RI 3786 Spot Test for the Separation of Aluminum Bronze from Manganese Bronze

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. B. Corbett
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
6
File Size:
311 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 1944

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Aluminum and manganese bronzes as a group, may be separated readily from other copper-base alloys by experienced sorters. However, separation of aluminum bronze from manganese bronze is generally a matter of guesswork, so that accurate separation presents a difficult salvage problem.Attempts at separation by the thermoelectric tester. 3/ which had proved successful in solving other sorting problems, showed in this instance that the desired separation was uncertain because of the wide range of composition allowable in each kind of bronze. If only one composition of each kind of bronze were used in industry, separation by the thermoelectric method probably would be simple. However; the variability in composition observed in commercial alloys is so great that the thermoelectric power of the one type frequently overlaps the range of values found for the other. As a result, specimens frequently are classified in the' wrong group.Separation of the two types of bronzes on the basis of measurements of magnetic properties on filings from the various samples also proved unsuccessful because the test results overlapped to such an extent that no clear-cut division could be obtained.Electrode potential measurements were made also on the aluminum and manganese bronzes in the hope of distinguishing between them. A drop of saturated potassium chloride solution was placed on the fresh surface of the metal and the tip of a calomel electrode introduced therein. The voltage generated was measured by connecting the electrode and the bronze part to a research-type potentiometer. Although the voltages generated by the manganese bronze parts were greater than those generated by the aluminum parts, the difference in the closest two sets of readings was not sufficient to warrant a good separation. When a concentrated potassium alum solution was used instead of the potassium chloride solution, a wider divergence of voltage was produced by the various bronzes, but unfortunately readings overlapped in several instances."
Citation

APA: R. B. Corbett  (1944)  RI 3786 Spot Test for the Separation of Aluminum Bronze from Manganese Bronze

MLA: R. B. Corbett RI 3786 Spot Test for the Separation of Aluminum Bronze from Manganese Bronze. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1944.

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