Papers - Institute of Metals Division Lecture, 1929 - Passivity of Metals and Its Relation to problems of Corrosion (Annual Lecture)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Ulick R. Evans
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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22
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1192 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1929

Abstract

I Should like to commence by saying how much I appreciate the honor which the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers has done me in inviting me to visit your country, and to deliver this lecture before you. In choosing a subject, and in deciding what to include and what to omit, I have endeavored to discuss as far as possible work carried out recently in Europe with which you may not be unduly familiar. It would be poor return for your hospitality, and a mistaken sort of compliment indeed, if I were to load the lecture with accounts of researches carried out in your own country—researches with which you are probably better acquainted than I. Not that I have in any way excluded work done on this side of the Atlantic from my survey; one would indeed find it difficult to write on this, or on any other branch of science, without mentioning American work. But I have endeavored as far as possible to concentrate on aspects of the case which will, I hope, be comparatively fresh to you, and I feel fairly certain that this will be in accordance with your own wishes. Films Produced at Elevated Temperatures If a strip of iron is heated strongly at one end, the other end remaining cold, there is produced over the heated portion a layer of oxide scale, the thickness of which diminishes steadily with the distance from the hot end. Somewhere in the middle of the strip, the thickness of the oxidized layer will become comparable to the wave length of light, and over this region the thin films give rise to a series of beautiful interference tints, commonly known as "temper colors." The colors are caused by the fact that two trains of light waves are reflected respectively from the outer and inner surfaces of the oxide film, and the possibility arises that the "crests" of one series of waves may coincide with the "troughs" of the other, thus diminishing the intensity of the light of some particular wave length. The state of affairs in this part of the strip is shown diagrammatically in Fig. 1, in which the film thickness is enormously exaggerated, of course, in comparison with the length of the strip; the
Citation

APA: Ulick R. Evans  (1929)  Papers - Institute of Metals Division Lecture, 1929 - Passivity of Metals and Its Relation to problems of Corrosion (Annual Lecture)

MLA: Ulick R. Evans Papers - Institute of Metals Division Lecture, 1929 - Passivity of Metals and Its Relation to problems of Corrosion (Annual Lecture). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1929.

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