New York City Paper - A Theory to Explain the Cause of Hard Centers in Steel Ingots

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 266 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1885
Abstract
The solution here offered is at once simple and important in its direct and indirect bearings. According to the principles of surface-tension, which will be found sufficiently enlarged upon for present purposes in Clerk Maxwell's excellent little treatise on The Theory of Heat, a mechanical mixture of liquids will frequently of itself divide into groups, consisting of liquids mixing among themselves but withdrawing from the other liquids. The following simple and familiar illustration will suffice: " If we mix water with alcohol, the liquids diffuse into each other. If we now attempt to mix oil with the alcohol and water, the two liquids separate from each other of themselves, and in the act of separation sufficient force is brought into play to set in motion considerable masses of the fluids." Maxwell goes on to show that this relative energy is one of arrangement, depending on the nature of the fluids and the area of the surface of contact, the act of separation tending to reduce this surface to a minimum consistent with equilibrium; that this surface-tension exists between a solid and touching fluid, either liquid or gaseous, being of one sign or the other, in the case of a liquid, according as it tends to draw itself up into a drop on its surface or to spread and wet the solid. After considering various cases, lie states that which particularly interests us, thus : " When a solid body is in contact with two fluids, then, if the
Citation
APA:
(1885) New York City Paper - A Theory to Explain the Cause of Hard Centers in Steel IngotsMLA: New York City Paper - A Theory to Explain the Cause of Hard Centers in Steel Ingots. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1885.