The Lead-Antimony System And Hardening Of Lead Alloys

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
R. S. Dean
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
25
File Size:
1896 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 2, 1926

Abstract

THE first attempt to establish an equilibrium diagram of the lead-antimony series was made by Roland-Gosselin1 in 1896. This investigation classified the system as a purely eutectiferous one, with the eutectic at 12.5 per cent. antimony and 228° C. In the next year, Stead2 placed the eutectic temperature at 247° C. The error in temperature made by Roland-Gosselin, however, has been perpetuated in the literature with a remarkable degree of persistency; this value was accepted by Campbell (1902), and Ewen (1910),3 and will be found in the last edition of Desch's3 Metallography (1922). Gonterman's investigation, made in 1907, was the most complete one available at the time the present investigation was started. He concluded' that the system was a simple eutectiferous one and placed the eutectic at 13 per cent. antimony and 247°C. Other investigations by Tammann (1907),5 Garbow (1909),6 Rudolfi (1910),7 Loebe (1911),8 and Leroux (1913)9 added little, if any-thing, to Gonterman's diagram. A number of investigations have been made of physical properties of the alloys. The electrical conductivity of the series was studied by Matthiessen (1860)10 and by A. W. Smith (1921);" the thermoforce by Rudolfi (1910),12 and Pelabon (1923);13 the specific heat by Durrer
Citation

APA: R. S. Dean  (1926)  The Lead-Antimony System And Hardening Of Lead Alloys

MLA: R. S. Dean The Lead-Antimony System And Hardening Of Lead Alloys. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1926.

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