo. When these containers were cut open and the cross-section surface polished, they showed an inside zone with a different luster from the rest of the metal. Upon etching, this zone was almost unaffected while the rest of the steel etched normally.
Citation

APA: H. E. Wheeler  (1922)  Lake Superior Paper - Nitrogen in Steel, and the Erosion of Guns (with Discussion)

MLA: H. E. Wheeler Lake Superior Paper - Nitrogen in Steel, and the Erosion of Guns (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1922.

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