Use Of The Noble Metals For Electrical Contacts (4b55e7bf-44f8-40d6-9494-119b989d4f13)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. F. Kingsbury
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
21
File Size:
791 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1928

Abstract

ONE of the well-known and important uses of the noble or precious metals has been for electrical contacts. In fact, the elements of this group, comprising gold, silver and the six platinum metals, have been called "noble" because of their ability to resist heat and corrosion, properties which were early found to be of importance in good contacts. Of these, platinum and its iridium alloys, palladium, and silver, have been extensively used. In recent years the electrical industry has been responsible for about one-eighth of the total consumption of the platinum metals in the United States. Information is not available as to what part of this one-eighth has been used for contacts but it is certainly an important one. SUBSTITUTES FOR PLATINUM During the past 20 years a considerable number of contact alloys have been proposed in the patent literature largely with the aim of more or less replacing platinum by gold or silver, and some of these alloys are finding increasingly widespread application as the reliability of their performance becomes established. From even the partial data-at hand it appears that this substitution by the less precious metals has replaced at least one-half of the amount of platinum that the entire electrical industry would otherwise be consuming at the present time. While the subject is of considerable interest to the metallurgist it is , even more so to the electrical engineer and it is surprising that the literature records no systematic and comprehensive investigation along these lines. Practically all the scattered work on noble metal contacts has centered around platinum as a Standard and has had two more or less distinct aims. One of these has been the replacement of platinum by cheaper materials, and the other, the development of materials of superior electrical performance. The merit of a contact metal has been assumed to be dependent on its infusibility, and since the more precious metals have the higher melting points there has naturally been an association of the two qualities in the sense that the more precious were
Citation

APA: E. F. Kingsbury  (1928)  Use Of The Noble Metals For Electrical Contacts (4b55e7bf-44f8-40d6-9494-119b989d4f13)

MLA: E. F. Kingsbury Use Of The Noble Metals For Electrical Contacts (4b55e7bf-44f8-40d6-9494-119b989d4f13). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1928.

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