Of Mr. Fackenthal's paper on a Peculiar Siliceous Efflorescence upon Pig-Iron

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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2
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87 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1901

Abstract

Prof. Henry M Howe, New York: It is extremely probable that this efflorescence of silica is due to the liquation either of silicon or of a silicide, and the subsequent oxidation of the silicon to silica. As Mr. Fackenthal says, it is very hard to see why silicon should liquate from an iron containing so little silicon, and it seems more probable that some silicide of some volatile element has liquated, and has dissociated on reaching the air, and that the volatile element has volatilized, leaving the silicon to oxidize to silica. The volatile elements present which might thus liquate in combination with the silicon are sulphur, zinc, and lead. It is hard to see why sulphide of silicon should have liquated from an iron containing so little of either sulphur or silicon. At first, one naturally thinks that either the zinc or the lead present in this furnace might have liquated as silicide. It is true that they are both volatile at the temperature within the furnace, but then the vapor-tension* of each of them within
Citation

APA:  (1901)  Of Mr. Fackenthal's paper on a Peculiar Siliceous Efflorescence upon Pig-Iron

MLA: Of Mr. Fackenthal's paper on a Peculiar Siliceous Efflorescence upon Pig-Iron. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1901.

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