Slag Viscosity Tables For Blast-Furnace Work

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
A. L. Field
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
359 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 12, 1917

Abstract

Previous Publications THE first report on the slag viscosity work of the Bureau of Mines was made by one of the authors 1 in 1916. It was concerned chiefly with, the method of measurement. A paper 2 on this phase of the work was presented to the Institute in February, 1917, and a similar paper 3 was communicated to the Faraday Society. Purpose and Scope of the Slag Viscosity Tables Following the development of a suitable method, the next step in the investigation was the measurement of slag viscosity over a wide range of temperature and composition, and the arrangement of this experimental data in the form of tables for the use of the blast-furnace operator. It is believed that this information, if used intelligently, should help the operator to reduce losses in production caused by off-grade pig iron, to improve fuel economy, to promote operating efficiency, and to extend present-day practice to meet the increasing need of smelting lean and complex ores. In the experimental part of the work it was early observed that the temperature-viscosity relations of a slag were determined, for practical purposes, by the relative proportions of the three major constituents, lime (CaO), alumina (Al203), and silica (Si02), provided the percentage
Citation

APA: A. L. Field  (1917)  Slag Viscosity Tables For Blast-Furnace Work

MLA: A. L. Field Slag Viscosity Tables For Blast-Furnace Work. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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