Magnesium

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. D. Hanawalt W. H. Gross
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
29
File Size:
1099 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

Magnesium has long been known as the lightest of our engineering metals. This metal, silvery white in color, has a specific gravity of only 1.74. Aluminum, the next lightest structural metal, is 1 ½ times heavier; zinc is 4 times heavier; iron and steel are 4 ½ times heavier; and copper and nickel are 5 times heavier. Magnesium does not occur in the free state but is very abundant in nature, constituting 2.5 pct of the earth's crust in the form of various ores. It is the third most abundant structural metal, being exceeded only by iron and aluminum. Magnesium is unique, however, in that in the form of magnesium chloride it also exists in the oceans. Sea water is the source most widely used for production in the United States but magnesium is also commercially produced from magnesite, dolomite, and other ores as well as from certain inland brines. The vast quantity of magnesium existing in the waters of the oceans can be visualized when it is realized that the removal of one hundred million tons per year (the approximate annual steel production in the United States) for a million years would reduce the magnesium content of sea water only from 0.13 to 0.12 pct, providing no more magnesium had washed into the sea in the meantime. Not only is magnesium potentially very abundant but it is in addition a very versatile metal and can be shaped and worked by practically all methods known to the art of metal working. It can be cast by sand, die, and the various permanent-mold methods;
Citation

APA: J. D. Hanawalt W. H. Gross  (1953)  Magnesium

MLA: J. D. Hanawalt W. H. Gross Magnesium. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1953.

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