Pittsburg Paper - The Girod Electric Furnace, and the French Works Using the Paul Girod Steel-Process

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Wilhelm Borchers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
19
File Size:
1135 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1911

Abstract

In all special branches of the chemical and metallurgical industries, in which large electric furnaces became necessary for carrying out new processes or for the improvement of old ones, the development of the electric furnaces took place on much the same lines. The endeavors to make a success of a new idea brought forth many ingenious designs, which, however, almost without exception, furnished the proof that the safest and shortest way to practical success is the utmost simplicity of construction of the necessary apparatus. Our knowledge of the qualities of materials for building electric furnaces and of the constituents of the furnace-charges, especially their electric conductivity and their chemical affinity towards one another at high temperatures, is still far from being complete, and from this fact we must conclude that the smaller the number of elements in the construction of a furnace, the fewer the number of unreliable factors both in the construction and in the operation of the electric furnace. This conclusion deserves special attention when an electric furnace for making steel has to be chosen from the constantly-growing number of inventions, inasmuch as the chief constituent of steel, the element iron, is a substance which in its liquid phase has so great an affinity for those elemen'ts which are to be removed from the charge, that it is very difficult to comply with the following conditions: 1, to heat the refining-slag to the highest point of its chemical activity ; 2, to prevent the iron from entering the slag, or, where this cannot be done, to make it enter so that it finally appears in the end-product
Citation

APA: Wilhelm Borchers  (1911)  Pittsburg Paper - The Girod Electric Furnace, and the French Works Using the Paul Girod Steel-Process

MLA: Wilhelm Borchers Pittsburg Paper - The Girod Electric Furnace, and the French Works Using the Paul Girod Steel-Process. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1911.

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